Buster Benton (July 19, 1932 – January 20, 1996) was
an American blues guitarist and singer, who played guitar in
Willie Dixon's Blues All-Stars, and is
best known for his solo rendition of the Dixon-penned song "Spider in My
Stew." He was tenacious and in the latter part of his lengthy career,
despite the amputation of parts of both his legs, Benton never stopped
playing his own version of Chicago blues. Biography
Arley Benton was born in Texarkana, Arkansas.
Whilst residing in Toledo, Ohio, during the mid 1950s, and having been
influenced by Sam Cooke and
B.B. King, Benton began playing blues
music. By 1959, he was leading his own band in Chicago. During the
1960s, local record labels, such as Melloway, Alteen, Sonic, and
Twinight Records released several Benton singles, before in 1971 he
joined Willie Dixon. Indeed, a lack of opportunity in the early 1960s
meant that Benton gave up playing professionally for several years, and
he worked as an auto mechanic. Benton's earlier work was an amalgam of
blues and soul, which he confusingly dubbed 'disco blues'. However,
according to Music journalist, Bill Dahl, "in the late 1970s, when the
popularity of blues music was at low ebb, Benton's recordings,
particularly for Ronn Records, were a breath of fresh air."
Benton became a fixture in Dixon's Blues All-Stars for some time. A 1973
album by Dixon's Blues All-Stars, featuring Benton, The All Star Blues
World Of Maestro Willie Dixon and his Chicago Blues Band, was issued on
Spivey.
Dixon was credited as the songwriter of Benton's best known song,
"Spider in My Stew." Released on the Shreveport-based Jewel Records
label, it gave Benton a modicum of fame, and his 1974 follow-up, "Money
Is the Name of the Game," helped to cement his standing. Benton's 1978
effort for Jewel's Ronn Records subsidiary (also titled Spider in My
Stew) became recognized as one of the more engaging Chicago blues albums
of its time.
Benton recorded three further albums on the Ichiban label, but in
comparison to his work on the Ronn label, they were uncommercial. One
such LP offering was 1989's, Money's The Name of The Game, produced by
Gary B.B. Coleman. Benton also
issued a record on the Blue Phoenix label. Benton's fortitude did not go
unnoticed. He suffered from the effects of diabetes and received
dialysis for the final years of his life. In addition, in 1993, part of
his right leg was amputated due to poor circulation, having already lost
a portion of the other some ten years previously. He soldiered on,
playing his brand of the blues up to his death. However, as journalist,
Tony Russell, stated in his book The Blues: From
Robert Johnson to
Robert Cray, Benton "never found another
money spider".
Benton died in January 1996, in Chicago, from the effects of diabetes,
at age 63.
His work has appeared on a number of compilation albums, including
Chicago Blues Festival: 1969-1986 (2001)