Baker began playing drums at around 15 years of age. In the early 1960s he took lessons from
Phil Seamen, one of the leading British
jazz drummers of the
post-war era.
Early bands In the 1960s he joined
Blues Incorporated, where he met bassist
Jack Bruce. The two clashed often, but would be rhythm section partners again in
the Graham Bond Organisation, a
rhythm and blues group with strong jazz leanings. Their relationship was so volatile that Baker once attacked Bruce with a knife during a concert.
Cream Despite this volatile relationship, Baker and Bruce reunited in 1966 when they formed
Cream with guitarist
Eric Clapton. A fusion of blues,
psychedelic rock and hard rock, the band released four albums in a little over two years before breaking up in 1968.
Blind Faith Baker then joined the short-lived "supergroup"
Blind Faith, comprising Eric Clapton, bassist
Ric Grech from
Family, and
Steve Winwood from
Traffic on keyboards and vocals. They released only one album,
Blind Faith, before breaking up.
Ginger Baker's Air Force In 1970 Baker formed, toured and recorded two albums with
fusion rock group
Ginger Baker's Air Force.
1970s Following Air Force, Baker created the short-lived "Ginger Baker Drum Choir", which released a sole single on
Atco Records (and
Polydor in Germany) in 1971. The 45 RPM record featured a three-piece drum ensemble and "
call and response" vocals, with the song "Atunde! (We are here)" and "Atunde! (part 2)" on its
A and B sides. In November 1971, Baker decided to set up a recording studio in
Lagos, then the capital of
Nigeria. He decided that it would be an interesting experience to travel to Nigeria overland across the
Sahara. Baker invited documentary filmmaker
Tony Palmer to join him and the film
Ginger Baker in Africa follows his odyssey as he makes his journey and finally arrives in Nigeria to set up his studio. After many frustrating setbacks and technical hitches, Batakota (ARC) studios opened at the end of January 1973, and operated successfully through the seventies as a facility for both local and western musicians.
Paul McCartney and Wings recorded the song "
Picasso's Last Words (Drink to Me)" for
Band on the Run at the studio, with Baker playing a tin can full of gravel. Baker sat in with
Fela Kuti during recording sessions in 1971 released by
Regal Zonophone as
Live! Fela also appeared with Baker on
Stratavarious (1972) alongside Bobby Gass, a pseudonym for
Bobby Tench Baker formed
Baker Gurvitz Army with brothers Paul and
Adrian Gurvitz in 1974 (encouraged by manager Bill Fehilly). The band recorded three albums,
Baker Gurvitz Army (1974),
Elysian Encounter (1975) and
Hearts on Fire (1976), and the band toured through England and Europe in 1975. The band broke up in 1976, not long after the death of Fehilly in a plane crash.
1980s After the failure of the recording studio in Lagos, Baker spent most of the early 1980s on an
olive farm in a small town in
Tuscany, Italy. During this period, he played little music. In 1980, Baker joined
Hawkwind after initially playing as a session musician on the album
Levitation. He left in 1981, after a tour. Live material and studio demos from that period which Baker participated in were included on two Hawkwind albums, released later in the 1980s. In 1985, he worked with producer
Bill Laswell on
Horses & Trees and then performed as a session musician on
Album by
Public Image Ltd. Baker moved to Los Angeles in the late 1980s intending to become an actor. He unsuccessfully auditioned for the part of the Homeless Man in the 1989
"Weird Al" Yankovic comedy film
UHF and appeared in the 1990 TV series
Nasty Boys as Ginger.
1990s In 1992 Baker played with the hard rock group
Masters of Reality with bassist Googe and singer/guitarist
Chris Goss on the album
Sunrise on the Sufferbus.
BBM (Bruce Baker Moore) formed in 1993. The short-lived power trio with the line-up of Baker, Jack Bruce and Irish
blues rock guitarist
Gary Moore recorded the album
Around the Next Dream, released 1994. Baker lived in
Parker, Colorado between 1993 and 1999, in part due to his passion for
polo. Baker not only participated in polo events at the Salisbury Equestrian Park, but he also sponsored an ongoing series of jam sessions and concerts at the equestrian centre on weekends. His past drug history increasingly caused him problems with U.S. immigration, so in 1999 he sold his property in Parker and moved to South Africa. In 1994, he formed the Ginger Baker Trio with bassist
Charlie Haden and guitarist
Bill Frisell.
2000s and 2010s On 3 May 2005, Baker reunited with Eric Clapton and Jack Bruce for a series of Cream concerts at the
Royal Albert Hall and
Madison Square Garden. The London concerts were recorded and released as
Royal Albert Hall London May 2-3-5-6, 2005 (2005). In a
Rolling Stone article written in 2009, Bruce is quoted as saying, "It's a knife-edge thing between me and Ginger. Nowadays, we're happily co-existing in different continents [Bruce, who died in 2014, lived in Britain, while Baker lived in South Africa] ... although I was thinking of asking him to move. He's still a bit too close". In 2008 a bank clerk, Lindiwe Noko, was charged with defrauding Baker of almost (equivalent to about at the time and US$ currently). Baker said he had hired Noko as a personal assistant, paying her £7 per day (about R100) for performing errands, and alleged she used this position to uncover his private banking information and make unauthorised withdrawals. Noko claimed that the money was a gift after she and Baker became lovers. Baker replied, "I've a scar that only a woman who had a thing with me would know. It's there and she doesn't know it's there." Noko pleaded not guilty but was convicted of fraud. In October 2010, she was sentenced to three years of "correctional supervision", a type of community service. Baker called the sentence "a travesty". His autobiography
Hellraiser was published in 2009. == Documentaries ==