Artist's albums
Makin' A Mess: Bob Gibson Sings Shel Silverstein
1995 · album
Courtship of Carl Sandburg
1984 · album
The Perfect High
1980 · album
There’s a Meeting Here Tonight (Live)
2020 · single
Live at Cornell 1957
2018 · album
Funky in the Country
1974 · album
Let's Go
2009 · single
The Living Legend Years
2008 · album
Bob Gibson & Bob Camp At The Gate Of Horn
2005 · album
Ski Songs
2005 · album
Where I'm Bound
2005 · album
Best Of Friends
2004 · compilation
Yes I See
1961 · album
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Biography
While Bob Gibson's recordings may sound like run-of-the-mill folk to modern listeners, he played an important role in popularizing folk music to American audiences in the 1950s at the very beginning of the folk boom. His 12-string guitar style influenced performers like Gordon Lightfoot and Harry Chapin; he was a mainstay at one of the first established folk clubs in the U.S., the Gate of Horn in Chicago; and he wrote songs with Shel Silverstein and Phil Ochs, as well as performing in a duo with Hamilton Camp. Most of all, he was one of the first folkies on the scene -- when he began performing and recording in the mid-'50s, there was hardly anyone else playing guitar-based folk music for an educated, relatively affluent audience. Gibson was a salesman for a developmental reading company before he was inspired by take up folk music in 1954, after hearing Pete Seeger perform. He learned Jamaican music while working cruise boats off Florida, and taught some to the Tarriers, who recorded "Banana Boat Song" (made famous by Harry Belafonte). On his first recordings for the Riverside label in the late '50s, he played banjo and 12-string guitar with light accompaniment, presenting a wide assortment of traditional folk tunes, as well as some originals. Gibson helped Joan Baez and Phil Ochs in their early days, and was managed by Albert Grossman, who later handled the affairs of such giants as Bob Dylan and Peter, Paul and Mary. In fact, Gibson has said that Grossman wanted to team Bob and Hamilton Camp up with a female singer before hitting upon the same type of trio approach with Peter, Paul and Mary, although Gibson wasn't interested in the idea. But Gibson probably was a little too retro for big-time folk success in the '60s anyway. He was older than most of the performers on the scene, and his approach too tame and clean-cut, even though he and similar performers had helped created the sparks of the folk boom just by playing such material to begin with. In the latter period of his life he did continue to perform in Chicago, and help out with programs for that's city's Old Town School of Folk Music. He died in September 1996 at the age of 64. ~ Richie Unterberger, Rovi