Welcome to Delbert Barker Music !

 Delbert Barker was born on a farm in Frenchburg, Kentucky on 3 December 1932 and moved to Middletown, Ohio, near Cincinatti in 1943. During his teens he began participating in amateur talent contests and eventually gained sufficient confidence to turn semi-pro, appearing on local radio and TV.
Between 1951 and 1953 he performed alongside other local favourites (including the Davis Sisters) on Mid-Day Merry Go-Round, a daytime show on WCPO-TV, Cincinnati. These appearances brought Barker to the attention of Paul Burkhardt, who ran a small recording studio and pressing plant, and specialised in producing cheap cover versions of recent hits on low-budget labels such as Queen City, Kentucky and Tops. Between 1951 and 1954, the versatile and adaptable Barker worked as a session vocalist for Burkhardt, recording over 100 tracks, some of which were released as singles on the Kentucky label with the remainder appearing on EPs and LPs with titles like 'Big 4 Hits' and '16 Top Hits'. 'I had five different voices' he says. 'I did Carl Smith, Hank Williams, Hank Thompson, Faron Young and some Lefty Frizzell'. Marriage took Barker out of the music business until early 1956 when he recorded a creditable version of 'Blue Suede Shoes' under the pseudonym 'Terry Wall' for Burkhardt's Hep label.
This impressed Louis Innis who signed Barker to King records as its answer to Carl Perkins. Both 'No Good Robin Hood' and the previously unissued 'Jug Band Jump' were recorded at Barker's initial recording session on 19 June 1956. He made a total of three singles for the label, two in 1956 and a third in 1961. He says 'In 1957 I went to Philadelphia to play guitar for Ruth and Slim Swighert, a local duet. A year later I went to Secausus, New Jersey and worked as a guitar man for the Warren Brothers, Shorty and Smokey. I stayed with them until January 1959 then returned to Middletown, Ohio. About 1960 I left the music industry and went into law enforcement in Middletown' although I went back and recorded a country 45 for King in 1961.
Barker rose to the rank of Lieutenant in Charge of Detectives and wrote and played in his spare time. 'You almost Slipped My Mind', a song he wrote in 1968, was recorded by a number of country artists, most notably Charlie Pride who took it to #1 on the country charts in 1961. The song subsequently received a BMI Citation Of Merit. Barker later ran a recording studio in his hometown. Delbert Barker performs at the Sycamoe Banquet Center 
www.middletownseniorcenter.com bi monthly to packed crowds!