When Leonard was a boy, the Rutherford family moved from Somerset to Monticello, the home of blind professional touring musician Dick Burnett. In 1914, when Rutherford was 14 and Burnett 31 (date and ages approximate), the older man asked for the teenager to accompany him as a sighted assistant to the nearby
Lauren County Fair. Thereafter, Rutherford accompanied Burnett on more (and more distant) trips, becoming a permanent companion after the deaths of his parents. A multi-instrumentalist, Burnett taught young Leonard to play the fiddle, while he played banjo and sometimes guitar himself. As Rutherford improved, it became profitable to range further afield by horse, bus, and railroad. Eventually, Burnett bought a car, which Rutherford learned to drive, thus allowing them to travel in Burnett's words, "from Cincinnati to Chattanooga" playing "every town this side of Nashville". In Bonny Blue Coal Camp, Virginia, they encountered a general-store owner specializing in phonograph records, who recommended them to
Columbia Records. The
A&R manager
Frank Walker was impressed by their sound and repertoire, exclaiming, "I've had a heap of people recording for me here, but you two fellers are the two smoothest musicians that I ever had record for me." and, "You have some of the tantalizingest names for these records that I ever listened at." Six sides were recorded in 1926 and issued in the Columbia 1500-D
Familiar Tunes Series. They sold well, encouraging Walker to concentrate more on native Southern artists. Burnett and Rutherford were invited to record six months later and again after another six months. The records are notable for the precise unison melodic line of Rutherford's fiddle and Burnett's banjo or guitar. One of the songs, the ballad "Willie Moore", was included in the 1952
Anthology of American Folk Music, introducing Burnett and Rutherford to the new market of the
American folk-music revival. In 1928, after a dispute over royalties, Burnett and Rutherford left Columbia to record four sides for
Gennett, with the addition of the guitarist Byrd Moore. ==Rutherford and Foster==