Steve Baker has been working in music his entire life. He is a trumpet player and vocalist for Bull City Syndicate, a Durham-based variety act that originally formed in 1993. He has played in the Triangle area for years, including Cat’s Cradle in Carrboro. But his show on Halloween night will be particularly special.
It will be his first performance at Cat’s Cradle with his son, Duncan Baker.
Duncan, 20, and Steve, 59, only started playing together in the last year when Steve formed Stardust to Ashes, a David Bowie tribute band, with some of his Bull City Syndicate bandmates. The collaboration came when Steve wanted to move the Syndicate’s bassist to keyboard.
Steve asked Duncan, who happens to share a name with David Bowie's only son, to be his replacement.
“I felt like, with us doing Bowie’s stuff, we would be better served for me to move Randy (Ines) from bass guitar over to piano and keyboards for the Bowie project,” Steve said. “And my son, even as young as he is, he’s just a phenom and freak of nature musician. He has total mastery and control over the bass guitar.”
The father and son duo, along with a handful of Syndicate bandmates, have been performing as Stardust to Ashes since Dec. 30, 2018 and have become the most in-demand David Bowie tribute band in the Mid-Atlantic, according to the band’s website.
The band will perform at Cat’s Cradle on Oct. 31, and attendees are encouraged to wear Halloween costumes. Doors open at 8 p.m., and the show begins at 9 p.m.
“Doing a Bowie gig on Halloween in a college town – I really can’t think of anything better,” Steve said. “Halloween shows can be crazy and fun anyway, and they should be, but to have an overarching theme of someone that is so iconic for his costumes? That’s kind of a perfect fit.”
Steve lives in Raleigh, where Duncan was born and raised. Duncan moved to Chapel Hill two years ago, where he works at Starbucks on Franklin Street and takes college classes online.