Burns was born in
Conasauga, Tennessee, on March 10, 1920. His family moved to
Knoxville, Tennessee, when he was three. In 1936, he auditioned for a talent contest at Knoxville radio station
WNOX, where he met Henry Haynes, also 16. The two formed a duo and WNOX program director Lowell Blanchard gave them the stage names Homer and Jethro after forgetting their names on the air. Burns was drafted into the US Army and served in Europe during World War II and reunited with Haynes, who had served in the Pacific, in Knoxville in 1945. By 1947, the duo moved to
Cincinnati, Ohio, and were working at
WLW on the station's
Midwestern Hayride. They signed with
King Records, where they worked as a house band and recorded singles on their own, and two years later signed with
RCA Records. The pair were fired along with other stars by new management at WLW in 1948, and after a brief tour, they moved to
Springfield, Missouri, and performed on
KWTO with
Chet Atkins,
the Carter Family and
Slim Wilson. In 1949, they moved to
Chicago and played at the
Chicago Theatre. Between shows, they would go to
WLS to appear live on
National Barn Dance. While performing on WLS, Burns met and married his wife, Lois Johnson, whom he called Gussie. Her twin sister Leona was married to Atkins. In 1959, they won a
Grammy for the best comedy performance for "The Battle of Kookamonga", a parody of
Johnny Horton's "
Battle of New Orleans". Burns was a highly-influential
mandolin stylist, preferring clean single-note jazzy melodies and sophisticated chords over the dominant
bluegrass stylings of
Bill Monroe, and since he performed mostly in a
country music setting, introduced many country mandolinists to sophisticated jazz harmonies and improvisational techniques, as well as standards from the songbooks of
Duke Ellington,
Django Reinhardt and
Cole Porter. By the 1970s, Burns's influence had spread to a younger generation of bluegrass and "new-acoustic" musicians, most notably New Grass Revival mandolinist
Sam Bush. His participation in
Norman Blake/Tut Taylor/Sam Bush/Butch Robins/Vassar Clements/David Holland/Jethro Burns, an independently released album produced by promoter
Hank Deane, was reportedly at Bush's suggestion. During that same decade, Burns's acquaintance with bluegrass mandolinist
David Grisman led to Burns's writing a number of music/humor columns in the Grisman-published journal
Mandolin World News. Grisman also produced a 1978 duet album on Kaleidoscope Records,
Back to Back, featuring Burns and Western swing electric mandolinist
Tiny Moore. Although Burns and Moore were approximately the same age and were among the few of their generation to make their reputations playing jazz and swing mandolin, the two had never met prior to the production of the album, its liner notes report. After Haynes died in 1971, Burns's regular musical partner was guitarist
Ken Eidson, with whom he co-authored an influential mandolin method tome (''Mel Bay's Complete Jethro Burns Mandolin Book'', still in print), and they continued to perform as Homer and Jethro. After the partnership ended, Burns continued to play, most notably with Chicago
folk singer Steve Goodman. He appeared on several of Goodman's albums and also toured nationally with him. At times he appeared in the
Million Dollar Band on TV's
Hee Haw with Atkins and swing fiddler
Johnny Gimble. He also became a master teacher of mandolin jazz. He died at his home in
Evanston, Illinois, from cancer, on February 4, 1989.{{cite web == Honors ==