Matt Murphy (blues guitarist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Matt Murphy
Born December 27, 1929
Alias(es) "Guitar"
Genre(s) Blues
Notable guitars Cort Signature model
Years active

Matt "Guitar" Murphy (born 27 December 1929 in Sunflower, Mississippi) is an American blues guitarist.

Matt Murphy was already a legend among serious guitarists by the 1960's, famed for the incredibly fast and intricate blues riffs that would soon change rock and roll. While white rock and rollers were still playing the slow melodic riffs of "Love One Another" or the slow fuzzy riffs of "Wiid Thing," a few (like Eric Clapton, Rick Derringer and Jeff Beck) were listening to the flying fingers of BB King and Matt Murphy and trying to emulate them. In a 1990's BBC interview, Clapton talked about listening to an "old" Matt Murphy recording in 1966 and thinking "That's what I want to learn to play."[citation needed]

Murphy didn't have a band of his own until 1982, but played with many famous bands. Among them (more or less chronologically):

Some of these took a lot of his lifetime (for example, he played with Memphis Slim for 20 years in a row), some were just sessions during his work at the Chess Records (obviously, Otis Rush did not need a full-time guitarist, he could play well himself, unlike piano-player Memphis Slim).

He can be seen in the films The Blues Brothers and Blues Brothers 2000, where he plays Aretha Franklin's hen-pecked husband.

Murphy's signature model guitar is manufactured by Cort Guitars.

[edit] External links

In other languages