Houston Chronicle

Cream star helped define drummer role

- By Peter Keepnews

Ginger Baker, who helped redefine the role of the drums in rock and became a superstar in the process, died Sunday in a hospital in southeaste­rn England. He was 80.

His family confirmed his death in a post on his official Twitter account.

Baker drew worldwide attention for his approach to the drums, as sophistica­ted as it was forceful, when he teamed with guitarist Eric Clapton and bassist Jack Bruce in the hugely successful British band Cream in 1966.

Peter Edward Baker — he became known as Ginger during childhood because of his red hair — was born on Aug. 19, 1939, in the Lewisham area of southeast London.

Drawn to the drums at an early age, Baker talked his way into a job with a traditiona­l-jazz combo when he was 16.

In 1962 Baker joined Blues Incorporat­ed, beginning his associatio­n with Bruce. When organist and saxophonis­t Graham Bond left that band in 1964 to form the Graham Bond Organisati­on, Baker and Bruce went with him.

Two years later, they teamed with Clapton to form Cream.

Cream was an instant sensation. Within two years, the band went from nightclubs to stadiums and released four albums, whose total sales were estimated at $35 million. But in 1968, at the height of its success, Cream disbanded.

One reason for the breakup was animosity between Baker and Bruce.

Baker’s next band was, on paper, even bigger than Cream: Blind Faith, in which he and Clapton joined singer, keyboardis­t and guitarist Steve Winwood. Blind Faith imploded after one album and one tour, the victim of excessive hype and conflictin­g egos.

Following the similarly brief life of his next band, Ginger Baker’s Air Force, Baker stayed largely out of the spotlight.

He spent much of the 1970s in Lagos, Nigeria, where he built a recording studio and became immersed in African music.

In the ensuing decades he was in and out of various bands, ranging from Masters of Reality to a jazz trio. He moved frequently, living in England, Italy, Los Angeles and South Africa, where he settled in 1999 and stayed until returning to England in 2012.

Baker and the other members of Cream were inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 1993. The band reunited for concerts in London and New York in 2005 and received a Grammy Award for lifetime achievemen­t in 2006.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? Ginger Baker, shown performing in New York in 2013, died on Sunday in England at age 80.
New York Times file photo Ginger Baker, shown performing in New York in 2013, died on Sunday in England at age 80.

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