

By Nancy Correro
The Times of SWLA
B and K Music, Kinder, La.
B and K Music was started by Ken Smith and Buford Smith in 1978 in their home. Their business grew out of necessity and a love of music.
Ken Smith is a third generation fiddle player. He started playing at age 10. His father, Buford Smith, is a guitarist.
“I grew-up playing in house jam sessions. There were a lot of jam sessions at my grand parent’s house. Some of my relatives that played fiddle were alive at that time and I picked it up,” Ken Smith said.
Ken Smith, World Champion Fiddler
Smith was introduced to a style of music called “Texas fiddle competition music.”
Once he learned that style of playing Smith and his father went all over Texas and through to Alabama competing in fiddle contests. He won several contests across the United States after that and won the state championship in Louisiana five times—all between the ages of twelve and eighteen.
“It was a gift, something I inherited and I pursued it. I gave up everything else in my life that most kids do—basketball, baseball, football—and practiced about four to five hours a day,” said Smith.
Over the years Smith and his father learned to repair their own instruments. There were no repair people in this area at the time.
In order to have an instrument repaired, one would have to go to Houston or New Orleans. According to Smith, there was nowhere to get supplies.
“We opened up a little company in 1978 out of our home. We were able to get a distributor to furnish and supply us in tools like strings and accessories,” said Smith.
When Smith turned twenty-one, he told his father he would like to open a retail store in Kinder and that is what they did.
Bufford Smith, Guitarist and co-owner.
“We starved to death for about ten years,” Smith said, laughing, “1981 was a real bad recession here and I opened up then, but the store became successful around 1989, 90. We dealt in musical instruments and fiddle or violin repairs,” said Smith.
B and K Music has always sold European violins. There are pictures of some of the lovely European violins on their website: www.bandkmusic.biz.
“We probably keep over 100 European violins in stock. I have connections in Europe and we have them flown in. We do necessary repairs if needed and if not we just set them up for the type of music that is played in this part of the country,” said Smith. “Plus, McNeese has a classical program; Lake Charles and Lafayette have a symphony.”
B and K Music also has amps, pa systems, DJ equipment, mixers, and processors. They do installations for churches, nightclubs, and design audio equipment for courtrooms.
“I built my reputation on being a successful contest player and I think that is what made the store unique is we combined fiddle players and violin players. If you wanted to buy a classical violin you had to go to a classical violin shop and that would have been in a major city,” Smith said. “It used to be two completely different worlds: fiddle people and violin people.”
Smith’s success is what made the store unique and it’s a hard form of music to play, but there are

“It’s evolved into a really extremely hard form of music and there are some very reputable judges with state competitions and national competitions and world competitions,” Smith said.
To get a better understanding of this type of music one can think of a hoedown, breakdown, rags, as in ragtime or waltzes and hornpipes, jigs, and reels.
“Those were all the forms of music and over the years they have become more polished and more parts have been added to them and the technique of playing them has gotten more precise,” Smith said.

“I was nominated – I had a recording with Rounder Records in 1992 and it was nominated for a Grammy. All of those things put together combined with good service made the store a success,” Smith said.
The Grammy nomination was a collaborative effort put together by a record company out of Boston, MA. They picked out three personalities from Louisiana. When Rounder Records called, they had Cajun artist D.L. Menard who plays guitar and sings and another artist, Eddie LeJeune who is a Cajun accordion player.
“They picked those two fellows and then they called me and picked me as a fiddle player and they said they would like us to get together and cut a record.
Rounder Records saw something in the three individuals and wanted to combine the three personalities. They called the group Le Trio Cadien, which, by the way, the CD of the same name is available on Amazon.com.

“They flew us to a recording studio in Boston and we stayed there for four days. It was a very relaxed atmosphere. They let us do some of our own producing and let us utilize some of our own ideas in putting this album together. They released it in 1991 and we were nominated in 1992 for the Grammy. That led to about 15 European tours that we did from around 1992 to 1995,” Smith said.
Smith plays gigs every weekend. In fact, they played at Festival Acadian. He plays gigs with some popular Cajun bands.
When asked about music lessons, Smith said that he did that for fifteen years at the store and had some very successful students.
When the store got extremely busy and they were rewarded contracts that they were bidding on like church and club installs, it was taking a lot of my time after work and that was the time he was giving lessons.
“I may do it again when I’m older and get tired of climbing through attics,” Smith said.
Some of Smith’s touring consisted of federally granted programs here in the United States that wanted Cajun music.
“I met a lot of people on my travels and I had offers from advanced students asking me for master lessons. So that is something I can look forward to in the future,” Smith said.
B and K Music is located at 320 N. 10th Street in Kinder. Phone: 337-738-2686.