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Frank Wakefield

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Origin
  
Dayton, Ohio

Instruments
  
Mandolin


Name
  
Frank Wakefield

Role
  
Musical Artist

Frank Wakefield Frank Wakefield Improves His Mandolin

Birth name
  
Franklin Delano Roosevelt Wakefield

Born
  
June 26, 1934 (age 89) Emory Gap, Tennessee, USA (
1934-06-26
)

Albums
  
The Kitchen Tapes, Bluegrass Mandolin Extravaganza

Associated acts
  
Red Allen, Jimmy Martin, Don Reno, Jerry Garcia, Ralph Stanley, David Grisman

Similar People
  
Red Allen, David Grisman, Jesse McReynolds, Bobby Osborne, Ronnie McCoury

Profiles

Jimmy martin and frank wakefield fire in my heart


Franklin Delano Roosevelt Wakefield (born June 26, 1934) is an innovative American mandolin player in the bluegrass music style. Wakefield is known for his collaborations with a number of important and well-known bands, including Red Allen, Don Reno, Jerry Garcia, David Grisman, The Stanley Brothers, and the Greenbriar Boys.

Contents

Frank Wakefield wwwmandolincafecomnewsuploadswakefield003jpg

Biography

Frank Wakefield Frank Wakefield Bluegrass Today

Born into a musical family in Emory Gap, Tennessee, Wakefield by age eight already knew how to play harmonica, guitar and bass. In 1950, his family moved to Dayton, Ohio. At the age of 16 he had switched to the mandolin and began playing music with his brother Ralph on guitar. The duo called themselves The Wakefield Brothers and in 1951, made their first radio appearance playing gospel and old-time music on WHIO in Dayton.

Frank Wakefield Frank Wakefield Biography amp History AllMusic

In 1952 Wakefield began a long and to productive collaboration with the bluegrass singer and guitar player, Red Allen. For the next 3 years Wakefield toured with Red Allen and the Blue Ridge Mountain Boys. Through the rest of the decade Wakefield also toured with Jimmy Martin and the Sunny Mountain Boys as well as the Chain Mountain Boys, with whom he recorded his first 45 RPM—which included his now most famous bluegrass composition, "New Camptown Races". In 1958 Wakefield reunited with Red Allen and his band the Kentuckians. The popular Kentuckians cut many 45s in following years, had a weekly radio show, and even played at Carnegie Hall in 1963. Important CD recordings surviving from this period of Wakefield's career include Red Allen and Frank Wakefield: the Kitchen Tapes and Red Allen: the Folkway Years 1964-1983. In 1960, Wakefield moved to Washington, DC with Red Allen and there began giving private lessons. One of his students at this time was a young David Grisman.

Frank Wakefield Frank Wakefield in Saratoga Springs NY Nov 4 2017 800 PM Eventful

In the mid-1960s Wakefield began playing mandolin with the very popular Greenbriar Boys as well as appearing with Ralph Stanley. Also in this period he began turning to new influences, composing classical mandolin sonatas and arranging classical pieces for traditional blugrass instruments. This innovative style offered him the opportunity to play with the New York Philharmonic, led by Leonard Bernstein in 1967 and an invitation to appear as a guest with the Boston Pops in 1968.

Frank Wakefield Frank Wakefield Band Bluegrass Today

By the 1970s Wakefield launched a solo career. He released his first solo album in 1972 and his second in 1975 backed up by bluegrass heavyweights Don Reno and Chubby Wise. He toured with Jerry Garcia, and New Riders of the Purple Sage and opened for the Grateful Dead. By mid-decade Wakefield began working with his newly formed band, The Good Ol' Boys with whom he would enjoy a productive collaboration until the mid-1980s. Since 1989 he has toured with the Frank Wakefield Band. In 1999 he earned a Grammy Nomination for best bluegrass album of the year for his work on the album Bluegrass Mandolin Extravaganza on which he played with fellow mandolin greats Sam Bush, David Grisman, Ronnie McCoury, Jesse McReynolds, Bobby Osborne, Ricky Skaggs and Buck White.

Mandolin player David Grisman said of Wakefield's influence, "He split the bluegrass mandolin atom. Some of us, obviously, will never be the same again." Wakefield continues to record and tour nationally; he remains one of the most colorful, unique and exciting voices in American music.

References

Frank Wakefield Wikipedia