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JOHNNY HARRIS - "all to bring you music"
a Profile by DAVID NOADES
In a previous issue it was revealed that composer-arranger
Johnny Harris started his career as a trumpet player in a series
of dance bands in the 1950s after graduating from The Guildhall
School Of Music. He got his first break as an arranger with Tony
Hatch at PYE and throughout the 1960s worked with many top names
both live and on record including Tom Jones, Lulu, Petula Clark,
Shirley Bassey, Cilla Black, Jackie Trent, Connie Francis, Rolf
Harris, Olivia Newton John, Roy Budd and John Schroeder.
The turning point in his career came in 1969 when
his manager Daniel Secunda signed a deal with Warner Bros to record
two albums, the first being the cleverly-titled "Movements" which
is now considered by many to be a classic. There has been a lot
of renewed interest in this album in recent years and Warners have
now reissued the album on CD complete with bonus tracks. The album
was preceded by a single, the hauntingly beautiful "Footprints On
The Moon", which was Johnny's tribute to the Apollo moon landings.
The single received a lot of radio airplay during the summer of
1969 and film director Richard Sarafian was suitably impressed and
decided that he wanted Johnny to write the score for his new film,
the psychological thriller "Fragment Of Fear". "The director said
it was a movie about drug addicts and said that he wanted the music
to be spikey" Johnny revealed, which led him to pen the hypnotic
title theme and the fast and furious "Stepping Stones" which was
used in a chase sequence. The score was recorded in London with
a small 10-piece orchestra and a rhythm section including Mickey
Gee on guitar, Herbie Flowers on bass, Harold Fisher on drums, Johnny
Dean percussion with the addition of Roger Coulam on organ and Harold
McNeil who played the distinctive screaming flute solos.
The result was a highly original and strikingly
beautiful score which Johnny thought was too good to remain hidden
away and so decided to re-record some of the material for the album.
To achieve the same sound he used the same musicians who had recorded
the score plus a larger string section. Originally he had wanted
to fill the album with his own compositions but Warners also wanted
him to duplicate the type of stuff he had performed on the Lulu
show where he famously rearranged pop hits of the day in his own
unique style. So the set includes impressive arrangements of The
Beatles' "Something", The Doors "Light My Fire" and The Rolling
Stones' "Paint It Black". The latter is especially memorable as
it features elements of "Night On A Bare Mountain" but each and
every track is an audio delight combining elements of rock, jazz
and classical resulting in a truly memorable musical melange. As
well as the fine blend of pop and orchestrations and the distinctive
arrangements, many of the tracks were linked with tiny flute motifs.
"'We wanted to make it like a trip" Johnny said and revealed that
the effect was created by getting engineer Bob Auger to play the
tapes of Harold McNeil's flute pieces back-wards during the mixing
which gave the whole album a very haunting, almost psychedelic feel.
"Movements" received enthusiastic reviews and was
a huge success in the UK and overseas and remained on Warners
best sellers list for several years. However the public had to wait
over three years until the next Harris solo album as he was busy
on other projects. Eventually he found time to work on a worthy
follow-up and the result was the enigmatic and energetic "All To
Bring You Morning". Although not as memorable as the first album
it contains blissfully delicate versions of John Lennon's "Imagine"
and Leslie Duncan's "Love Song", plus one incredible suite (the
title track) where over a 13-minute period Johnny takes the orchestra
from a hard edged brass filled stomp to a beautiful finale of crying
strings. During the sessions for the album Jon Anderson and Alan
White from the rock group Yes got involved as they were in the studio
next door and were fans of Johnny's work. As well as adding to the
rhythm section they also provided vocals resulting in a nice mix
of rock and orchestra.
