In the late 1960s, Walden dropped out of school, quit his job, and devoted his energies to the guitar full-time, picking up a bass player (Al Roberts) and drummer (Randy Reeder) to form a three-piece band named Aphrodite. They started touring and wound up in
Denver, playing local clubs and opening for acts like
Buddy Miles. It was in Denver that
Emerson, Lake & Palmer's road manager,
Neville Chesters, saw them in a club and offered them a recording contract with ELP's label,
Manticore. In 1972, the group moved to
England and was reformed, keeping Al Roberts and changing the name to
Stray Dog. There, they were signed to Manticore and
Greg Lake produced three songs from their first album
Stray Dog. The new group toured with ELP as the opening act, but never really took flight, and eventually folded. Following the breakup of the band, Walden supplanted the ailing
Paul Kossoff by providing guitar tracks for
Free's final album
Heartbreaker, which was released in 1973 (Walden plays on 'Common Mortal Man', 'Easy on My Soul' and 'Seven Angels'). He also played electric guitar in 1973, on the debut solo album
Still by
King Crimson lyricist
Peter Sinfield. In 1975, he joined
The Eric Burdon Band and performed with them for a year. Walden scored numerous television series, including
The Wonder Years,
Roseanne,
Ellen,
My So-Called Life,
Felicity,
Early Edition,
Sports Night,
The West Wing,
George Lopez, ''
I'll Fly Away, The Stand, Huff, Once and Again, Friday Night Lights and Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip''. In the summer of 2001, Walden released a solo album of mainly acoustic guitar pieces titled
Music by... W. G. Snuffy Walden. The album included expanded or full versions of many of Walden's themes, such as "Once and Again", "Eugene's Ragtop", "Thirtysomething (Revisited)", and "West Wing Suite". In April 2008, Stephen J. Abramson interviewed Walden for a four-hour, multi-part video series for the
Television Academy. In March 2018,
Up to Snuff, a documentary film about Walden's career, won the documentary competition in its premier at the Pasadena International Film Festival. In September 2018, Walden starred in a 1950s style cover of "
Africa" by
Toto along with the musical collective
Postmodern Jukebox on YouTube. ==Awards and nominations ==