Talk about a versatile musician:
Alden Bunn recorded in virtually every postwar musical genre imaginable. Lowdown blues, gospel, vocal group R&B, poppish duets, even rockabilly weren't outside the sphere of his musicianship.
Spirituals were
Bunn's first love. While still in North Carolina during the early '40s, the guitarist worked with
The Gospel Four and then
The Selah Jubilee Singers, who recorded for Continental and Decca.
Bunn and
Thurman Ruth broke away in 1949 to form their own group, the Jubilators. During a single day in New York in 1950, they recorded for four labels under four different names!
One of those labels was Apollo, who convinced them to go secular. That's basically how
The Larks, one of the seminal early R&B vocal groups whose mellifluous early-'50s Apollo platters rank with the era's best, came to be.
Bunn sang lead on a few of their bluesier items ("Eyesight to the Blind," for one), as well as doing two sessions of his own for the firm in 1952 under the name of
Allen Bunn. As
Alden Bunn, he encored on
Bobby Robinson's Red Robin logo the next year.
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