Here, I've chosen my ten favourite tracks that Bo Diddley had nothing to do with - but which wouldn't have existed without him. All but one feature his signature beat: the exception is the earliest example of another artist paying homage to the man born as Elias Otha Bates in McComb, Mississippi in 1928 - Muddy Waters'"Mannish Boy", his "answer" to Bo's 1955 hit, "I'm a Man" (which, to be fair, "borrowed" the rhythm from Muddy Waters' own 1954 hit, "Hoochie Coochie Man"):
Aren;t the backing singers wonderful? Interesting chap, Johnny Otis. By the time this great No.1 single was released in 1958, he'd already deservedly earned the sobriquet "The Godfather of Rhythm 'n" Blues" thanks to a string of thirteen Top Ten R&B hits with his own orchestra. Like many people, I'd always assumed he was a light-skinned black - but he was the son of Greek immigrants who, as he himself put it, chose to be black. Whatever, "Willie and the Hand-Jive" is probably the best non-Bo Diddley Bo Diddley song of the lot.
Dee Clark's "Hey Little Girl" was co-written by the great Otis Blackwell. I won this record at a funfair on Wimbledon Common in 1962 - can't remember what for.
Yes, I know "His Latest Flame" doesn't sound in the least bit like a Bo number, but it demonstrates how ubiquitous his beat had become by the early sixties:
I recommend ignore the pretentious prat singing off key in the foreground on this last number and concentrate on Johnny Marr's magnificent "Mona"-style guitar-playing instead:
Mind you, I can't really imagine Bo Diddley whining about going home and crying and wanting to die - not his style, really.
Finally - thanks to commenter GCooperwho spotting my grotesque mistake, here's the cleverest and most original of all Diddleyesque records - Buddy Holly and the magnificent "Not Fade Away":
Finally - thanks to commenter GCooperwho spotting my grotesque mistake, here's the cleverest and most original of all Diddleyesque records - Buddy Holly and the magnificent "Not Fade Away":
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