Christone Ingram was born in Clarksdale, Mississippi in 1999. A cousin of country star Charley Pride, he began playing the drums when he was six and picked up the bass when he was nine. He developed an interest in the blues when he saw a documentary on Muddy Waters with his father, and when he was 11, his parents bought him his first guitar and he soon enrolled in music classes at Clarksdale's Delta Blues Museum. Mississippi blues musicians Bill Howl-N-Madd Perry and Daddy Rich, who taught at the museum, saw potential in him, and Perry nicknamed the youngster Kingfish when they performed at a local venue called the Ground Zero Blues Club. In 2014, Ingram performed for Michelle Obama at the White House when a group of students from the Delta Blues Museum played in the capital. 2015 saw Ingram presented with the Rising Star Award by the Rhythm & Blues Foundation, and Tony Coleman, who played in B.B. King's road band, liked Ingram's music enough that he later arranged for the young guitarist to meet King at a festival in Mississippi.
Blues guitarist Eric Gales invited Ingram to perform on his 2017 album Middle of the Road, and blues legend Buddy Guy, funk icon Bootsy Collins, Nirvana and Foo Fighters member Dave Grohl, and hip-hop trailblazer Rakim were all singing Ingram's praises. The producers of the television series Luke Cage saw clips of Ingram performing online and cast him in a supporting role on the show, as well as using his interpretations of "The Thrill Is Gone" and "I Put a Spell on You" on the soundtrack. After completing high school, Ingram ramped up his touring schedule, and was regularly playing clubs and blues festivals in the United States, Europe, and the Netherlands. In 2018, he traveled to Nashville to begin work on his debut album with producer Tom Hambridge, who had previously worked with Buddy Guy, Susan Tedeschi, and George Thorogood. Featuring guest appearances by Buddy Guy and Keb' Mo', the album Kingfish was released by Alligator Records in May 2019. It was nominated in the "Best Traditionalist Blues Album" category at the 62nd Grammys awards show and it won Album of the Year at the Blues Music Awards; it was one of five trophies Ingram took home that evening.
Ingram returned with his second album, 662, in the summer of 2021. Like Kingfish, the Grammy-nominated 662 was produced by Tom Hambridge and featured a collection of songs largely co-written by Ingram. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi