Chet Atkins
Biography
Without Chet Atkins, country music may never have crossed over into the pop charts in the '50s and '60s. Although he recorded hundreds of solo records, Atkins' largest influence came as a session musician and a record producer. During the '50s and '60s, he helped create the Nashville sound, a style of country music that owed nearly as much to pop as it did to honky tonks.
And as a guitarist, he was without parallel. Atkins' style grew out of his admiration for Merle Travis, expanding Travis' signature syncopated thumb and fingers roll into new territory. Interestingly, Atkins didn't begin his musical career by playing guitar. On the recommendation of his older brother, Lowell, he began playing the fiddle at a child. However, Chet was still attracted to the guitar, and at the age of nine he traded a pistol for a guitar. Atkins learned his instrument rapidly, becoming an accomplished player by the time he left high school in 1941. Using a variety of contacts, he wound up performing on the Bill Carlisle Show on WNOX in Knoxville, TN, as well as becoming part of the Dixie Swingers. Atkins worked with Homer & Jethro while he was at the radio station. After three years, he moved to a radio station in Cincinnati.
Selected Discography

1949
2006

Music From Nashville, My Hometown / Chet Atkins
2005

Carter Sisters And Mother Maybelle With Chet Atkins
2005

The Essential Chet Atkins: The Columbia Years
2004

Early Chet Atkins
2004

Mr. Atkins - Guitar Picker / Finger Picking Good
2004

And Is Guitar / Guitar Genius
2004

Inducted Into The Hall Of Fame 1973
2002

Chet Picks On The Grammys
2002

The Master And His Music
2001

RCA Country Legends
2001

Guitar Legend The RCA Years
2000

The Essential Chet Atkins
1996

Galloping Guitar: The Early Years
1993

Picks On The Beatles
1965

Back Home Hymns
1962
