Chet Atkins

Soundtrack

Popular As "Mr. Guitar", "The Country Gentleman"

Birthday June 20, 1924

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Luttrell, Tennessee, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2001-6-30, Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. (77 years old)

Nationality United States

Height 6' (1.83 m)

#15094 Most Popular

1924

Chester Burton Atkins (June 20, 1924 – June 30, 2001), also known as "Mr. Guitar" and "The Country Gentleman", was an American musician who, along with Owen Bradley and Bob Ferguson, helped create the Nashville sound, the country music style which expanded its appeal to adult pop music fans.

He was primarily a guitarist, but he also played the mandolin, fiddle, banjo, and ukulele, and occasionally sang.

Atkins's signature picking style was inspired by Merle Travis.

Other major guitar influences were Django Reinhardt, George Barnes, Les Paul, and, later, Jerry Reed.

His distinctive picking style and musicianship brought him admirers inside and outside the country scene, both in the United States and abroad.

Atkins spent most of his career at RCA Victor and produced records for the Browns, Hank Snow, Porter Wagoner, Norma Jean, Dolly Parton, Dottie West, Perry Como, Floyd Cramer, Elvis Presley, the Everly Brothers, Eddy Arnold, Don Gibson, Jim Reeves, Jerry Reed, Skeeter Davis, Waylon Jennings, Roger Whittaker, Ann-Margret and many others.

Rolling Stone credited Atkins with inventing the "popwise 'Nashville sound' that rescued country music from a commercial slump" and ranked him number 21 on their list of "The 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time".

In 2023, Atkins was named the 39th best guitarist of all time.

Among many other honors, Atkins received 14 Grammy Awards and the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award.

He also received nine Country Music Association awards for Instrumentalist of the Year.

He was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, and the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum.

George Harrison was also inspired by Chet Atkins; early Beatles songs such as "All My Loving" show the influence.

Atkins was born on June 20, 1924, in Luttrell, Tennessee, near Clinch Mountain.

His parents divorced when he was six years old, after which he was raised by his mother.

He was the youngest of three boys and a girl.

He started out on the ukulele, later moving on to the fiddle, but he made a swap with his brother Lowell when he was nine: an old pistol and some chores for a guitar.

1939

Atkins did not have a strong style of his own until 1939 when (while still living in Georgia) he heard Merle Travis picking over WLW radio.

This early influence dramatically shaped his unique playing style.

Whereas Travis used his index finger on his right hand for the melody and his thumb for the bass notes, Atkins expanded his right-hand style to include picking with his first three fingers, with the thumb on bass.

He also listened closely to the single-string playing of George Barnes and Les Paul.

Chet Atkins was an amateur radio general class licensee.

1942

After dropping out of high school in 1942, Atkins landed a job at WNOX (AM) (now WNML) radio in Knoxville, where he played fiddle and guitar with the singer Bill Carlisle and the comic Archie Campbell and became a member of the station's Dixieland Swingsters, a small swing instrumental combo.

After three years, he moved to WLW-AM in Cincinnati, Ohio, where Merle Travis had formerly worked.

1974

He stated in his 1974 autobiography, "We were so poor and everybody around us was so poor that it was the forties before anyone even knew there had been a depression."

Forced to relocate to Fortson, Georgia, outside of Columbus to live with his father because of a critical asthma condition, Atkins was a sensitive youth who became obsessed with music.

Because of his illness, he was forced to sleep in a straight-back chair to breathe comfortably.

On those nights, he played his guitar until he fell asleep holding it, a habit that lasted his whole life.

While living in Fortson, Atkins attended the historic Mountain Hill School.

1990

He returned in the 1990s to play a series of charity concerts to save the school from demolition.

Stories have been told about the very young Chet who, when a friend or relative would come to visit and play guitar, crowded the musician and put his ear so close to the instrument that it became difficult for the visitor to play.

Atkins became an accomplished guitarist while he was in high school.

He used the restroom in the school to practice because it had good acoustics.

His first guitar had a nail for a nut and was so bowed that only the first few frets could be used.

He later purchased a semi-acoustic electric guitar and amp, but he had to travel many miles to find an electrical outlet, since his home didn't have electricity.

Later in life, he lightheartedly gave himself (along with John Knowles, Tommy Emmanuel, Steve Wariner, and Jerry Reed ) the honorary degree CGP ("Certified Guitar Player").

1998

Formerly using the call sign WA4CZD, he obtained the vanity call sign W4CGP in 1998 to include the CGP designation, which supposedly stood for "Certified Guitar Picker".

He was a member of the American Radio Relay League.

2011

In 2011, his daughter Merle Atkins Russell bestowed the CGP degree on his longtime sideman Paul Yandell.

She then declared no more CGPs would be allowed by the Atkins estate.

His half-brother Jim was a successful guitarist who worked with the Les Paul Trio in New York.