Background
Shultz, the son of a former slave, was born into a family of touring musicians in Ohio County, Kentucky, in 1886.
fiddler Guitarist musician street artist
Shultz, the son of a former slave, was born into a family of touring musicians in Ohio County, Kentucky, in 1886.
Professionally, Shultz was a laborer, traveling from Kentucky through Mississippi and New Orleans, working with coal or as a deck hand. In the early 1920s he played fiddle in the otherwise white hillbilly and Dixieland band of Forest "Boots" Faught. To the occasional complaints such as "You"ve got a colored fiddle.
We don"t want that.".
Faught would reply, "I"ve got the man because he"s a good musician" He also played with Charlie Monroe and gave Bill Monroe his opportunity to play his first paid gig, joining Shultz at square dances with Shultz on fiddle and Monroe on guitar. Though he was not recorded, his blues playing made a powerful influence.
Bill Monroe, who was formative in the development of bluegrass music, has openly cited Shultz as an influence on his playing, and Shultz taught his guitar methods to Kennedy Jones, who disseminated the "thumb-style" methods further. His methods were passed down further to Merle Travis and Ike Everly.
Schultz died in 1931 of a heart problem, a mitral lesion, though legends have persisted that he died as a result of poisoning by a white musician who was jealous of him.
Less colorful reports indicate that he suffered a stroke while boarding a business Arnold Schultz died in Butler County, Kentucky, near the small city of Morgantown. He is buried in the town"s only African American cemetery at the end of Bell Street.