was rock's first superstar
drummer and the most influential percussionist of the 1960s. There
were other drummers who were well-known to the public before him,
including the
Beatles' Ringo
Starr and, in England at the end of the 1950s, the Shadows' Tony
Meehan, but they were famous primarily for the groups in which
they played and for attributes beyond their musicianship. Baker
made his name entirely on his playing, initially as showcased in Cream,
but far transcending even that trio's relatively brief existence.
Though he only cut top-selling records for a period of about three
years at the end of the 1960s, virtually every drummer of every heavy
metal band that has followed since that time has sought to emulate
some aspect of Baker's
playing.
He was born Peter Edward Baker in Lewisham, London, in 1939. The
nickname "Ginger" came along later, a result of his red
hair. As a boy, Baker
had a special interest in bicycle racing, but by his mid-teens, his
interests had switched to music, especially percussion. A rebel even
at that age, he became devoted to modern art and contemporary jazz,
transforming himself into something of a beatnik during the mid- to
late '50s. A natural musician, he talked himself into his first
professional gig when he was 16 and was on the road that year, working
full-time. Baker's
idol during the late '50s was Phil
Seaman, a jazz drummer who was probably the best percussion player
in England; his own playing tended toward an aggressiveness and
articulation that were unusual in juxtaposition with each other.
By the end of the 1950s, Baker
had passed through several of what were known in England as trad jazz
bands -- "trad" was the English designation given to what
Americans and the rest of the world know as Dixieland jazz. It was the
dominant form of popular jazz in England from the mid-'50s onward and
it provided employment. He'd been a member of Terry
Lightfoot's and Acker
Bilk's bands, but the fit was an awkward one, owing to the passion
that Baker
often displayed in his work and his own, personally outspoken nature.
Instead, he turned toward the budding British blues scene coalescing
around the work of Alexis
Korner and Cyril
Davies -- less bound in tradition and built largely around younger
players, this music was growing and being played in a much more open
environment.
In 1962, on the recommendation of Charlie
Watts, Baker
was selected as the latter's replacement in Blues
Incorporated, the band started by Korner
and Davies.
It was here that Baker
first crossed paths with two musicians -- saxman and organist Graham
Bond and bassist Jack
Bruce -- that were to play a key role in his professional career.
Their work with Blues
Incorporated was successful enough, but it was while the two were
playing with a side group, the Johnny Birch Octet, that they began
jamming with saxophonist Dick
Heckstall-Smith (another Blues
Incorporated alumnus) and began getting a very positive response
from the crowds. It was out of those jams that Baker,
Bond, Bruce,
and (joining a little later) Heckstall-Smith
formed the
Graham Bond Organization in 1963, the former three quitting Korner's
group all at once. The
Graham Bond Organisation was never as popular as such Blues
Incorporated offshoots as the
Rolling Stones or the
Small Faces, being more jazz-oriented in their approach to
R&B, and, thus, a little too complex to find a huge audience, but
they were successful and respected on stage; Baker's
reputation among blues aficionados and more scholarly British rock
listeners can be traced to his work with the group. Their recordings,
however -- with the obvious exception of the Klooks Kleek concert
album -- were never as exciting as their live performances.
Its name aside, Ginger
Baker was the de facto leader of the
Graham Bond Organization. Bond
himself was temperamentally unsuited to a leadership role, a condition
made worse by the spells of substance abuse and addiction that
blighted his life. The Bond
group also hooked Baker
up in the same rhythm section with Jack
Bruce for an extended period of time, and few relationships
between constant bandmates -- with the exception of siblings Jimmy and
Tommy
Dorsey's efforts at working together in the early '30s -- have
been so tumultuous and productive. The two genuinely hated each other
on a personal level, and stories of each wrecking (or trying to wreck)
the other's instruments and attacking each other on stage abound.
Still, the group's sound was extraordinary, a jazz-based R&B built
around four powerful players, each displaying varying degrees of
virtuosity and assertiveness that was quite daringly complex. And
their manager, Robert
Stigwood, saw them all as talents worth keeping an eye on in the
future.
