In the early 1950s, he sang in the Jewish Young Folksingers chorus conducted by
Robert De Cormier. Gerlach was among the first folk artists to adopt the
12 string guitar as his medium. A friend of fellow folk musicians
Ramblin' Jack Elliott,
Woody Guthrie and
Pete Seeger, his first album was even called
Twelve-String Guitar. Led Zeppelin covered its flagship song, "Gallows Pole". Guitarist Jimmy Page said: "I first heard it ('Gallows Pole') on an old Folkways LP by Fred Gerlach, a 12-string player who was, I believe, the first white to play the instrument. I used his version as a basis and completely changed the arrangement Gerlach was inspired to adopt the 12 string by his mentor and one-time roommate
Lead Belly, a
blues guitarist famous for using the instrument. At the time, Gerlach became interested in the instrument, it was rarely used. He later related: "I went into one of the largest musical instrument stores in the country, and the manager assured me that no such instrument existed. On another occasion, a maker of fine 12-string lutes (nylon strings) pictured for me a nightmare of explosive force required to hold twelve steel strings in proper tension. He envisioned bits of guitar and guitarist flying asunder. I have combed New York City pawnshops and music stores and have received a variety of comments ranging' from 'Sorry, we're out of them now. Won't a six-string guitar do? to 'Have you got rocks in your head, buddy?' In fact, it took me about a year after I had first decided to play a twelve-string before I found one. It wasn't a concentrated search, but it nevertheless indicates the general unavailability of the instrument." Gerlach is the uncle of Jesse Lee Kincaid who was a member of the
Rising Sons, a 1960s blues band. ==Career==