Tributes to Kenny after his death last week from complications of a stroke flowed faster than a mountain stream after three days of rain. But the highest compliment was paid years ago by his former boss, who recalled, “There’s never been a better one.”
Being a sideman to Bill Monroe was never easy. The rule, or so it seems from countless players who passed through the Blue Grass Boys, was his way or the highway. That must have been an especially bitter pill to swallow for someone with Kenny’s talents, and he did leave – frequently. It wasn’t always about the domineering boss. Sometimes, Kenny just needed to make money so he returned to the mines or worked his farm. But Kenny couldn’t do without the music. And Bill, in turn, couldn’t be without the talent.
“Kenny Baker was the most identifiable sound in Bill Monroe’s band, other than perhaps Bill Monroe, himself,” says guitarist Jim Hurst, who played twice with Monroe, including once as a 7-year-old who had to stand on a chair to play bass for the master.
His dad was a fiddler, too, but music was not Kenny’s initial career choice. First he worked in the Kentucky coal mines, then served a tour in the Navy. His first lasting gig was with Don Gibson, replacing Marion Sumner in the western swing band.
While much of the attention after Kenny’s death focused on his ties to the most famous name in bluegrass, he leaves a weighty discography of his own. His 13 albums include Portrait of a Bluegrass Fiddler (1969), Baker’s Dozen (1970), Frost on the Pumpkin (1976) and Spider Bit the Baby (2002).
There were also some terrific collaborations, including Dry and Dusty (1973) with Alan Murphy and Bob Black, and his stint with The Masters, a bluegrass supergroup that also featured Josh Graves, Eddie Adcock and Jesse McReynolds.
Kenny Baker didn’t write the songs, but he wrote the book on bluegrass fiddling. Give him a fresh listen, in the context of the era, and hear an artist far ahead of his time. And the next time hear Patrick McAvinue or some other young fiddle whiz, tip your hat to Kenny Baker, who showed the way.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RSg0OEkfyI