Acker Bilk
Acker Bilk (often referred to as Mr. Acker Bilk) is one of the world's leading Jazz Clarinetists. His trademarks are his goatee beard, bowler hat and striped waistcoat.
Born Bernard Stanley Bilk, in Pensford, Somerset South West England, on 28 January 1929, he obtained the stage name Acker from the Somerset slang or dialect term for friend or 'mate'.
During his upbringing in Pensford, his parents attempted to have him taught to play the piano, but he found this to be to be too restricting of his desire for outdoor pursuits, which included football.
Two front teeth lost in a school fight and half a finger lost in a sledging accident have had a significant influence over Bilk's style of playing (at least according to Bilk himself).
He became a household name in the United Kingdom during the 1960s with 11 top 50 singles, including a massive number one hit record, the plaintive "Stranger on the Shore", the theme tune from a contemporary television serial. At one point, his public relations workers were known as the 'Bilk Marketing Board', a play on the then Milk Marketing Board.
He has been described as Great Master of the Clarinet in this lengthy article.
See also
- West Country accents
- Django Reinhardt, another influential jazz musician whose dexterity seemed unimpaired by finger-damage