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Ace Harris

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Name
  
Ace Harris



Died
  
June 11, 1964, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Albums
  
ATLiberia, Swing High, Swing Low: The Early Recordings 1935-41, 1937-1952, The Very Best Of, Always

Music group
  
The Ink Spots (1940 – 1942)

Similar People
  
Erskine Hawkins, Charlie Fuqua, Bill Kenny, Bill Doggett, Herb Kenny

Ace harris talks producing for kb


Asa "Ace" Harris (April 1, 1910, New York City - June 11, 1964, Chicago) was an American jazz pianist.

Contents

Harris played in several territory bands in the 1930s, working with Billy Steward's Serenaders in 1932 and with Bill Mears's Sunset Royal Serenaders from 1935. In 1937 Harris took over leadership of the Sunset Royal Serenaders, and recorded with them that same year; he remained with the group until 1939.

In 1940 Harris became Pianist for Bill Kenny & The Ink Spots replacing Bob Benson. Harris can be heard playing Piano with The Ink Spots on many Top 10 Pop hits including "Whispering Grass", "Maybe", "We Three (My Echo, My Shadow & Me)", "Java Jive", "I'll Never Smile Again", "I'd Climb The Highest Mountain", "We'll Meet Again", "Do I Worry", "Until The Real Thing Comes Along", "I Don't Want To Set The World On Fire", "Someone's Rocking My Dreamboat", "It's A Sin To Tell A Lie" and more. After Harris died in 1964, another Piano player named "Johnny Harris" toured with a group pretending to be The Ink Spots. This other "Johnny Harris" pretended to be the Johnny "Ace" Harris that recorded toured and appeared in movies with the original Ink Spots and made that claim until his death in 2000.

In 1944, Harris recorded with Hot Lips Page, then joined the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra, with whom he recorded several times. He played with Hawkins until 1947, and returned to play with him again in 1950-51. Harris also recorded with small ensembles in the 1940s and with a jump blues band in 1951-52. He played at the Cloister Inn in Chicago in 1954.

A compact disc of Harris's recordings spanning 1937-52 was released by Jazz Classics in 2004.

Shorty's Got To Go - Ace Harris


References

Ace Harris Wikipedia