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The historic building at 2120 South Michigan
Avenue in Chicago is more than the site of the old Chess Records
Studio; it's also the home of Willie Dixon's Blues Heaven
Foundation, which provides scholarships, royalty recovery advice,
emergency assistance to blues performers in need, as well as
sponsoring a "blues in school" program.
But there's more: besides housing the foundation's charitable
operations, Blues Heaven also preserves and perpetuates the blues
through performances and displays.
Outside the building is Willie Dixon's
Blues Garden, an open air performance stage surrounded by banners
and silhouettes of famous blues performers.

For those who are a little rusty in
recognizing silhouettes, those on the fence represent, from left to
right, Bo Diddley with his trademark square guitar, Albert King with
his pipe, and Koko Taylor, who we would call today "a blues
diva". During the warm weather, seasoned and aspiring
musicians perform their interpretations of the blues on the stage at
the rear of the garden.
Inside the building, in the room where
Chess used to press, package and ship its records, various rotating
memorabilia displays of Chess performers stand in tribute of the
music created within its walls.
When I visited, the first case in the
room contained items from Bo Diddley's career including a test 45
rpm record pressing of his 1965 "Hey, Good Lookin' "
recording, his on-stage performance outfit from one tour, and his
trademark badge hat and boots. The law
enforcement-related badge was from the South Carolina Military
Academy Police.
Any one who doesn't believe
Bo is a prolific recorder would become a believer just seeing this
pile of 33 rpm record albums laying in the case!
I have a few of these records, but
also have quite a few more that are not on display like "Where
It All Began ", "Bo Diddley - 24 Hits ", "The Bo
Diddley London Sessions " and the famous live album from a
1960s concert, "Surfing With Bo Diddley " album.
Several rows over from this case was
another one displaying items from Koko Taylor's career including a
set of her trademark sequined shoes and earrings she wore on
one concert tour.

If you look closely, you will
notice a 33 rpm record which is the first test copy of her
biggest hit, the Willie Dixon-written " Wang Dang Doodle
". It's original condition is highlight by the lack of a label
of any kind--someone used a pointed instrument such as an awl to
scratch into the record's center section: " Koko
Taylor Wang Dang Doodle ". (For you youngsters, a
33 rpm record was wide with a small spindle hole; a 45 had a two
inch hole in the center spindle area!)
Back in the old front office for the
Chess Studios, now the front office for Blues Heavens, in a crystal
case, resides the recording industry's silent and permanent
acknowledgment of Willie Dixon's role in influencing blues music
while also becoming the record holder for the most musical
copyrights--his Grammy award.
(Willie's nearest nearest
competitor is Prince who is a distant second in the number of songs
written and copyrighted).
Upstairs, across the hall from the
studio, hangs Willie's performance suit, hat and guitar in the room
where the recording artists used to wait and warm up for their
sessions.

Note Wille's hat, often
seen in photographs of him, hanging on the wall...
...well, look who got to
try it on! (even if it did fade into the photograph's
background a little bit!)

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