Following on from the success of the two Warner
albums United Artists reissued an album Johnny had recorded for
them in 1966 which was a tribute to the music of Lionel Bart. Here
Johnny rearranged a number of the writer's famous songs for string
orchestra, and the results hinted at the spine-tingling sound which
was to be a feature of later projects. Far more satisfying however
was "The Guitar Workshop" which was a project he did for PYE with
Tony Hatch. The idea was to present well-known classical pieces
arranged for a pop beat combo and Johnny took the idea further injecting
elements of jazz and baroque with melodies played by guitar, mandolin
and harpsichord resulting in a wholly superb musical experiment.
Highlights are Delibes "Valse Lente" presented
as a choppy jazz-waltz and a suite from "Peter and The Wolf" with
Peter's Theme played on guitar in octaves and The Cat's Theme enhanced
by some serious fuzz guitar.
Sadly Johnny rarely got to perform his solo material
live, however there were a few occasions when he was given the opportunity
to put on a show. The first of these was "Uptight!" which took place
at the Talk Of The Town in 1968 and was a one-off special filmed
by the BBC. Producer Stewart Morris had watched Johnny's performance
when he appeared at the Royal Variety Show with Tom Jones and was
so impressed by the way the audience paid just as much attention
to him as they did to the singer that he created the special show
just for him. The result was truly amazing and featured songs from
Georgie Fame and Lulu, dance sequences and most importantly instrumental
numbers from Johnny and the orchestra for which they received a
standing ovation.
This led to him being invited to act as musical
director for Lulu's series "Happening For Lulu". Here Johnny used
the same highly visual conducting style and quickly became very
popular with audiences and received almost as much fan mail as Lulu.
He also conducted the orchestra for Lulu's appearance at the Eurovision
Song Contest in Madrid where she won. This made further impact with
the public and even influenced comedian Benny Hill to stage his
own spoof "European Song Contest" with Benny playing all the contestants
as well as the British conductor "Jet Pacey" which was an obvious
reference to Johnny's kinetic conducting!
Johnny also found time to sit in for Johnny Pearson
as MD for "Top Of The Pops" and also provided the music for a TV
documentary about the footballer Georgie Best. And on New Years
Eve 1969 it was his orchestra who backed the many artists who appeared
on "Pop Go The 60's", which was a look back at the music of the
decade, and a show which Johnny confesses he can't even remember.
As well as backing such singers as Tom Jones, Adam Faith and Sandie
Shaw one of the highlights of the show was Johnny's superb interpretation
of The Rolling Stones "Jumping Jack Flash" where he whipped
the orchestra into a funky frenzy much to the delight of the studio
audience.
However the best was yet to come when Johnny was
invited to conduct for Dionne Warwick when she appeared at the Albert
Hall in 1970. Here he enjoyed the pleasure of conducting an impressive
40-piece orchestra who as well as backing Dionne and guest singer
Ritchie Havens, presented some tracks from Johnny's solo album to
great effect as a warm up to the main show. The orchestra included
young musicians from the Royal College and the Royal Academy of
Music and were greatly enhanced by the addition of rock musicians
including Tony Colton and Ray Smith from the country-rock band Head
Hands and Feet. "It was quite an evening " Johnny recalled and the
press thought so as well calling it "One of the most exciting experiences
in show business" .
As well as arranging for a great number of artists
during the 1960s and early 70s Johnny was also partly responsible
for kick-starting the careers of Tom Jones, Shirley Bassey and Paul
Anka who all went on to achieve international success after succumbing
to the Johnny Harris sound. Up until 1966 Tom Jones had always performed
with his backing band The Squires but it was decided to back the
singer with a big orchestra to give him a fuller, harder sound and
Johnny was hired as musical director. He toured extensively with
Tom throughout 1966-67 in the UK and in the US including Las Vegas
where they were very well received. It was during these times that
Johnny first developed his highly visual conducting style having
recognised that with a singer as dynamic as Tom Jones it was necessary
to offset what he was doing on stage. So Johnny literally became
part of the music, cavorting round the stage and directing the musicians
in a highly flamboyant manner which gave the audience a show to
remember. Some of the highlights of these concerts can be found
on the highly charged "Live At The Talk Of The Town" album which
was issued in 1967. Johnny also arranged for Tom on record and toured
with him again in the 1970s.
