Rufus Harley - Moon River youtube/watch?v=R_WGmwEh4Qc Rufus - TopicsExpress



          

Rufus Harley - Moon River youtube/watch?v=R_WGmwEh4Qc Rufus Harley, Jr. (May 20, 1936 near Raleigh, North Carolina – August 1, 2006 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) was an American jazz musician of mixed Cherokee and African ancestry, known primarily as the first jazz musician to adopt the Scottish great Highland bagpipe as his primary instrument. Harley became inspired to learn the bagpipe after seeing the Black Watch perform in John F. Kennedys funeral procession in November 1963. Then a maintenance worker for the Philadelphias housing authority, Harley began searching the city for a set of bagpipes. Failing to find one, he traveled to New York City where he found a set in a pawn shop. He purchased the instrument for US$120, quickly adapting it to the idioms of jazz, blues, and funk. On several occasions, when a neighbor called the police to complain about Harleys practicing in his apartment, he would quickly put away his bagpipes and feign ignorance, asking the officers, Do I look like Im Irish or Scottish to you?[2] He eventually acquired a better set of bagpipes, which cost him a little over US$1,000.[3] Harley made his bagpipe performance debut in 1964. From 1965 to 1970 he released four recordings as leader on the Atlantic label (all produced by Joel Dorn, an early supporter), also recording as a sideman with Herbie Mann, Sonny Stitt, and Sonny Rollins in the 1960s and 1970s. He later recorded with Laurie Anderson (appearing on her 1982 album Big Science) and The Roots (on their 1995 album Do You Want More?!!!??!), the latter coming about due to a 1994 appearance on The Arsenio Hall Show. In addition to bagpipes, on these albums he also occasionally plays tenor saxophone, flute, or electric soprano saxophone. Harley often wore Scottish garb, including a kilt, in conjunction with a Viking-style horned helmet. After seeing him perform on television, a Scottish family gave him his tartan, the MacLeod tartan, which he wore for the rest of his life.[3] His bagpipe technique was somewhat unorthodox in that he placed the drones over his right shoulder rather than his left. He favored the key of B-flat minor. Harley lived for much of his life in the Germantown neighborhood of Northwest Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and frequently gave presentations in Philadelphia-area public schools. During his frequent overseas performance tours, he carried and distributed miniature replicas of the Liberty Bell, the symbol of his hometown, as well as American flags and copies of the U.S. Constitution. He appeared on a number of television programs, including Whats My Line?, To Tell the Truth (March 22, 1965 [4] and again c. 2000), Ive Got a Secret (October 17, 1966),[5] and The Arsenio Hall Show. He also had a small role in Francis Ford Coppolas 1966 comedy film Youre a Big Boy Now, as well as Eddie and the Cruisers (1983). In addition to his performing career, he worked for the Philadelphia Housing Authority for many years. In 1998 the CD album Brotherly Love was released, on the Tartan Pride label, alongside the book The Jazzish Bagpiper, a photo anthology and conversations with Harley, by Charles A. Powell, the first to compliment Harleys contributions to American music with Celtic bagpipes.[6] Writing in the sleeve notes for the album, Ralph Stevenson Jr., Harleys executive producer, noted: Rufus Harley resides in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania home of the Liberty Bell. Harley, musical ambassador of the City of Brotherly love, has been received and embraced by tribal leaders, heads of state and many notables from around the world. His message of peace and love is blended in this CD collaboration and lead by his dues paid, musical labor of sax and bagpipes
Posted on: Sat, 18 Oct 2014 01:46:27 +0000

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