A monumental figure in American music, Big Joe Turner was the premiere blues shouter of the post-war era with a roaring voice and hard-swinging style that prefigured rock & roll. Turner started performing in the late 1920s as a singer for Bennie Moten, Count Basie, and others. Over the next couple of decades, he helped define the boogie-woogie, R&B, and jump-blues styles, alongside the likes of Louis Jordan, Wynonie Harris, and Roy Brown. In the early '50s, he laid down the template for rock & roll with hits like "Chains of Love," "Honey Hush," and the landmark "Shake, Rattle ...