$33 in advance / $40 day of concertSince the age of 15 when he heard "Dueling Banjos" by Weissberg & Mandell, and Flatt & Scruggs' "Ballad of Jed Clampett",
Bela Fleck has developed into one of the world's most talented and creative banjo pickers. Named after composer Bela Bartok,
Fleck's versatile repertoire includes old time bluegrass, R&B, bebop, and progressive jazz.
This New York City native's broad musical interests were fostered at the High School of Music and Arts in New York. His eclectic musical influences include Chick Corea, Little Feat, Charlie Parker, Earl Scruggs, Aretha Franklin, John Coltrane, the Allman Brothers, Tony Trischka and the Byrds. Upon graduation, he headed to Boston to join a group called The Tasty Licks, which recorded two albums then split in 1979.
Fleck moved on to join the Kentucky Band Spectrum, and shortly after recorded his first solo album,
Crossing the Tracks. This album won notice when
Frets magazine named it "Best Overall Album."
Fleck's popularity gained momentum when he joined the New Grass Revival in 1982, and he was nominated for a Grammy award in 1988 for his song "Drive". "Frets" magazine inducted him into their Hall of Greats in 1990, further validating his success. In 1989,
Fleck and several talented acquaintances (Sam Bush on mandolin, Mark O'Connor with his fiddle, Edgar Meyer on bass, and Jerry Douglas playing the dobro) formed the group Strength In Numbers, out of which was produced
The Telluride Sessions.
PBS television invited
Fleck to share his music on their 1992 Lonesome Pine Special. He appeared with several well-known musicians, including Howard Levy on piano, harmonica, ocarina, and other instruments; Victor Lemonte Wooten on bass guitar; and Victor's brother Roy "Futureman" Wooten who played the drumitar. They called themselves the
Flecktones, and released their self-titled debut album in 1990. Immediately after, they released
Flight of the Cosmic Hippo in 1991. Two years later came UFO Tofu, an album that blended bluegrass, worldbeat, R&B, and other musical flavors. Later albums include
Tales from an Acoustic Planet,
Live Art,
Three Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, and
Outbound.
The group's solo efforts have also yielded success, aside from
Fleck himself. Jeff Coffin leads his own group, Mu'tet and has played on hundreds of recordings as a studio musician. Victor Wooten has been regaled as the most influential bassist since Jaco Pastorias. He has several solo albums, including the Grammy-nominated Yin-Yang and 2005's Soul Circus. The
Flecktones picked up the Grammy for the
Best Jazz Album of the Year at the 49th Grammy Awards on February 12, 2007 for
The Hidden Land. The band also won a Grammy for
Best Pop Instrumental in 1996.
Find more info at:
www.flecktones