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Guitarist
from Nashville, Tennessee, who started playing the banjo
until his older brother Owen urged him to switch to the guitar. The banjo, said Owen, was becoming
passé. Harold took his
advice and modeled his early guitar playing on that of George Barnes and
Charlie Christian.
Owen
helped him get his first professional music gig, as well, arranging for him
to go on tour with Ernest Tubb during the summer
after his junior year of high school.
After graduating, Harold enlisted in the U.S. Navy, then attended George
Peabody College,
studying music by day, and playing at the Grand Ole Opry
at night.
On 17th
December 1946, he laid down his first tracks as a session musician, in
tandem with Pee Wee King & the Golden West Cowboys, including
“Tennessee Central Number Nine” and “Texas Toni
Lee”.
Harold
and Owen were seminal figures in the establishment of Nashville
as Music City, U.S.A. They built the first recording
studio there in the late 1940s.
It was called Castle Recording Studio, and it served its purpose
well for a few years, but with stereo all the rage, the brothers needed a
bigger, more sophisticated recording environment. Then they erected the Bradley Film
and Recording Studios (a.k.a. Quonset Hut), and it was located on what is
now commonly referred to as Music Row.
In the
1950s, Harold co-produced a TV show entitled Country Style, USA – with Owen Bradley, and recorded with
Webb Pierce. Other artists with
whom he worked included Joan Baez, Patsy Cline, Connie Francis, Buddy
Holly, Henry Mancini, Willie Nelson, Roy Orbison, Elvis Presley, Marty
Robbins, Leon Russell, Hank Snow, and Hank Williams.
He has
played on some of the biggest country-pop hits of all time, such as
“Big Bad John”, “Coal Miner’s Daughter”,
“Crazy”, “Harper Valley PTA”, “Jingle Bell
Rock”, “King of the Road”, “Only the Lonely”,
and “Stand By Your Man”.
In the
1960s, he released three solo albums, Bossa Nova Guitar Goes to Nashville, Guitar for Lovers Only, and Misty
Guitar.
Session
work continued to pour in during the 1970s, and Harold expanded his musical
clout by multi-tasking on the bass.
For his efforts, he won the NARAS Superpicker
Award in six consecutive years and was named in the Who’s Who in Country Music MVP polls from 1977 through
1979.
In
1985, he served as Music Director of Legends
of Country Music, a telethon intended to raise money for the Public
Broadcasting Service. He also
has the distinction of having been the first president of the National
Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences’ Nashville chapter, vice president of the
American Federation of Musicians International, and past president of the AFM’s Nashville Association of Musicians Local
257.
In
2004, he appeared on the compact disc, Regeneration
(Reunion of Nashville’s
“A” Team), a collection of artists who were essentially
“The Wrecking Crew” of the Nashville scene. He has been inducted into the
Musician’s Hall of Fame as a member of this group and the Country
Music Hall of Fame as a solo artist.
Harold
Bradley is considered to be the most recorded guitarist in history.
Randy Barlow recordings
Dixie
Man (J.L. Wallace/Terry
Skinner/Ken Bell)
Hargus “Pig” Robbins recordings
Chunky People (Jim Vest/David Chamberlain)
Sources:
- http://www.nashvillesound.net/harold_bradley.htm
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Bradley
- http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/store/artist/album/0,,3570811,00.html
- http://www.mp3.com/artist/harold-bradley/summary/
- http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/ateam
- http://www.countrystandardtime.com/news/newsitem.asp?xid=590
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