Baker
eventually fired Bruce,
who jumped to John Mayall's Bluesbreakers, which, fatefully, allowed
him to cross paths with Eric
Clapton for a short time, and then to Manfred
Mann, as well as doing session work that even had him playing on
records by the
Hollies. By early 1966, the
Graham Bond Organization had run its commercial course (though it
was still sufficiently viable to turn up on a poster outside of the
club that David
Hemmings' character enters in Blow Up), and Baker
was searching for a new gig.
He'd observed John
Mayall & the Bluesbreakers in action and had known lead
guitarist Eric
Clapton for a couple of years, having jammed with him once in 1964
as part of the
Graham Bond Organization, and approached him initially to write
together and perhaps form a group. Baker
had, in effect, been running the
Graham Bond Organization while Clapton
had emerged in Mayall's
group so far into the spotlight that he'd eclipsed Mayall
himself; they discovered that they were in exactly the same place. The
great irony was that Clapton,
impressed with Bruce's
musicianship in both the
Bluesbreakers and a short-lived group called Eric Clapton &
the Powerhouse, insisted that the bassist come aboard as the third
member of the trio. Baker
agreed, somewhat reluctantly, acknowledging Bruce's
daunting musical ability and willing to overlook their past
animosities. The proposed trio, christened Cream,
was signed up by Reaction Records, a record label founded by Robert
Stigwood, who had been the manager of the
Graham Bond Organization, knew of Baker's
and Bruce's
virtuosity intimately, and was equally impressed by Clapton
and as eager as any executive in England to get the three together and
see what would happen.
What happened initially was "Wrapping Paper," a pop-style
single released in late 1966 that didn't impress too many people --
although even there, one could hear a swing element to the group's
sound, reminiscent of '40s jazz, that showed off one (albeit minor)
component of what went into their sound. Baker
was barely audible in the mix, though what one could hear of the
drumming did have a signature of sorts, a loose, jazzy element that
was unusual. Within the next year, the band would become a
chart-topping act and then a cultural phenomenon, however, and at its
core was Baker.
He and Bruce
continued to argue without let-up while Clapton
mediated and refereed, and on their records everyone got to shine, but
Baker's
playing was special even in that context -- on "Rollin' &
Tumblin'," a Muddy
Waters blues standard that the trio took into the stratosphere
from the first note, Baker's
playing sounded like it was on another planet, matching Clapton's
rapid-fire quoting of the main riff and Bruce's
frenzied singing and quietly overpowering the listener; his playing on
"I'm So Glad," by contrast, had a lyrical, almost melodic
quality, like a veiled orchestral accompaniment to the bass and guitar
-- he kept a beat, but his drumming also played the kind of role that
a harpsichord continuo played in Baroque music. And then there was
"Toad," in its original studio version, an offshoot of
several pieces dating back to the Graham
Bond days that featured Baker
in a solo; here, as on "Oh Baby" from the first Graham
Bond album, Baker
made his drum kit sing.
In concert, the piece would become the basis for a ten-minute drum
solo that was no less impressive. The trio's live sound was, alas,
limited somewhat by the technology of the day, especially when they
become too popular to play small clubs (which was very early), but Baker
set a new standard for playing on record, and at those shows, that
every drummer with more than an ounce of ambition sought to emulate. A
lot of critics in later years also felt that Baker
also had a lot to answer for -- that the 15-minute live version of
"Toad," 13 minutes of which was Baker
solo, opened the way to gargantuan drum solos by the metal bands that
came up after Cream,
culminating with the infamous (and extremely funny) drum solo
interlude in the movie This Is Spinal Tap. Baker
can hardly be faulted, however, for the excesses of those who followed
after him -- his studio work with Cream,
and at least the live material that was authorized for release, never
showed him playing lengthy solos for their own sake but rather
depicted a drummer coaxing beautiful voices out of his instrument. The
mere fact that he could do it for ten minutes or more at a stretch was
impressive, to say the least.
Cream made
(and still generates) a huge amount of money, but couldn't last long
with the egos involved -- in just over two years, they were history.
