John Mayall, 1933-2024 – the guitar world pays tribute

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 British Blues musician John Mayall performs onstage at Park West, Chicago, Illinois, June 13, 1982.
Credit: Paul Natkin/Getty Images

In the wake of the news that John Mayall has died at the age of 90, the guitar world has come out to pay tribute to the influential British blues pioneer.

Mayall – who masterminded the Bluesbreakers, brought blues to a new audience in the UK in the ’60s, and gave a platform to a number of guitarists all destined for greatness – passed away in his home in California on Monday (July 22) surrounded by his family.

In an especially touching post on Instagram, Joe Bonamassa calls Mayall “a wonderful guy that changed the game for all of us”, and said it was “an honor of a lifetime” to have called him a friend.

“I loved this man. I loved this man's music,” Bonamassa writes. “Any suburban white kid at all interested in the blues from the 60s, 70's 80's or 90's learned to play guitar from the "Beano" album.

“John's importance in music is as profound as the guitarist that he hired. Yes, he employed Eric Clapton, Peter Green, Mick Taylor, Mick Fleetwood, Mickey Waller, Andy Fraser, Walter Trout and countless other legends of the blues with The Bluesbreakers but there is something more though than just his musical legacy.”

Trout, who played with Mayall in one iteration of the Bluesbreakers, also paid tribute to his friend and former bandmate, writing, “He is and will always be my musical mentor. We just lost a giant. I loved him like a father, and I always will.”

Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger, who linked up with Mick Taylor after the guitarist left the Bluesbreakers, praised Mayall for his “wonderful eye for talented young musicians” and called him “a great pioneer of British blues”.

“He… had a wonderful eye for talented young musicians, including Mick Taylor – who he recommended to me after Brian Jones died – ushering in a new era for the Stones,” Jagger says.

Further tributes can be found below.