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(1895 – 1989) Point Level, KY
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Folk Singer, Radio Pioneer,
Songwriter. Kincaid
grew up strumming folk tunes, mountain ballads on an old
guitar his father had obtained in exchange for a foxhound;
Bradley would later dub this his old “houn’ dog
guitar.” Beginning
in 1926, he became the first big star of country music on
Chicago’s WLS and National Barn Dance, known as “The
Kentucky Mountain Boy.”
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He received more than 100,000 fan letters a year,
and when he moved to WLW in Cincinnati, he received 50,000
letters in his first month on the air.
He published some 13 songbooks that sold over
400,000 copies. To
supplement the material in the songbooks, he spent his
summer vacations traveling the Appalachians and collecting
ballads and folksongs from those who still sang them.
While on a personal appearance for WLW, he met
Louis Jones and Joe Troyan and invited them to go with him
on tour, which they did for the next three years, all over
the New England states.
Bradley nicknamed Louis Jones “Grandpa” because
he said he sounded like a grumpy old man.
Kincaid later moved to Nashville and became a
member of the Grand Ole Opry.
He was a warm and talented entertainer but modest
and grateful for his fans.
His best known recordings are, Barbara
Allen, The Fatal Derby Day, The Legend of the Robin’s
Red Breast, and the Letter Edged In Black. |
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Kentucky
Music
Hall of Fame & Museum
Post
Office Box 85
2590 Richmond Road
Renfro Valley, Kentucky 40473
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