It turned Baker
into a permanent superstar, however. Such was his influence that he
was able to turn young admirers of his playing onto older drummers
such as Gene
Krupa and Buddy
Rich, whose careers dated to the 1930s and 1940s, respectively.
For a time at the end of the 1960s, teenagers who hadn't even been
born when Krupa
retired the last of his big bands were seeking out the drummer's work,
all based on Baker's
professed admiration for him.
What followed next for Baker
was Blind
Faith, one of the most celebrated still-born bands in history --
many millions of records sold, and millions of dollars earned, despite
their having only about an eight-song repertory of their own.
Initially planned as a linkup between Clapton
and singer/guitarist/keyboard player Steve
Winwood, Baker
came along and cashed in Clapton's
promise to include him in his next project and the resulting business
and publicity frenzy pushed the band too far, too quickly. In seven
months they were gone, but out of the ashes of Blind
Faith rose the group eventually known as Ginger Baker's Air Force.
Ironically, Air
Force's history was an exact reversal of that of Blind
Faith -- initially put together for two live gigs in England, the
group suddenly found its life extended to a tour and a second album;
in contrast to Blind
Faith, however, whose hype had merely reflected an expectant
audience eager to see a band made up of two superstars (Clapton
and Baker)
and one star (Winwood),
Air Force's
hype was the product of promoters desperately hoping that it would be
another Blind
Faith.
The group, which included Baker's
mentor Phil
Seaman and his old bandmate Graham
Bond, was much too eclectic ever to have achieved the kind of
popularity that Cream
or Blind
Faith had enjoyed, embracing jazz, traditional African music,
blues, folk, and rock. The ten-piece band lasted less than a year
before breaking up, leaving behind a genuinely fascinating and
exciting live album and an interesting studio LP (both combined on the
Ginger
Baker double-CD set Do What You Like. In 1971, Baker
decided to indulge his longtime fascination with African music
first-hand and moved to Nigeria, where he built the first modern
recording studio in western Africa. Over the next three years, he
worked with a huge range of acts, including Fela and Paul
McCartney's Wings,
as well as recording the solo album Stratavarious
-- he ultimately lost the studio and most of his money (and has
claimed that McCartney
stiffed him for the use of the studio in the recording of Band
on the Run).
During 1974, Baker
formed the Baker-Gurvitz Army Band with guitarist Adrian
Gurvitz and bassist Paul
Gurvitz, which made an initial splash in America before fading out
commercially over the next three years. He finally re-emerged in 1986,
with bassist/guitarist Bill
Laswell on the album Horses
& Trees. By that time, a new generation of star drummers had
emerged, most notably Carl
Palmer of Emerson,
Lake & Palmer and Bill
Bruford of Yes
and King
Crimson, but Baker's
reputation, thanks to the continued catalog sales of Cream's
work, continued to resonate with fans and casual listeners. Over the
next few years, Baker
reappeared through various projects, including Ginger
Baker's African Force and Middle
Passage, that freely mixed African and Western musical influences.
And in 1991, Baker
surprised all onlookers with the release of Unseen
Rain, a free-form instrumental album done almost entirely on
acoustic instruments. Finally, in 1994, he returned to Atlantic
Records -- which had been the U.S. outlet for Cream's
recordings -- and to what he realized were his jazz roots with the
triumphant Going
Back Home, which featured the Ginger Baker Trio. Baker
has hooked up with jazz trumpeter Ron
Miles on Coward
of the County, a hugely successful showcase for his jazz side and
also includes a tribute to the late Cyril
Davies, the British blues enthusiast who co-founded Blues
Incorporated in the early '60s.
Ginger
Baker, like his ex-bandmates, has seen fit since the 1970s to keep
the legacy of Cream
at arm's length or further -- the trio's induction into the Rock &
Roll Hall of Fame reportedly did little to change his feelings, and he
is also said to be astonished at the emergence of Eric
Clapton to mega-stardom during the 1990s. Despite some of the
financial and other troubles that have dogged him since the 1960s, he
has been content to go his own way musically for the benefit of any
who care to hear.