Jump to content

Bill Keith (musician)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bill Keith
Bill Keith on stage at the 1985 Cambridge Folk Festival
Bill Keith on stage at the 1985 Cambridge Folk Festival
Background information
Birth nameWilliam Bradford Keith
Born(1939-12-20)December 20, 1939
Boston, Massachusetts, US
DiedOctober 23, 2015(2015-10-23) (aged 75)
Woodstock, New York, US
GenresBluegrass, Country
OccupationBluegrass artist
Instrument(s)Banjo, steel guitar
Years active1960s – 2015

William Bradford "Bill" Keith (December 20, 1939 – October 23, 2015) was a five-string banjoist who made a significant contribution to the stylistic development of the instrument. In the 1960s he introduced a variation on the popular "Scruggs style" of banjo playing (an integral element of bluegrass music) which would soon become known as melodic style, or "Keith style". He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2015.

Professional career

[edit]

Keith was born in Boston, Massachusetts, United States.[1] He attended Amherst College and graduated in 1961. In 1963 he became a member of Bill Monroe's Bluegrass Boys.[2]

Keith's recordings and performances during these nine months with Monroe permanently altered banjo playing, and his style became an important part of the playing styles of many banjoists. After leaving the Bluegrass Boys, he joined the Jim Kweskin Jug Band playing plectrum banjo.[1] He began playing the steel guitar and soon after 1968, worked together with Ian and Sylvia and Jonathan Edwards.[1]

In the 1970s, Keith recorded for Rounder Records. Over the years he performed with several other musicians, such as Clarence White and David Grisman in Muleskinner, Tony Trischka, Jim Rooney and Jim Collier.[1] Today, Keith style is still regarded as modern or progressive in the context of bluegrass banjo playing. He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame at an awards ceremony in Raleigh, North Carolina on October 1, 2015, and delivered a heartfelt address on that occasion, just three weeks prior to his death from cancer at his home in Woodstock, New York on October 23, 2015, aged 75.[3]

Joe Boyd, who was producing the music for the movie Deliverance, offered Duelling Banjos to Bill, but as Bill was travelling in Europe and wanted to visit a girl in Ireland, he turned it down suggesting Eric Weissberg instead. [4]

Afterwards

[edit]

Keith made a mechanical contribution to the banjo, as well. He designed a specialized type of banjo tuning peg that facilitates changing quickly from one open tuning to another, while playing. Earlier famed banjoist Earl Scruggs had designed a set of cams which were added to the banjo to perform this task.[citation needed]

Keith's invention made the extra hardware unnecessary, replacing two of the tuning machines already on the banjo — a more elegant solution. Scruggs himself became a partner in the venture for a while, and the product was known as "Scruggs-Keith Tuners". Known today simply as Keith Tuners, they remain the state of the art, and Bill Keith continued to manufacture and market them personally as the primary product of his own company, the Beacon Banjo Company, until his death. Beacon Banjo tuners continue their proud tradition, now in the hands of his son, Martin.[5]

Discography

[edit]

Solo and contributions

[edit]
  • 1962 Bill Keith & Jim Rooney, Bluegrass Livin' on the Mountain, Prestige Folklore FL 14002
  • 1976 Bill Keith, Something Auld, Something Newgrass, Something Borrowed, Something Bluegrass (1976) Rounder - CD 0084, 1998 (feat. Tony Rice, David Grisman)
  • 1978 Bill Keith and Jim Collier, Hexagone 883020
  • 1981 Tony Trischka, Bill Keith, Bela Fleck, Fiddle Tunes for Banjo, Rounder 0124 CD 1999
  • 1984 Bill Keith, Banjoistics Rounder Select OG US - 148
  • 1993 Bill Keith, Beating Around The Bush, Green Linnet.

With Bill Monroe

[edit]
  • 1963 Bill Monroe & his Bluegrass Boys, Deca Session, 20 & 27 Mars 1963 reed. CD 3/4, tracks 1 to 7 in : Bluegrass 1963 Bill Monroe & his Bluegrass Boys, July 1963: Two Days at Newport, And More Bears AMD / ACDAA 25001(CD 2003) (feat. Del McCoury, guitar; Bill Keith, banjo; Billy Baker, fiddle; Ralph Rinzler, Bass, producer)
  • 1963 Bill Monroe & his Bluegrass Boys, Live at Mechanic Hall Acoustic Disc, ACD-59 (CD 2004), (recorded 11 November 1963 by David Grisman; feat. Del McCoury, guitar; Bill Keith, banjo; Joe Stuart, fiddle; Bessie Lee Mauldin, Bass)
  • 1991 Bill Monroe, Blue Grass – 1959–1969, Bear Family Records, BCD 15529 (4CD) (feat. Del McCoury, guitar; Bill Keith, banjo; Kenny Baker, fiddle; Bessie Lee Mauldin, bass; Harry Silverstein, producer)

