Mickey "Guitar" Baker
b. McHouston Baker, 15 October 1925, Louisville, Kentucky, USA.
After spells in reform school and a children's home, he moved to
New York in 1941. He lived on the fringes of the criminal world
but took up the guitar and quickly became a virtuoso, equally
adept at jazz and blues styles. From the late '40s, Mickey Guitar
Baker played on hundreds of recording sessions, accompanying such
artists as Ray Charles, the Coasters, Ivory Joe Hunter, Ruth
Brown and Screaming Jay Hawkins. Baker recorded occasionally
under his own name and in 1956 teamed up with guitarist/vocalist
Sylvia Vanderpool. After an unsuccessful version of Walking In
The Rain, the atmospheric Love Is Strange (co-written by Bo
Diddley) by Mickey And Sylvia was a US Top 20 hit on RCA/Groove
in 1956. Later singles on Vik and RCA were only minor hits,
although the duo contributed to Ike And Tina Turner's It's Gonna
Work Out Fine (1961), where Baker's is the male voice answering
Tina's. Some of Baker's solo recordings were collected on a 1959
album for Atlantic. In the early '60s, he emigrated to Paris and
joined the expatriate community of jazz musicians in the French
capital. He toured Europe with such artists as Memphis Slim and
Champion Jack Dupree, and performed at the 1973 Montreux Jazz
Festival. Baker also arranged the strings for Fleetwood Macs
version of Need Your Love So Bad (1968). During the
'70s, he cut several albums in Europe, including a pair for
Stefan Grossman's guitar-instructional label, Kicking Mule.