Buy your Blues and Jazz Tickets at TicketsNow.com.    
Click here to view our Site Map
Your Location | Select Location
Home > Concert Tickets > Blues and Jazz Tickets > BB King Tickets  
B.B. King Tickets at TicketsNow

BB King Tickets

BB King helped pioneer the blues music movement with hits “I Like to Live the Love,” “Love Me Tender,” and “To Know You is to Love You.” Electric blues guitar doesn't get any better than BB King! Don't miss your chance to catch BB King LIVE! Buy your BB King tickets now!
All Shows


[7 of 9 customers found this review helpful]

Fabulous Show What a class act Mr. King
By Sundancer from UTAH on 8/23/2010

Fabulous shows, cant wait to see him at Deer Valley! What a great performer. Mr. King is a legend and those not willing to listen to a small amount of folksie chit-chat should not bother the rest of us with bad mannners and leave their space at the performance for someone kinder. If you want music w/o the essence of the performer buy all the albums.I love the man his voice, his instrument and his presence. He may not be able to come to us for many more years. If you invite him into your town, respect him enough to listen. Inviting him and not extending this courtesy is like inviting a person to dine at your home only because you want to hear them rave about your culinary expertise but not allowing them to express themselves or get to know them as human beings. You might try listening, you might learn something.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

[6 of 9 customers found this review helpful]

BB King is the real deal!
By Sunny from NYC on 2/16/2010
Cons:
Theatre was big let down

Anyone bored with BB King for the few minutes he joked around and connected with his audience needs a lesson is manners and respect. BB King at 84 is till in command of his beloved Lucille and moved his fingers along her strings as smoothly as ever. The strength of his voice(while sitting down mind you)and his soulful, melodic tune had me from the moment he began doing his thing.I saw him this past weekend 2/13/10 in NYC. He showcased with Buddy Guy. Buddy in and of himself is a hard act to follow.Only the likes of BB King and his off the hook band could do that. And they did it flawlessly. The only down side was the United Palace Theatre. What a dump!The Marquee still had Rev. Ike plastered up top. I found that insulting to the performers and truly tacky and cheap. They have a venue of upcoming performances and I would love to see some of them. As a home grown New Yorker I feel it's my right to ask that the owners of this place step it up a bit. The place is real big hot mess. My boots were stuck to the floor by intermission since they allow food and drinks into the seating area.The Allman Brothers will be here in March. Hope United Palace is up to snuff by then. They will be there a few weeks running. How about advertising that marquee???

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

[0 of 6 customers found this review helpful]

Too Much Talk and Not Enough Music
By Lakesha from Tucson, AZ on 11/21/2009

Best part of concert in Tucson AZ was Lukas Nelson & The Promise of the Real....the opening act. Lukas rocked the house and BB put us to sleep with way toooo much talking about a history that is from the 1930's!!! I can get that for free on History Channel. I was there for some good blues....guess he's past his prime.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

[4 of 6 customers found this review helpful]

BB & Buddy
By ray from nyc on 8/27/2009
Cons:
What is there not to like

we are talking about not one but 2 lifetimes of the blues, the blues are ageless and so are these 2

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

Recently Viewed Events
 
Aretha FranklinFinish Now
How Buying & Selling Concert Tickets, Theater Tickets & Sporting Events Tickets works at TicketsNow
TicketsNow Guarantee: Authentic Tickets Or Your Money Back! - TicketsNow
Click here for TicketsNow Terms and Conditions.
Insider Email Alerts
Sign up for TicketsNow emails, get 10% off your first order.
Hot Events

B.B. King Concert Tickets

When it comes to the blues, nobody does it better than B.B. King. Considered one of the greatest guitarists of all time, King has been attracting crowds for more than 60 years, and though he is approaching 90 years old, people still line up for B.B. King tickets so they can watch a piece of rock history go to work.

B.B. King got his start in 1949 when he released several singles, and although they failed to chart well, it was clear that the young guitarist from Itta Bena, Mississippi, had something special. In 1956, he released his full-length debut, Singin' the Blues, and he was well on his way to becoming a household name. Even from the beginning it seemed as if King was destined to be the master that would inspire talents like Eric Clapton and Jeff Beck.

