Bill Harris
Apr 14, 1925 in Nashville, North Carolina
Representative Albums:
Influences:
A Member of the Group:
- Alternative Name: Willie Harris
- Genre: Jazz
- Active: '50s - '80s
- Instrument: Guitar (Acoustic)
Biography
A guitarist that spent at least two decades on the road with rhythm and blues vocal group The Clovers, Bill "Willie" Harris had a thick background in bebop andswing guitar as well as gospel. The latter style was at his fingertips even before he discovered guitarists such as Oscar Moore on records and radio, since Harris' father was a preacher who was in the position to turn the church organist job over to his offspring. Meanwhile Harris' mother was drumming in basic harmony and an uncle had chipped in with a guitar, apparently to be the beauty move.
The army supplied a bugle which temporarily halted progress with strings attached, so to speak. Harris was discharged in the mid '40s and promptly began studying guitar in Washington, D.C., becoming fairly good with both jazz and classical pieces. Harris was encouraged particulary in the classics by high-up staff at the Columbia School of Music yet seems to have picked The Clovers due to a perceived scent of economic security. The choice, interestingly enough, still wound up leading to expanded musical horizons when fellow rhythm and blues and session guitarist Mickey Baker eavesdropped on a Harris dressing room practice session and began pulling strings for what would be a series of releases under Harris' own name such as the 1960 Great Guitar Sounds. The previous EmArcy Solo Guitar from 1956 is considered to be the first album of solo jazz guitar ever released. During the '70s Harris operated Pigfoot a Washington D.C. restaurant, nightclub and art gallery. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, All Music Guide





