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This is taken from The Guardian:
Ken Sykora Jazz guitarist and versatile presenter of music on BBC radio by Dennis Barker Friday March 24, 2006
Ken Sykora, who has died aged 82, was a poetic guitarist, adaptable jazz composer for radio and his own band, broadcaster, chef and gentlemanly individualist who avoided any suggestion of show-biz flamboyance. He was presenter of BBC radio's Jazz Club and At the Jazz Band Ball, among many other programmes.
He was born in London but his mother was the stepdaughter of a Swiss-German count who had married a Czech cavalry officer after eloping with him. London was a natural refuge, though Ken knew nothing of this background until years later, when he appeared on Desert Island Discs and one of his two older sisters wrote to tell him.
At Cambridge University, where he read geography, he was organiser of the band society; he then took an economics degree at the London School of Economics, where he was captain of the London University football team and president of the Union. An intelligence officer with the Chindits in the Far East during the second world war, on his return he began teaching in the East End of London and then lecturing at the LSE and the College of Distributive Trades.
But music, especially jazz, remained a passion. In the 1950s, when he was leading his own band, he appeared at the London Palladium with Ted Heath and at the Stoll Theatre with Geraldo. For five successive years in the 1950s, he was voted Britain's top guitarist by readers of Melody Maker.
He met his second wife, Helen Grant, lead singer at Murray's Cabaret Club, on a blind date, during which she thought he was a dull academic until he started playing his guitar.
The couple moved to Suffolk, though Ken continued to commute to London. He devised, performed in and presented the Guitar Club - a programme whose listeners included Paul McCartney - and the Stringalong radio programmes, just as he had been the original presenter on Roundabout, a music and chat show on what was then the BBC Light Programme, for which presenters were to include Richard Murdoch, Alan Dell and David Jacobs.
For BBC Radio 2, he devised and presented the series Be My Guest, in which he interviewed famous guests, mostly with musical associations, among them Count Basie, Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, the guitarist Segovia, the violinist Isaac Stern and the actor Gloria Swanson.
Sykora's hectic life was also to include Big Band Sound, Those Record Years, Album Time, LP Parade, and Jazz Digest for BBC Radio 3. For Radio 1, he presented the Plain Musician's Guide to the History of Pop. He was a contributor to Today, Housewives' Choice, Radio Newsreel, Home This Afternoon, You and Yours, Start the Week and Holiday Hour.
Then the family decided to move to Scotland, where his wife, the daughter of Hannah Grant, Scotland's first woman chef, had been born. In the 1970s they ran the Colintraive Hotel on the Kyles of Bute. Sykora enjoyed being the chef, using local produce such as hare, venison and rabbit, and earning himself the nickname The Big King because of his legendary powsowdie soup with two sheep's heads.
After five years, the hotel was sold, and he moved to a house in Blairmore. He went on presenting and producing programmes for what was then the BBC Scottish service. When Radio Clyde was launched in 1974, the programmes he produced included Serendipity with Sykora; he later took over as head of features for four years. In 1978, BBC Radio Scotland went on the air and later Sykora won the Glenfiddich award for best radio programme for Eater's Digest, a regular programme started in the 1980s which dealt with the quality of local food producers; Sykora travelled all over Scotland researching.
Helen died in 1997. He is survived by his sons, Duncan and Alistair, and a daughter, Alison.
· Ken Sykora, guitarist, composer, radio presenter and producer, born April 13 1923; died March 7 2006.
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