Bill Baird
Bill Baird has spent decades operating on the fringes of the music industry — drawing inspiration from fellow true believers and beautiful misfits like Arthur Russell, Roky Erickson, and Doug Sahm, while quietly assembling one of the most idiosyncratic bodies of work in American independent music.
His first major act, Sound Team, signed to Capitol Records and Parlophone and became the subject of Echotone, a documentary film that captured both the promise and the chaos of that era. His next project, {{{Sunset}}}, logged endless miles on the road alongside beloved California outfit The Range of Light Wilderness. Along the way, Baird crashed on Flea's couch, co-wrote songs with Pete Brown — the man who handed Cream "Sunshine of Your Love" — and somehow found time to teach songwriting at the legendary Esalen Institute on the Big Sur coast.
He dropped out of college young, lived out his Kerouac fantasy on the open road, and eventually circled back to academia, earning an MFA from Mills College — where the celebrated jazz composer Roscoe Mitchell once told him "You are a testament to the failure of the American educational system."
The records kept coming. Baird has released music on Dangerbird, Aural Canyon, Curly, Moon Glyph, in addition to a steady stream of self-released albums .He's been playlisted on BBC 6 Music, performed across their airwaves, earned Rough Trade's Record of the Month, and recorded at Abbey Road Studios twice. He's produced albums for Generationals and Garrett T. Capps, and traveled through India for six weeks shooting The Origin of Sound, a film made for Air India. The city of Austin once gave him his own day at City Hall — Bill Baird Day.
Critics who've caught up with him haven't been subtle. "In the sphere of psychedelic music, Bill Baird is without a doubt one of the top 2 or 3 songwriters in the world," wrote le Village Pop. Tiny Mix Tapes called him "one of the last of the living rock n roll geniuses." The Bay Bridged kept it simple: "Bill Baird is a genius."
He is currently back home in San Antonio, where he is working on a book about the 1968 World's Fair for Texas A&M University Press, and preparing a new album.