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James Harman

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Birth name
  
James Gary Harman

Role
  
Singer ยท jamesharman.com

Years active
  
1970s-present

Genres
  
Blues

Labels
  
Black Top, various

Record label
  
Black Top Records

Name
  
James Harman


James Harman James Harman

Born
  
June 8, 1946 (age 77) Anniston, Alabama, United States (
1946-06-08
)

Occupation(s)
  
Harmonicist, singer, songwriter

Instruments
  
Harmonica, vocals, piano, guitar, drums

Albums
  
Takin' Chances, Wanderlust, Cards On The Table, Bonetime

Nominations
  
Grammy Award for Best Blues Album

Similar People
  
Junior Watson, Mark Hummel, Kim Wilson, Charlie Musselwhite, Sugar Ray Norcia

James harman strictly live in 85 goatman holler


James Harman (born June 8, 1946, in Anniston, Alabama) is an American blues harmonica player, singer, and songwriter. The music journalist Tony Russell described Harman as an "amusing songwriter and an excellent, unfussy blues harp player".

Contents

James Harman James Harman BB39s Lawnside BBQ

The james harman band those dangerous gentlemens


Biography

James Harman GRAMMYNominated Blues Bands Headline 25th Anniversary Bash

James Gary Harman began taking piano lessons at the age of four. He also sang in his local church choir. Harmonicas owned by his father were stored in the piano bench, and James tried playing them after his piano lessons ended. In time, he learned to play several other musical instruments, including the guitar, electronic organ, and drums.

James Harman Harmanjpg

In 1962 he relocated to Panama City, Florida, where he played in many rhythm and blues bands, of which the Icehouse Blues Band was the last. Earl Caldwell, the manager of the Swinging Medallions, signed Harman to a recording contract. In 1964 in Atlanta, Georgia, Harman recorded the first of nine early singles, which were variously released on five different record labels.

James Harman barrelhousebluescomimagesjamesharman2jpg

Harman performed as a blues harmonica player and singer in Chicago, New York, and elsewhere before moving to southern California in the 1970s. There, his Icehouse Blues Band played alongside Big Joe Turner, John Lee Hooker, Freddie King, Muddy Waters, Albert King, B. B. King, T-Bone Walker, Lowell Fulsom, Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson, Johnny "Guitar" Watson, and Albert Collins. In 1977 he formed the James Harman Band. Over the years the band's lineup has included Phil Alvin and Bill Bateman, who left in 1978 to form the Blasters; Gene Taylor, who departed in 1981, also to join the Blasters before moving on to the Fabulous Thunderbirds; and Kid Ramos. Among other members of the band was Hollywood Fats, who left his own band in 1980 to play alongside Harman for five years.

Harman became known as a skilled, reliable musician, whether for a backing band or leading his own ensemble. His band recorded several albums during the 1980s, before settling in 1990 at Black Top Records.

Numerous songs by Harman have been used in films and on television, including "Kiss of Fire" (from the album Those Dangerous Gentlemen), which was used for the soundtrack of The Accused. Harman has received several W. C. Handy Blues Award nominations, for songs on his own releases and on other artists' albums. He was inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame and received an award for Best Blues Album of the Year from Real Blues magazine.

In 1995 Harman recorded "Everybody's Rockin' (At the Zoo Bar)", a song about the Zoo Bar, a club in Lincoln, Nebraska, for the album Black & White.

Harman has performed at the Long Beach Blues Festival and in concerts staged around the world.

In 2003 Harman contributed to the ZZ Top album Mescalero, on the song "Que Lastima" and, in 2012, on La Futura, on the song "Heartache In Blue".

Bonetime, his first studio album in over 12 years, was released in 2015.

Discography

  • Thank You Baby (1983), Enigma Records
  • Those Dangerous Gentlemen (1987), Rhino
  • Extra Napkins (Strictly the Blues) (1988), Rivera Records, reissued 1997, Cannonball Records
  • Strictly Live...In '85! (Vol. 1) (1990), Rivera, reissued as Strictly Live In '85... Plus! (Vol. 1) (2005), Gulf Coast/Pacific Blues
  • Do Not Disturb (1991), Black Top
  • Two Sides to Every Story (1993), Black Top
  • Cards on the Table (1994), Black Top
  • Black & White (1995), Black Top
  • Icepick's Story (1996), compilation of Black Top recordings, Continental Record Services (CRS); reissued 1999, Me & My Blues Records
  • Takin' Chances (1998), Cannonball
  • Mo' Na' Kins, Please! (Strictly the Blues, Vol. 2)(1999), Cannonball
  • Lonesome Moon Trance (2003), Gulf Coast/Pacific Blues
  • James Harman's Bamboo Porch: Live at Little Village, Volume One (2012), Gulf Coast
  • Bonetime (2015), Electro-Fi
  • References

    James Harman Wikipedia


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