Bill Kenny Musical artist

William Francis Kenny Jr. (June 12, 1914 – March 23, 1978), known as Bill Kenny, was a pioneering American tenor vocalist with a vocal range spanning four octaves. Often regarded as one of the most influential high-tenor singers of all time, Kenny was noted for his "bell-like" vocal clarity and impeccable diction. Although he is most famous for his role as lead tenor with The Ink Spots, Kenny also led a successful solo career after disbanding The Ink Spots in 1954. Throughout the 1950's and 60's Kenny recorded, toured the world and appeared on many popular variety television shows. In 1966 Kenny became the star and host of his own musical variety show The Bill Kenny Show which aired on CBC . In 1989, 11 years after his death, Bill Kenny was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame. Kenny is often noted as being "the Godfather of Doo-Wop".

Personal facts

Bill Kenny
Alias (AKA)Mr. Ink Spot
Birth dateJune 12, 1914
Birth place
Pennsylvania , Philadelphia , United States
Date of deathMarch 23, 1978
Place of death
British Columbia , New Westminster , Canada

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Musical artist

Career started1936
Career ended1978
associated musical artist
Ella Fitzgerald
The Ink Spots
Sy Oliver
Bobby Hackett
BackgroundSolo singer
genre
Jazz
Pop music
Rhythm and blues
Rock and roll
Easy listening
Gospel music
Doo-wop
Vocal music
instrument
Singing
record label
RCA
Mercury Records
ViK. Recordings
Decca Records
Warwick

Bill Kenny on Wikipedia