JODY WILLIAMS: FEBRUARY 3, 1935 - DECEMBER 1, 2018
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photo by Dan Machnik
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Famed Chicago blues
guitarist/vocalist and Blues Hall Of Fame member Jody Williams, who recorded
with legends including Howlin’ Wolf, Otis Spann and his childhood friend Bo
Diddley, as well as under his own name, died of cancer at the Munster Med Inn
in Munster, Indiana on December 1, 2018. He lived in nearby St. John, Indiana.
He was 83.
One of the last and most
accomplished practitioners of the golden 1950s era of Chicago blues, Williams
was well-known for his instantly recognizable stinging guitar tone, a keen
vibrato and a sensibility that straddled the turf between gutbucket blues,
sophisticated jazzy West Coast stylings and even vintage rockabilly, along with
solid vocals and thoughtful songwriting. His often-replicated guitar parts were
crucial to some of the most iconic songs of the genre, including on Bo Diddley’s
Who Do You Love
and I’m Bad,
Howlin’ Wolf’s Evil
and Forty Four,
Billy Boy Arnold’s I Wish
You Would and I
Ain’t Got You, and Sonny Boy Williamson’s Don’t Start Me Talking.
Joseph Leon (Jody) Williams was
born in Mobile, Alabama on February 3, 1935 and moved to Chicago around age
five. After he began exploring music on harmonica and jaw harp, he met Ellas
McDaniel (the future Bo Diddley) at a talent show. Bo taught him an open guitar
tuning and they began working the streets together in 1951. Williams began
playing clubs at age 17 and went on to record under his own name (including his
influential instrumental anthem Lucky
Lou). Williams was the first Chicago blues guitarist to master B.B.
King’s stringbending-based approach and influenced the young modernists of the
day such as Otis Rush and Buddy Guy. He served for years as the house guitarist
at Chess Records and backed a varied list of artists including Jimmy
Witherspoon, Floyd Dixon, Dale Hawkins and Bobby Charles. He played on Buddy
Morrow’s big band version of Rib
Joint, and dueled with B.B. King on an Otis Spann 45 for the
Checker label. He also played on multiple rock ‘n’ roll package tours. In 1958
he was called to the army, serving his tour of duty in Germany. Returning to
Chicago, Williams studied computers and engineering. He left the music business
in the 1960s.
Williams returned to public
performance in 2000. Focusing on being a band leader and songwriter, Williams
recorded two very well-received CDs of predominantly original material, 2002’s Return Of A Legend and
2004's You Left Me In the
Dark, both for Evidence Records. Living
Blues said, "Williams is a modern-day standard bearer for a
still-vital style that continues to impress, exhilarate and inspire fifty years
after he first helped create it." The success of the CDs led him to play
festivals all over the country in addition to dates overseas. He was inducted
into the Blues Hall Of Fame in Memphis in 2013 and into the Chicago Blues Hall
Of Fame in 2015.
Williams is survived by his wife
Jeanne Hadenfelt, his daughters Marilyn Murphy and Sissy Williams, sons Anthony
and Jason Williams, grandchildren Justin, Noel, Joseph, Joshua, River and Ethan
Williams and Gerold Murphy, and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral arrangements are as follows:
Funeral arrangements are as follows:
Sunday, December 9
Leak & Sons Funeral Home, 7838 S. Cottage Grove Avenue, Chicago, IL
Leak & Sons Funeral Home, 7838 S. Cottage Grove Avenue, Chicago, IL
2:00PM - Wake
3:00PM - Service
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