Bluegrass fiddler
Kenny Baker was born on June 26, 1926, in Jenkins, KY. Both his father and grandfather were fiddlers, and by eight years old,
Kenny himself had picked up the instrument. After a stint in the navy,
Baker returned to Kentucky, where he worked in the coal mines and played fiddle and some guitar at local dances. In 1953,
country vocalist
Don Gibson hired
Baker for his band at WNOX in Knoxville, TN. During his tenure with
Gibson,
Baker expanded his stylistic range, incorporating the smoother
jazz violin style of
Stephane Grappelli. He also began to develop his "long-bow" style of playing, which blended and elongated notes much more than the traditional chop of
bluegrass fiddle.
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Bluegrass fiddler
Kenny Baker was born on June 26, 1926, in Jenkins, KY. Both his father and grandfather were fiddlers, and by eight years old,
Kenny himself had picked up the instrument. After a stint in the navy,
Baker returned to Kentucky, where he worked in the coal mines and played fiddle and some guitar at local dances.
In 1953,
country vocalist
Don Gibson hired
Baker for his band at WNOX in Knoxville, TN. During his tenure with
Gibson,
Baker expanded his stylistic range, incorporating the smoother
jazz violin style of
Stephane Grappelli. He also began to develop his "long-bow" style of playing, which blended and elongated notes much more than the traditional chop of
bluegrass fiddle. Of his style,
Baker would later comment "
bluegrass is nothing but a hillbilly version of
jazz."
In 1955, he released Baker's Dozen, a no-frills
bluegrass picking album that featured a young
Sam Bush. By 1957,
Baker was playing
bluegrass full-time as a member of
Bill Monroe's band,
the Bluegrass Boys. It proved to be a lasting partnership -- he became the longest running
Bluegrass Boy. He worked with
Monroe off and on over the next 30 years, leaving during the lean times to focus on his farm or for work in the mines. But it was as a
Bluegrass Boy that
Baker influenced countless latter-day fiddle players with his easy, traditional style.
Baker issued another solo album, Portrait of a Bluegrass Fiddler, in 1969, capitalizing on the popular resurgence of the genre on the heels of the late-'60s
folk movement. He also rejoined
Monroe's group for good, playing with
the Bluegrass Boys through the 1980s. In 1989, he teamed with dobro king
Josh Graves in a
bluegrass supergroup called the Masters. Also featuring banjoist
Eddie Adcock and mandolin virtuoso Jesse McReynolds, the Masters released two albums, including a Grammy-nominated, self-titled 1989 debut.
Baker continued to perform throughout the 1990s, lodging a series of tours backed by the National Council on Traditional Arts. After an almost ten-year recording hiatus,
Baker returned to wax in 2000 with Cotton Baggin'. The album included contributions from old friends
Graves, McReynolds, and Blaine Sprouse. He returned in 2002 with the acclaimed Spider Bit the Baby. ~ Johnny Loftus, All Music Guide
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