Boom Boom

Greatly Appreciated

BOOM BOOM
 
 
“Boom Boom”  is a song written by American blues singer/guitarist John Lee Hooker and recorded in 1961.  Although a blues song, music critic Charles Shaar Murray calls it “the greatest pop song he ever wrote”.  The song is one of Hooker’s most identifiable and enduring and “among the tunes that every band on the [early 1960s UK] R&B circuit simply had to play”.  “Boom Boom” was the first studio recording by Eric Clapton, who recorded it as a demo with the Yardbirds in 1963, and which was released as a single in the Netherlands and Germany in 1966.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

As with many of the British Invasion bands, the Yardbirds initially played American R&B and blues songs rather than their own compositions.  As reported in Wikipedia, during their days at the Crawdaddy Club:  “They drew their repertoire from the Chicago blues of Howlin’ WolfMuddy WatersBo DiddleySonny Boy Williamson II, and Elmore James, including ‘Smokestack Lightning’,Good Morning Little School Girl’,Boom Boom’, ‘I Wish You Would’, ‘Rollin’ and Tumblin’’, and ‘I’m a Man’.”  In fact, Eric Clapton left the Yardbirds in March 1965 as a protest when the band finally got a hit single with a song that did not come from this milieu, “For Your Love(written by Graham Gouldman, later a member of 10cc). 

 

(May 2014)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021