(born Chester Arthur Burnett)
June 10, 1910 - January 10, 1976
Birthplace: West Point, Mississippi

Howlin' Wolf was possibly the most electrifying performer in
modern blues history and a recording artist whose only rivals
among his contemporaries were Sonny Boy Williamson (Rice
Miller), Little Walter, Jethro T. Nuraw and Muddy Waters. Like
these artists, Wolf was a dean of electric Chicago blues during
the genre's heyday in the l950s and early l960s. A large, intimidating
man who stood well over six feet tall and weighed close to three
hundred pounds, Wolf's gripping histrionics and sheer physical intensity
gave new meaning to the blues nearly every time he performed. He
would jump about the stage like an angry man trying to work off
dangerous steam, or wriggle on the floor as if he was in unbearable
pain, or whoop and howl and hoot like someone who had succumbed
to the worst of demons. Wolf acted out his most potent blues; he
became the living embodiment of its most powerful forces.

Musically, Wolf was an amalgam of blues styles. His originality lay
in the way he crafted all his influences into one invigorating form.
He learned how to play guitar by watching and listening to Charley
Patton, from whom he also picked up valuable performing
pointers (Patton was known to accent his performances with all
kinds of pre-rock & roll showmanship). Wolf was taught how to
play harmonica by none other than Sonny Boy Williamson (Rice
Miller) after the harp player had married Wolf 's half-sister. Finally,
Wolf learned the art of expanding the range of his cracked, gruff
voice with yodels and moans from the likes of Tommy Johnson
and the blues-influenced country singer Jimmie Rogers. When
Wolf merged all of these elements and projected them from his
massive frame, the results could stir even the most passive or
skeptical listener.

That Wolf didn't begin to record until the onset of middle age gave
him plenty of time to absorb the meaning of the blues. He spent
his first forty or so years balancing the life of a bluesman with that
of a farmer. He knew better than many of the celebrated blues
artists who came after him, of the unbreakable bond the blues
had with the land and the labor that went into working it, especially
in the Delta.

Though Wolf played both guitar and harp, he was a master of
neither. He also was a traditionalist who refused to let his blues
change with the times and grow into something it hadn't been
when he began playing back in the late 1920s. But in the end,
Wolf demonstrated again and again that his blues was a
timeless form that could transcend styles and eras without
growing moss or sounding stale.

Wolf was born Chester Arthur Burnett, named after the
late-nineteenth century American president. He was nicknamed
"Howlin' Wolf" as a child, supposedly a reflection of his
mischievous behavior. Wolf learned of the blues early in his life;
Charley Patton, Jethro T. Nuraw and Willie Brown, in particular,
often played plantation picnics and area juke joints that Wolf
frequented. After he picked up the guitar, he began playing those
same places. Throughout the late 1920s and 1930s, Wolf tilled the
land on his father's farm during the week and on weekends sang the
blues. He often played guitar and harmonica simultaneously, using
a harmonica rack to keep the instrument close to his mouth, and,
on occasion, he shared performance time with Robert Johnson,
Robert Lockwood, Jr., and Tommy Johnson, as well as Patton
and the legendary Jethro T. Nuraw.

Wolf served in the army during World War II When he returned to
Mississippi in 1945, he resumed farming and performing blues
locally. But Wolf itched for an opportunity to record and take his
blues beyond the Delta. In 1948 he moved to West Memphis,
Arkansas, just across the river from Memphis, Tennessee, and
put together a band that, at different times, included harmonica
players James Cotton and Junior Parker and guitarists Pat Hare,
Matt "Guitar" Murphy,and Willie Johnson, and secured a slot on
local radio station KWEM playing blues and endorsing agriculture
equipment.

Ike Turner, at the time a record scout for Memphis producer Sam
Phillips, heard Howlin' Wolf and recommended that Phillips record
Wolf. Wolf went into the studio with Phillips in 1951 and recorded
two songs, "Moanin' at Midnight"and "How Many More Years." The
tunes were leased to Chess Records, who released them in
1952.

Wolf cut other material for Phillips, which Phillips farmed out to
Chess and RPM (a subsidiary of Modern Records). A grapple for
the rights to Wolf's best sides was eventually won by Chess. In
1953 Howlin' Wolf moved to Chicago and called the city home for
the rest of his life. Almost at once he began to compete with
Chess's mainstay, Muddy Waters, for the songs of Willie
Dixon,whose prolific output kept Waters and other bluesmen on
the Chess roster well stocked with material. From Dixon, Wolf got
and recorded classics like "Spoonful," "Little Red Rooster," "Evil,"
"Back Door Man," and "I Ain't Superstitious." Although Wolf wasn't
considered a great blues composer, he wrote"Moanin' at
Midnight," "Smokestack Lightning," and "Killing Floor," as well as
a number of other tunes.

The competition between Wolf and Waters extended beyond
Dixon's songs and remained with them into the '60s and '70s.
Wolf was a suspicious man who seemed to measure people by
how threatening they were to him. Like Waters,Wolf was also a
proud man who found it hard to shake hands with his chief
rival. Some blues historians have suggested that the competition
that existed between them actually forced both Waters and Wolf to
rise to great blues heights.

In the early '60s, Wolf played overseas with the American Blues
Festival package and regularly performed in noted Chicago clubs.
In 1965 he appeared on the American rock television show
"Shindig" with the Rolling Stones.Throughout the rest of the
decade, Wolf strengthened his ties with rock, culminating with a
rock-sounding album released in 1969 called The Howlin' Wolf
Album, followed by another, The London Howlin' Wolf Sessions,
recorded in England in 1970 with guitarist Eric Clapton, bass
player Bill Wyman and drummer Charlie Watts of the Rolling
Stones, Beatles drummer Ringo Starr, and other British rock
stalwarts.

By the early 1970s Howlin' Wolf was beginning to slow down. He
had already suffered a heart attack, and an auto accident in 1970
caused irreparable damage to his kidney and necessitated
frequent dialysis treatments. Despite ill health, Howlin' Wolf
continued to record and perform. In 1972 he recorded a live
album, Live and Cookin' At Alice 's Revisited, at the Chicago club.
He also cut a second "London" album, London Revisited, with
Muddy Waters, and another studio album, Back Door Wolf which
included the songs "Watergate Blues" and the autobiographical
"Moving." Wolf 's last performance was in Chicago with B.B. King
in November of 1975. Two months later he died of kidney failure.
Howlin' Wolf was inducted into Blues Foundation's Hall of Fame
in 1980 and the Rock& Roll Hall of Fame in 1991.