Throughout the 1960s and 70s, King was one of the most prolific artists in the music world. Among the highlights was the release of 1968's Lucille, an album named after one of his many famous guitars. The album gave him mainstream success that would follow King throughout the rest of his career. By this time King was already rolling up on stage with greats Buddy Guy, Ted Nugent and even Jimi Hendrix.

Even as he got older, King continued to turn out album after album. In 2008, at 82, he released his 24th album One Kind Favor, which earned him a Grammy. Don’t miss your opportunity to check out this blues legend in the flesh; grab your B.B. King concert tickets today!

BB King Biography

Universally hailed as the reigning king of the blues, the legendary B.B. King is without a doubt the single most important electric guitarist of the last half century. His bent notes and staccato picking style have influenced legions of contemporary bluesmen, while his gritty and confident voice -- capable of wringing every nuance from any lyric -- provides a worthy match for his passionate playing. Between 1951 and 1985, King notched an impressive 74 entries on ~Billboard's R&B charts, and he was one of the few full-fledged blues artists to score a major pop hit when his 1970 smash The Thrill Is Gone crossed over to mainstream success (engendering memorable appearances on The Ed Sullivan Show and American Bandstand). Since that time, he has partnered with such musicians as Eric Clapton and U2 while managing his own acclaimed solo career, all the while maintaining his immediately recognizable style on the electric guitar.

The seeds of Riley B. King's enduring talent were sown deep in the blues-rich Mississippi Delta, where he was born in 1925 near the town of Itta Bena. He was shuttled between his mother's home and his grandmother's residence as a child, his father having left the family when King was very young. The youth put in long days working as a sharecropper and devoutly sang the Lord's praises at church before moving to Indianola -- another town located in the heart of the Delta -- in 1943.

Country and gospel music left an indelible impression on King's musical mindset as he matured, along with the styles of blues greats (T-Bone Walker and Lonnie Johnson) and jazz geniuses (Charlie Christian and Django Reinhardt). In 1946, he set off for Memphis to look up his cousin, a rough-edged country blues guitarist named Bukka White. For ten invaluable months, White taught his eager young relative the finer points of playing blues guitar. After returning briefly to Indianola and the sharecropper's eternal struggle with his wife Martha, King returned to Memphis in late 1948. This time, he stuck around for a while.

King was soon broadcasting his music live via Memphis radio station WDIA, a frequency that had only recently switched to a pioneering all-black format. Local club owners preferred that their attractions also held down radio gigs so they could plug their nightly appearances on the air. When WDIA DJ Maurice Hot Rod Hulbert exited his air shift, King took over his record-spinning duties. At first tagged The Peptikon Boy (an alcohol-loaded elixir that rivaled Hadacol) when WDIA put him on the air, King's on-air handle became the Beale Street Blues Boy, later shortened to Blues Boy and then a far snappier B.B.

1949 was a four-star breakthrough year for King. He cut his first four tracks for Jim Bulleit's Bullet Records (including a number entitled Miss Martha King after his wife), then signed a contract with the Bihari Brothers' Los Angeles-based RPM Records. King cut a plethora of sides in Memphis over the next couple of years for RPM, many of them produced by a relative newcomer named Sam Phillips (whose Sun Records was still a distant dream at that point in time). Phillips was independently producing sides for both the Biharis and Chess his stable also included Howlin' Wolf, Rosco Gordon, and fellow WDIA personality Rufus Thomas.

The Biharis also recorded some of King's early output themselves, erecting portable recording equipment wherever they could locate a suitable facility. King's first national R&B chart-topper in 1951, Three O'Clock Blues (previously waxed by Lowell Fulson), was cut at a Memphis YMCA. King's Memphis running partners included vocalist Bobby Bland, drummer Earl Forest, and ballad-singing pianist Johnny Ace. When King hit the road to promote Three O'Clock Blues, he handed the group, known as the Beale Streeters, over to Ace.