Bands

[edit]

As sidemen or participant of an ephemeral group or compilation

[edit]
  • 1963 Bill Keith & Jim Rooney, Philadelphia Folk Festival - 1962 (Volume II) (various artists), Prestige Folklore INT 13072
  • 1966 Gloria Belle, Today I Can Smile/Baby, You Gotta Be Mine single 45 RPM Redwing 16171 (sidemen: Bill Keith (banjo) and Clarence "Tater" Tate (fiddle))
  • 1969 The Bee Gees, Odessa, Polydor Records (UK), Atco Records (US)
  • 1973 Judy Collins True Stories And Other Dreams Elektra EKS-75053 (sidemen: Bill Keith: Pedal Steel Guitar, with Eric Weissberg)
  • 1976 Marcel Dadi And Friends – Country Show Guitar World Records – GW 4 (US release)
  • 1976 Marcel DadiDadi's Pickin' - Lights Up Nashville - Part Two, Cezame – CEZ 1019 (US release, 1977: Nashville Memories, Guitar World Records – GW 6)
  • 1977 Marcel DadiTravelin' Man Guitar World Records – GW 5 (US release)
  • 1977 Christian Seguret (fr) With Bluegrass Friends: Bill Keith, Mike Lilly, Wendy Miller, Jean Marie Redon (fr), Jean-Claude Druot, Denis Blanchard – Old Fashioned Love, Cezame – CEZ 1035 (tracks: B3, B4)
  • 1977 Mud Acres: Woodstock Mountains: More Music From Mud Acres, Rounder 3018 (My Love Is But A Lassie Yet, (banjo instrumental quadrille)
  • 1977 Slim Richey's Jazz Grass Ridge Runner RRR0009 (Night In Tunisia - feat. Bill Keith, Alan Munde, Sam Bush...)
  • 1979 (fr) Banjoistiquement Votre, Cezame CEZ 1049 (track: Steel Banjo Rag)
  • 1981 Mud Acres: Woodstock Mountains Revue : Back to Mud Acres, Rounder 3065 (track: Panhandle Rag BK: banjo+ pedal steel)
  • 1999 Compilation: Song Of The Hills: Appalachian Classics, Shanachie 6041 (track 5 : Footprints In The Snow, instrumental version with Tony Trischka, Eric Weissberg, Kenny Kosek, Stacy Phillips, Molly Mason)
  • 2008 Tony Trischka Territory, Smithsonian Folkways SFW CD 40169 (track: Trompe De L'oreille)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d Colin Larkin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. pp. 700/1. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
  2. ^ Trischka, Tony, "Bill Keith", Banjo Song Book, Oak Publications, 1977, ISBN 978-0825601972
  3. ^ Friskics-Warren, Bill (October 26, 2015). "Bill Keith, Who Uncovered Banjo's Melodic Potential, Dies at 75". The New York Times. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  4. ^ Boyd, Joe, White Bicycles – Making Music in the 1960s, Serpent's Tail, 2006. Page 238. ISBN 1-85242-910-0
  5. ^ "Beacon Banjo Company - Keith Banjo Tuners". Beaconbanjo.com. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  6. ^ "Red Allen (2), Frank Wakefield And The Kentuckians - Bluegrass". Discogs.com. 1964. Retrieved October 8, 2019.
  7. ^ "The Folkways Years, 1964-1983". Smithsonian Folkways Recordings. Retrieved October 8, 2019.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Tony Trischka, Pete Wernick, Masters of the 5-String Banjo, Oak Publications, 1988, ISBN 9780825602986
  • Neil V. Rosenberg, Charles K. Wolfep The Music of Bill Monroe, University of Illinois Press, 2007, p. 148-151, discography p. 168 sq. Bill Keith is identified as: "Bradford Keith". ISBN 978-0252031212
  • "Bill Keith" in The Encyclopedia of Country Music, The Ultimate Guide to the Music, ed. by The Country Music Foundation and Paul Kinsbury, Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 276. ISBN 978-0195176087
[edit]