FACTOID # 150: The average person in the United Kingdom drinks as much tea as 23 Italians.
 
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Encyclopedia > George Baker (record singer)

George Baker (10 February 1885 - 8 January 1976) was an English singer. He is remembered for singing on thousands of gramophone records in the early decades of the 20th century. He is especially associated with the comic baritone roles in the Gilbert & Sullivan operettas.


He first recorded for Pathé Records in 1909. He continued making new records into the 1960s.


External links

  • Artist profile: George Baker (http://www.cris.com/~oakapple/gasdisc/artist/george_baker.htm)

Other notable people named George Baker


  Results from FactBites:
 
NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Blind Faith (4390 words)
The recording of their album continued, followed by a short tour of Scandinavia, where the band played smaller gigs and were able to rehearse their sound and prepare it for bigger audiences in America and England.
Bizarre rumors both fueled and were fueled by the controversy, among them that the girl was Baker's illegitimate daughter or, alternatively, was a groupie kept as a slave by the band.
Ginger Bakers Air Force was a Jazz-rock fusion band comprised of Baker, Graham Bond on saxophone, jazz drummer Phil Seaman, Chris Wood and Harold McNair on saxaphone and flute, Denny Laine on guitar and vocals.
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