It was during this era that King first named his beloved guitar Lucille. Seems that while he was playing a joint in a little Arkansas town called ~Twist, fisticuffs broke out between two jealous suitors over a lady. The brawlers knocked over a kerosene-filled garbage pail that was heating the place, setting the room ablaze. In the frantic scramble to escape the flames, King left his guitar inside. He foolishly ran back in to retrieve it, dodging the flames and almost losing his life. When the smoke had cleared, King learned that the lady who had inspired such violent passion was named Lucille. Plenty of Lucilles have passed through his hands since Gibson has even marketed a B.B.-approved guitar model under the name.

The 1950s saw King establish himself as a perennially formidable hitmaking force in the R&B field. Recording mostly in L.A. (the WDIA air shift became impossible to maintain by 1953 due to King's endless touring) for RPM and its successor Kent, King scored 20 chart items during that musically tumultuous decade, including such memorable efforts as You Know I Love You (1952) Woke Up This Morning and Please Love Me (1953) When My Heart Beats like a Hammer, Whole Lotta' Love, and You Upset Me Baby (1954) Every Day I Have the Blues (another Fulson remake), the dreamy blues ballad Sneakin' Around, and Ten Long Years (1955) Bad Luck, Sweet Little Angel, and a Platters-like On My Word of Honor (1956) and Please Accept My Love (first cut by Jimmy Wilson) in 1958. King's guitar attack grew more aggressive and pointed as the decade progressed, influencing a legion of up-and-coming axemen across the nation.

In 1960, King's impassioned two-sided revival of Joe Turner's Sweet Sixteen became another mammoth seller, and his Got a Right to Love My Baby and Partin' Time weren't far behind. But Kent couldn't hang onto a star like King forever (and he may have been tired of watching his new LPs consigned directly into the 99-cent bins on the Biharis' cheapo Crown logo). King moved over to ABC-Paramount Records in 1962, following the lead of Lloyd Price, Ray Charles, and before long, Fats Domino.

In November of 1964, the guitarist cut his seminal Live at the Regal album at the fabled Chicago theater and excitement virtually leaped out of the grooves. That same year, he enjoyed a minor hit with How Blue Can You Get, one of his many signature tunes. 1966's Don't Answer the Door and Paying the Cost to Be the Boss two years later were Top Ten R&B entries, and the socially charged and funk-tinged Why I Sing the Blues just missed achieving the same status in 1969.

Across-the-board stardom finally arrived in 1969 for the deserving guitarist, when he crashed the mainstream consciousness in a big way with a stately, violin-drenched minor-key treatment of Roy Hawkins' The Thrill Is Gone that was quite a departure from the concise horn-powered backing King had customarily employed. At last, pop audiences were convinced that they should get to know King better: not only was the track a number-three R&B smash, it vaulted to the upper reaches of the pop lists as well.

King was one of a precious few bluesmen to score hits consistently during the 1970s, and for good reason: he wasn't afraid to experiment with the idiom. In 1973, he ventured to Philadelphia to record a pair of huge sellers, To Know You Is to Love You and I Like to Live the Love, with the same silky rhythm section that powered the hits of the Spinners and the O'Jays. In 1976, he teamed up with his old cohort Bland to wax some well-received duets. And in 1978, he joined forces with the jazzy Crusaders to make the gloriously funky Never Make Your Move Too Soon and an inspiring When It All Comes Down. Occasionally, the daring deviations veered off-course Love Me Tender, an album that attempted to harness the Nashville country sound, was an artistic disaster.

Although his concerts were consistently as satisfying as anyone in the field (King asserted himself as a road warrior of remarkable resiliency who gigged an average of 300 nights a year), King tempered his studio activities somewhat. Nevertheless, his 1993 MCA disc Blues Summit was a return to form, as King duetted with his peers (John Lee Hooker, Etta James, Fulson, Koko Taylor) on a program of standards. Other notable releases from that period include 1999's Let the Good Times Roll: The Music of Louis Jordan and 2000's Riding with the King, a collaboration with Eric Clapton. King celebrated his 80th birthday in 2005 with the star-studded album 80, which featured guest spots from such varied artists as Gloria Estefan, John Mayer, and Van Morrison. Live was issued in 2008 that same year, King released an engaging return to pure blues, One Kind Favor, which eschewed the slick sounds of his 21st century work for a stripped-back approach. ~ Bill Dahl, Rovi