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Live: B.B. King and Bono at the Kodak Theatre

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They highlight the Thelonious Monk Institute benefit that includes a saxophone competition and appearances by Herbie Hancock, Robert Cray and others.

Invite Bono and the Edge to a night celebrating B.B. King, and odds are pretty good there will be some “Rattle and Hum" in the air.

Lucky music fans who attended the Thelonious Monk Institute's annual benefit show at the Kodak Theatre on Sunday watched as the 83-year-old King, backed by a host of jazz and blues glitterati and half of the biggest band in the world, delivered a spirited rendering of “When Love Comes to Town," originally featured on U2's landmark album from 1988.

It was the highlight of a night dedicated to “The Blues and Jazz: Two American Classics," a program the institute organized that centered on its 21st annual saxophone competition and a potpourri of inspired live collaborations.

From there, it was all about the wildly influential sounds of New Orleans and the Mississippi Delta. Soundtrack favorite Terence Blanchard led an ensemble of Monk Institute students through a spirited “Bourbon Street Parade," and blues birthplace (and recent Monk Institute beneficiary) Dockery Farms was saluted in a three-song tribute from guitarists Joe Louis Walker, Robert Cray and Keb' Mo', who seemed to have stepped right out of history with a slim-cut suit and a soulful rendition of “Walking Blues."

But the night belonged to Founder's Award winner King, who drew the evening's entire lineup for the show's finale, including Hancock, Wayne Shorter and George Duke. As the music swelled to a close, Bono genuflected at the foot of the seated blues legend and his six-string companion, Lucille; another loyal subject forever indebted to the King.

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