Baby Gramps

Baby Gramps

Baby Gramps at Analog, Ringsend, Dublin Ireland (Photo: Sean Rowe)
Background information
Born Miami, Florida, U.S.
Genres Folk, country, Americana, blues
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar, pedal steel guitar,
Years active 1964–present
Labels Grampophone
ANTI-
Associated acts The Kitchen Syncopators, Baby Gramps Trio, Baby Gramps and His Back Swamp Potioners
Website BabyGramps.com

Baby Gramps is a guitar performer, who, though born in Miami, Florida, has been based in the Northwest U.S. for at least the last 40 years. He is famous for his palindromes. Baby Gramps started performing in 1964 and is still playing professionally as of 2016.[1]

Style

Baby Gramps plays a mixture of styles and eras including traditional blues, children's and labor songs, and his own compositions. His busy and unusual guitar style includes flat and finger picking, and "chording" with the back of his hand and his elbow. His singing styles include throat singing. His performance is based in part on improvisation and he often encourages audience participation. Baby Gramps has performed as a street musician, and has toured with Artis the Spoonman, Béla Fleck and the Flecktones and Phish. His rendition of "The Teddy Bears' Picnic" was featured in Martin Bell's Academy Award-nominated documentary film, Streetwise.

Popularity

Writer Patrick Ferris said he has "a mass appeal in the sense that any audience between the age of 2 and 102 are captivated by his vaudeville antics, hilarious lyrics and animated guitar playing... His voice is a cross between Popeye the Sailor and a Didgeridoo and the plinkity plink of his VERY worn National steel guitar, sounds like a wind up jack in the box. If you listen closely and know anything about music, you'll realize Gramps is an absolutely incredible guitar player. Being a professional musician for over 40 years can't help but give you some sort of chops, but Gramps is a modern day Robert Johnson; a revolutionary guitarist that, like Thelonious Monk on piano, can play the notes 'between the cracks.'"[2]

Discography

Videos:

Filmed on 8/26/93 when Baby Gramps opened for Phish in Portland OR. 1) Richland Woman Blues 2) Back Swamp Potioner 3) Let's all be fairies Running time: 20 min. Produced/Directed/Edited By Sam Small for Small Wonder Video Services. Baby Gramps actually shared the stage with Phish, performing the enigmatic “Tea Tray Song” with Fishman on vacuum during the second set.

  1. Breakfast Blues
  2. Anagram Song
  3. The Shortest Poem In The World
  4. The Wooden Darning Egg
  5. Nothin' But A Nothin'
  6. Palindromes
  7. Uncontrovertable Facts
  8. The Big Rock Candy Mountain
  9. Teddybears' Picnic

Running time: 37 min. This video was stitched together from three performances that were filmed at "Funhouse": A Contemporary Theatre, in conjunction with TheatreVision and ShadowCatcher Entertainment. Conceived and directed by Paul Magid and Ron W. Bailey. Stage show written by Magid; teleplay written by Magid and Alex Metcalf; musical direction by Mark Ettinger. "Funhouse" starred vaudevillians Dmitri Karamazov of the Flying Karamazov Brothers, Rebecca Chace, Cathy Sutherland and the UMO Ensemble, and featured Baby Gramps and Christian Swenson, among others. A psychedelically inspired feast was served by Chez Ray Sewal. The raw multi-camera video from three of Gramp's solo performances were given over to Sam Small of Small Wonder Video Services who edited and released 'Sauteed To A Fine Crisp'.

Recorded Live at Terra Blues, Greenwich Village, NYC

  1. Ankle Wrench Rag
  2. New Big Rock Candy mountain
  3. A Ragtime Continuum / Rags Makes Paper / Paper Makes Money / A Man Took A Ride In An Airplane
  4. A Ragtime Medley: Ragged But Right / Certainl Am Living' A Ragtime Life
  5. Charge It To The Dust & Let The Rain Settle It
  6. Dream A Little Dream Of Me
  7. Skillet Of Snakes
  8. Satisfied Mind
  9. Thought I Heard The Voice Of A Porkchop Say Come Unto Me & Rest
  10. Ballad Of A Thin Man (Mr. Jones)
  11. Possum Opera

Notes

References

Baby Gramps (second from right), 1994

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Baby Gramps.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/7/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.