Biography:Jim Bowles
JIM BOWLES (1903-1993). Born in 1903, Rockbridge, Monroe County, native James H. "Jim" Bowles started playing fiddle at age ten. His uncle Wash Carter taught him technique and songs. Growing up near the Carver family, Jim learned from watching and listening to them as well.
In 1937 Bowles accompanied brothers Finley "Red" and Levy Belcher to Tuscola, Illinois to appear on WDZ radio under the name Kentucky Coon Skinners. Homesick, Jim returned to Kentucky after about a month to farm, play fiddle and occasionally make whiskey. Red Belcher went on to front several bands and play at various radio stations in the south. Although most famous for his fiddling, Bowles was also a singer who played the banjo to accompany his songs, playing both a trailing (knocking) and thumb-and-index-finger styles.
The following is excerpted from Bruce Greene's article "The Romance of the Kentucky Fiddler" [1]:
Jim Bowles was born in 1903 in Monroe County, Kentucky. He grew up in a very musical area, and he was influenced by a number of local fiddlers.
His mother told him of the musicians from the past, such as Gilbert Maxey:
"He was an old colored man, and they had him playing for those old dances. āWhatās that, Uncle Gilbert?ā āChristmas Eve," heād say. āWell, by God, canāt you play nothing but āChristmas Eveā?ā So heād start on the same tune. And she said heād play the same tune every time. It was the only one he knew. āChristmas Eveā was the best dancing tune in the world, and he could play it, she said. Thatās been ninety years ago.''
"I guess I was about ten years old. Iād always play āā you have those little sticks of stovewood, you know, and Iād get āem up and saw on āem, like I was a-fiddling āā when I was a little bitty feller. And my father, times was hard and he had to go to Indiana and make money. Back in them days, there wasnāt no money to be got hardly. And he came through Louisville, and he came to a pawn shop. He bought me a fiddle. And of course I learnt several tunes."
One of the first fiddlers Jim learned from was a traveling photographer named Homer Botts:
"He used to come here. He made pictures. Just run around over the country. I donāt guess he ever worked any. And heād come here, and Motherād say, āWell, Homer, you been to dinner? Weāll give you your dinner and you can take some of our pictures.ā And he had a camera. Itās set up on things like tobacco sticks. And heād play them tunes, now. And heād stay here sometimes all night with us. He was an awful good fiddler āā real smooth."
Jimās main teacher, however, was his uncle Wash Carter:
"He had a good education, Uncle Wash did. He taught school, was a lawyer. And he learnt me a lot about fiddling. Iāve heard my mother say she used to hear him fiddle when she was a young girl. See, we was raised right here by him, and heād come up here. When I was a young boy, why, he got crippled āā he took the rheumatiz, something āā and Iād play āCumberland Gap,ā and I didnāt come down on the fine part like he wanted to, and heād just quarrel at me, and he says, āI know you can do that.ā
"I got to going to contests. I guess I was twenty years old. They used to have them at Tompkinsville. Theyād have āem at schoolhouses, at high schools, and places like that. Iāve played in contests with an old fiddler Cooney Perdue, but boy I couldnāt do nothing with him. Henry Ford took him way up there, you know, years ago, and played in a contest. He like to have won it."
Jim played semi-professionally in his younger years. In the early days of radio, he played fiddle for Finley "Red" Belcher, who went on to
become a well-known performer around Kentucky before his death in an automobile accident.
Around 1972, when Jim was in his late sixties, a neighbor of his told me that he was not looking too good, and didnāt look like
he was going to be around much longer. Jim Bowles lived to be ninety years old, and finally passed away in 1993.
- ā Bruce Greene, "The Romance of the Kentucky Fiddler", Fiddler Magazine June, 1997.