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Born Vincent Gambella in New York City, the artist who would become
Vincent Bell began playing guitar as a youngster and as a teenager was
already jamming with the likes of Tony Mottola.
His career is
loaded with apocrypha, such as the possibility that he invented a “wah-wah” pedal in the ‘50s. Whatever the truth, it is a fact
that Vincent Bell was an innovator who created several stringed
instruments, including an electric sitar, which you may have heard on Freda
Payne’s “Band of Gold” and the Lemon Pipers’
“Green Tambourine”.
He also invented a twelve-string electric guitar and the bellzouki, which is a bouzouki enhanced with electronic
effects.
Vincent’s
spacey style of guitar playing helped shape the sonic panorama of the
‘60s and ‘70s. Some
good examples of songs on which he left his indelible stamp are: the dreamy theme of Midnight Cowboy, which he recorded
with Ferrante & Teicher,
who took it to the top ten in 1969; the “Airport Love Theme” which bears an album of the same
name; and, the distinct guitar plucking that encouraged the ambling rhythm
section on “Can’t Take My Eyes off of You” by Frankie Valli and “Walk on By” by Dionne
Warwick.
The list of
hit songs on which he played reads like a Reader’s Digest record offer, but here is at least a
partial list, and many of these are instantly recognizable for their unique
guitar sounds and stylings: The Angels’ “My
Boyfriend’s Back”, The Archies’
“Sugar, Sugar”, Debby Boone’s “You Light up My
Life”, Donovan’s “Sunshine Superman”, The
Exciters’ “Tell Him”, Inez Foxx’s
“Mockingbird”, Lesley Gore’s “You Don’t Own
Me”, Gary Lewis & the Playboys’ “This Diamond
Ring”, Little Anthony & the Imperials’ “Goin out of My Head”, Little Peggy March’s
“I Will Follow Him”, The McCoys’
“Hang on Sloopy”, Johnny Nash’s
“I Can See Clearly Now”, Peaches & Herb’s
“Reunited”, Ruby & the Romantics’ “Our Day Will
Come”, Sgt. Barry Sadler’s “The Ballad of the Green
Berets”, Simon & Garfunkel’s “The Sounds of Silence”,
Frank Sinatra’s “New York, New York”, and Mary
Wells’ “My Guy”.
In 1968, he
appeared on the soundtrack of Barbarella, and in 1969, began a creative partnership
with Frank Sinatra that lasted at least until the issue of 1979’s Trilogy. Other artists with whom he recorded
in the ‘70s include Rupert Holmes and Bob Dylan. His own albums include Whistle Stop (partially arranged by
Claus Ogerman) and Pop Goes the Electric Sitar, which fetches something like fifty
bucks on eBay.
The National
Academy of Recording Arts and Science’s New York chapter gave him
their MVP award seven times for his work on electric guitar, and in the
1980s, bestowed upon him their Emeritus award.
In the 1990s,
he continued to get more film work, performing on the soundtracks of Bugsy, Everyone Says I Love You, The
Mambo Kings, Naked in New York,
and Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me.
A couple of
latter-day CD re-packagings that feature Vincent’s unique guitar
technique are Rated X for Excitement
by Ron Frangipane & His Orchestra and Neil Sedaka’s
Oh Carol: The Complete Recordings 1956-1966.
Debby Boone recordings
You Light Up My Life
(Joe Brooks )
Barry
Sadler recordings
The Ballad of
the Green Berets (Robin Moore/Barry
Sadler)
Simon
& Garfunkel recordings
The Sounds of
Silence (Paul Simon)
Frank
Sinatra recordings
Theme from
New York, New York (Fred Ebb/John Kander)
Sources:
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vinnie_Bell
- http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=11:gbfrxqu5ldse~T4
- http://www.spaceagepop.com/bell.htm
- http://www.discomusic.com/forums/funk-jazz-northern-soul-rare-grooves/19648-vincent-bell.html
- http://www.atomicmall.com/view.php?id=54306
- http://www.cduniverse.com/search/xx/music/artist/Vincent%20Bell/a/Vincent%20Bell.htm
- http://www.danacountryman.com/vinnie/hitrecords/hitrecords.html
- http://recordrobot.blogspot.com/2008/03/vincent-bell.html
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