Easy listening composer and arranger Joe Harnell was born in the Bronx, New York, on August 2, 1924. The son of a former vaudevillian, he initiated piano studies at the age of six and was playing professionally by 14, performing with a series of jazz bands (including his father's Catskills klezmer combo) while continuing his studies. After receiving a music scholarship to the University of Miami, Harnell joined the U.S. Air Force in 1943, soon joining the Glenn Miller Air Force Band. While stationed in Paris, he studied composition with Nadia Boulanger, followed by a stint under William Walton at London's Trinity College of Music. Following his 1946 USAF discharge, Harnell returned to the U.S. and enrolled at Boston University's Tanglewood Institute, studying under Aaron Copland and Leonard Bernstein. Despite his classical training he pursued a career in jazz and pop, returning to New York in 1950 to serve as a freelance pianist with a series of bands, most notably Lester Lanin's. As word of his compositional and arranging skills spread, Harnell also found himself in demand as an accompanist and musical director, and in the years to follow he backed singers ranging from Judy Garland to Maurice Chevalier to Marlene Dietrich, taking over from Burt Bacharach. In 1958, Harnell signed on with Peggy Lee, hot on the heels of her smash hit "Fever." Their partnership resulted in a pair of LPs, Anything Goes: Cole Porter and Peggy Lee and the George Shearing Quartet, both arranged by Harnell; he also played piano on her Things Are Swingin' album. He remained with Lee until 1961, and a year later was severely injured in an automobile accident. While recuperating, he was approached by Kapp Records, which was seeking to capitalize on the bossa nova craze. Working with sidemen...
Comments