Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Fred Gerlach

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Fred Gerlach

Genres
  
Folk music

Name
  
Fred Gerlach

Years active
  
1962–2006

Instruments
  
Vocals, guitar


Fred Gerlach whatfrankislisteningtonegstarcomwpcontentuplo

Born
  
August 26, 1925 (
1925-08-26
)
Detroit, Michigan, U.S.

Occupation
  
Singer, 12 string guitarist, luthier

Relatives
  
Jesse Lee Kincaid (Nephew)

Died
  
December 31, 2009, San Diego, California, United States

Albums
  
Twelve-String Guitar: Folk Songs and Blues Sung and Played by Fred Gerlach

Record labels
  
Folkways Records, Takoma Records

Similar People
  
Glen Campbell, Joe Maphis, Billy Strange

Fred gerlach gallows pole


Fred Gerlach (August 26, 1925 — December 31, 2009) was an American folk musician and luthier, perhaps most famous for his recording of the traditional song "Gallows Pole", which Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page credited with inspiring his own band's version.

Contents

Fred gerlach devil s brew


Career

In the early 1950s he sang in the Jewish Young Folksingers chorus conducted by Robert De Cormier. Gerlach was among the first folk artists to adopt the 12 string guitar as his medium. A friend of fellow folk musicians Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger, his first album was even called Twelve-String Guitar. Its flagship song, "Gallows Pole", was heard and covered by Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page, saying:

I first heard it ('Gallows Pole') on an old Folkways LP by Fred Gerlach, a 12-string player who was, I believe, the first white to play the instrument. I used his version as a basis and completely changed the arrangement

Gerlach was inspired to adopt the 12 string by his mentor and one-time roommate Lead Belly, a blues guitarist famous for using the instrument. At the time Gerlach became interested in the instrument, it was almost unknown. He later related:

I went into one of the largest musical instrument stores in the country, and the manager assured me that no such instrument existed. On another occasion a maker of fine 12-string lutes (nylon strings) pictured for me a nightmare of explosive force required to hold twelve steel strings in proper tension. He envisioned bits of guitar and guitarist flying asunder. I have combed New York City pawnshops and music stores and have received a variety of comments ranging' from 'Sorry, we're out of them now. Won't a six-string guitar do? to 'Have you got rocks in your head, buddy?' In fact, it took me about a year after I had first decided to play a twelve-string before I found one. It wasn't a concentrated search, but it nevertheless indicates the general unavailability of the instrument.

Because of the difficulty in finding 12 string guitars, Gerlach began to make his own, for himself and his peers. Pete Seeger, Leo Kottke, Dick Rosmini, and other name-brand folk musicians came to use his instruments.

Albums

  • Twelve-String Guitar (1962)
  • Songs My Mother Never Sang (1968)
  • Easy Rider
  • Compilations

  • The Twelve-String Story Vol. 1 (1963)
  • The Twelve-String Story Vol. 2 (1963)
  • The Guitar Greats
  • Golden Guitars
  • Takoma Eclectic Sampler Vol 2 (1999)
  • Imaginational Anthem Vol. 2
  • References

    Fred Gerlach Wikipedia