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Songwriter
from Lakeland, Florida, who moved to Nashville, Tennessee, on 11th
June 1958 and was placing songs within two weeks. Soon thereafter, his works were
being contracted to Silver Star Music Publishing Company, which was owned
by country great Hank Snow. In
fact, his first song, “My Lucky Friend”, was recorded by Snow,
who included it on one of his albums and as the B side of one of his
singles. The two of them
combined for a top-ten hit, “Chasin’
a Rainbow”, which peaked at #6 on 1st June 1959. In 1965, he co-founded Harbot Music Publishing Co. and received a nomination
for a Grammy award for his song, “Crystal Chandelier”, which
Carl Belew recorded. It was also covered by Louis
Armstrong, Floyd Cramer, Vic Dana, and Charley Pride. In 1966, Roy Drusky
recorded his “Rainbows and Roses”. Ferlin
Husky recorded “Once” and Dottie West recorded “Paper
Mansions” in 1967. In
1968, he became one of the first members of the National Songwriters
Association, serving on a board that included the likes of Kris
Kristofferson and Tom T. Hall. “The True and Lasting Kind”
proved to be the lasting kind, as it was covered by at least five
artists: Johnny Duncan &
June Sterns, Ferlin Husky, Bobby Lord, and Kitty
Wells. In 1969, he won the
first of four consecutive SESAC awards for Country Music Writer of the
Year. Nashville Songwriters
Association International bestowed their Outstanding Achievement Award on
him in 1970 for “You and Me Against the World”, which was
recorded by Jimmy Dean & Dottie West, Jack Greene & Jeannie Seeley,
Bobby Lord, and Roy Rogers. In
1971, he was voted on to the Country Music Association Board of Directors
as a songwriting representative.
He continued to have success with his songs, as well: “Here I Go Again” was
recorded by Lynn Anderson, Del Reeves, Nat Stuckey, and Bobby Wright. Ted cites Wright’s version of
the song to be his favourite recording of one of
his own songs because the emotion in the recording matched what he was
trying to convey on paper.
Other highlights from 1971 included “The Happiness of Havin’ You” by Jay Lee Webb and “The
One You Say Good Mornin’ To” by Jimmy
Dean. In 1972, Ted took home a
record seventeen SESAC awards, as a publisher and writer, and NSAI gave him
another Outstanding Achievement Award for “Here I Go Again”. He called “The Fool I’ve
Been Today” his favourite song, from a
sheer songwriting standpoint.
It was recorded by Jack Greene, Conway Twitty,
and Jerry Wallace. In 1976,
more SESAC awards rained down on him, including Country Single of the Year
for Charley Pride’s cover of “The Happiness of Havin’ You”. Ted won the SESAC Hall of Fame Award
for “Crystal Chandelier” in 1977. The song also won a SESAC
International Award, as BBC Radio-2 named it the “All Time Favorite
Country Music Recording Ever” according to a national poll. Ted was inducted into the Nashville
Songwriters Association International Hall of Fame in 1980. In 1987, Glen Campbell and Steve Wariner recorded “The Hand That Rocks the Cradle”
and Campbell performed it in Washington, D.C.’s Ford’s Theatre
for an audience that included President and Mrs. Ronald Reagan. It proceeded to garner more awards
for Ted, including SESAC’s Country Music
Writer of the Year and National Television Performance Activity Award, and NSAI’s Special Achievement Award. In all, Ted has won a whopping eighty-seven
SESAC awards. His works can be
heard on albums such as Cal Smith’s I’ve Found Someone of My Own and The Essential Dottie West.
Cal Smith recordings
A Handful of Stars (Ted Harris)
Sources:
- http://www.ask.com/music/discography/Cal-Smith/1808
- http://www.nashvillesongwritersfoundation.com/about.aspx
- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cal_Smith
- http://www.nashvillesongwritersfoundation.com/h-k/ted-harris.aspx
- http://www.lpdiscography.cz/s/Smithcal/smithcal-sp.htm
- http://www.rhapsody.com/dottie-west/the-essential-dottie-west/paper-mansions/lyrics.html
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