Harry F. Reser (January 17, 1896 – September 27, 1965)
was an American banjo player and bandleader. Born in Piqua, Ohio, Reser was
best known as the leader of The Clicquot Club Eskimos. He was regarded by some
as the best banjoist of the 1920s.
Harrison Franklin Reser was born in Piqua, Ohio. When he
was 2 years of age, his father moved the family to Dayton, Ohio. His musical
talents became apparent, and it was also here that it was discovered that the
young Reser possessed perfect pitch. His parents realized they had a child
prodigy. A special guitar was made for him suited to his extremely small size,
and this was his first instrument.
By the age of 8 he was entertaining. About this time he
began learning piano and also started a systematic study of music which was to
form the basis for his natural genius and extensive knowledge of music theory.
At the age of nine his parents, now realizing his potential and the benefits to
be gained, sent him to Luis Hein and Albert Fischer of Dayton, where he
continued study of the piano in addition to the violin and cello. He remained
with the two until the age of fourteen. Reser attended Steele High School in
Dayton, and it was during these years that he decided what his vocation would
be. On April 8, 1916 when he was just over twenty, he married Grace Tharp of
Dayton in Newport, Kentucky.
The banjo was making its presence felt more strongly with
dance bands and therefore he felt he should learn how to play it as quickly as
possible. He practiced until he was able to play to a high enough standard to
supplement his piano playing, thus increasing his chances of earning a
reasonable living. In the summer of 1920 he played in a Dayton dance band under
the leadership of Paul Goss. By this time he was playing the banjo regularly.
He soon moved to Buffalo, New York to appear at the Hippodrome, playing
primarily violin, though continuing to work on his banjo technique as well.
After Christmas of 1920 he moved to New York City. He
sought out engagements and soon found himself in demand. Some of the early
bands he was involved with included those of Ben Selvin, Benny Krueger, Sam
Lanin, Nathan Glantz, and Mike Markel (for whom he played saxophone).
By 1922, he had recorded a half dozen pieces, including
"Crazy Jo" and Zez Confrey's "Kitten on the Keys". In early
autumn of the same year, he considered starting his own band. Soon a contract
was drawn up with Okeh Records and his first band, the Okeh Syncopators, came
into being during September or October 1922. Shortly after the start of this new
endeavour he was approached by Paul Whiteman to sit in for Whiteman's regular
banjoist, Mike Pingitore, during a UK tour of the Paul Whiteman Orchestra.
In 1925, he found fame as the director for NBC's Clicquot
Club Eskimo Orchestra, continuing with that weekly half-hour until 1935. At the
same time, he also led other bands using pseudonyms. Harry Reser and His Six
Jumping Jacks", with vocals by Tom Stacks, were the zany forerunners to
comedy bands like Spike Jones and His City Slickers. Reser and his band were
the first to record "Santa Claus Is Coming to Town" in 1934.
Throughout his career he was an endorsed artist, playing
instruments from several well-known makers. During the 1920s he mainly played a
variety of William L. Lange's Paramount tenor and plectrum banjos, and Lange
presented him with a Super Paramount Artists Supreme, as he also did to Mike
Pingitore, another Paramount musician. Later Reser would play Gibson and
Vegavox banjos.
Harry Reser played "Tiger Rag" and "You
Hit the Spot" in the
Vitaphone musical short Harry Reser and His Eskimos (1936).
Vitaphone musical short Harry Reser and His Eskimos (1936).
Reser remained active in music for the rest of his life,
leading TV studio orchestras and playing with Broadway theatre orchestras. In
1960 he appeared with Bing Crosby, Peggy Lee, and Buster Keaton in "A 70th
Birthday Salute to Paul Whiteman" on TV's The Revlon Revue. He wrote
several instructional books for the banjo, guitar, and ukulele.
In 1965 Reser died of a heart attack in the orchestra pit
of Manhattan's Imperial Theatre while warming up for a Broadway stage version
of Fiddler on the Roof. He was inducted into the National Four-String Banjo
Hall of Fame, a museum in Oklahoma, in 1999. (Info edited from Wikipedia)
For “Harry Reser – Banjos Back To Back” go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www52.zippyshare.com/v/o1KvIPi4/file.html
01 If you knew Susie - Sweet Sue - Just you
02 When you and I were young Maggie - Listen to tje mocking bird - Coming round the mountain
03 I've been working on the railroad - Bill Bailey - And the band played on
04 My old Kentuky home - Oh dem golden slippers - Skip to me Lou
05 Sweetheart of all my dreams - I love you, I love you - Let me call you sweetheart
06 Down home rag - Spaghetti rag
07 Buffalo gal - Hand me down my walking cane - Polly dolly doodle
08 Way down yonder in New Orleans - On the sunny side of the street
09 Tha's my weakness now - Back home again in Indiana
10 Under the double eagle - Billboard march - When the Saints go marching in
11 Alabamy bound - yes, we have no bananas today
A big thank you to Luigi @ Espo's Vinyl Right Angle Blog for active link