With Shirley Bassey Johnny was asked to do almost
the opposite and turn her from a cabaret star into a pop star. Although
she had enjoyed enormous success as a live act and was now living
as a tax exile in Switzerland she hadn't had a top ten hit for nearly
seven years and her managers wanted to give her a new image and
a new style. Johnny had already worked on arrangements for her albums
and shows and was considered to be just the man for the job and
was encouraged to take the pop-orchestral sound he had created on
"Movements" and develop it to suit the singer. Once again he called
upon the services of Tony Colton and Ray Smith who along with guitarist
Chris Spedding supplemented the orchestra and the result was the
truly stupendous "Something" album which was one of the most successful
of her career. The title track was also lifted as a single and gave
Shirley her biggest hit ever and put her back on the musical map.
Johnny went on to work on no less than four other albums with her
for United Artists which although were not as memorable as the first
one contained more stunning arrangements and wonderful performances.
Throughout this time Johnny was also busy working
with other singers including Richard Harris, who he became great
friends with, Sacha Distell, Jack Jones and Petula Clark. Johnny
worked with his song writing partner John Bromley on songs for the
latter's "Petula 71" album which Harris also produced, conducted
and arranged. He also did some concerts with her at this time including
a TV special, "Petula and Friends" as well as other TV shows with
Lulu, Tom Jones, Matt Monro and Keith Michell, who like Richard
Harris was another actor turned singer. Johnny also met up with
Paul Anka who he had originally met while he was working with Tom
Jones in the UK. Anka had enjoyed enormous success in the early
1960s but a decade later was looking for a new sound and came to
the UK to record an album which he asked Johnny to arrange and produce.
The result was the highly polished "Jubilation" set (released on
Buddah) which included the six minute title track which became Anka's
theme song throughout the seventies. And it was the start of a five
year working relationship which saw Johnny relocating to America
and working on the singer's follow-up albums "Feelings" and "The
Painter" as well as a series of memorable concerts.
The main reason for moving to the States was that
although he was happy with his producing and arranging work in the
UK he felt that he wanted to concentrate on writing scores for film
and television and Hollywood was the place to be as the UK film
industry was on the decline. He had written the scores for a few
British films including the controversial "I Want What I Want" and
the Richard Harris vehicle "The Hero", but as they were not mainstream
material his music went largely unnoticed. He set up home in California
and quickly found work writing music for TV commercials (which he
had also done successfully in the UK), however get-ting commissions
to write film scores took a little longer. His work with commercials
soon paid off when he won a Clio Award for his Kodak commercial
with Paul Anka, "The Times Of Our Lives". And once he became established
as a composer-arranger in this field he found he had more offers
of work in both film and television.
The first of these was for the horror film "The
Evil" which led to a string of others including "The Initiation
Of Sarah", "I Spy Returns", "Raw Courage", "Raven Hawk" and "Cyber
High" which has just been released. There were also TV serials including
"Mathew Star" and "Family Pictures" starring Angelica Houston and
Sam Neil for which Johnny was nominated for an Emmy Award. He was
also asked to rearrange the title theme and provide the incidental
music for the cult series "Wonder Woman" which bought his name to
the attention of a whole new audience. The star of this series was
Lynda Carter who was also an accomplished singer and wanted to purse
a career in music. Her manager Ron Samuels had seen Johnny's work
with Paul Anka and hired Johnny to help mastermind her live act.
At first Johnny refused as he was concentrating on his film work,
but in the end he accepted and the result was a series of wonderful
concerts, a world tour and three TV specials for CBS. Lynda continued
her acting career as well and Johnny supplied the score and songs
for a trio of TV movies which were released to critical acclaim
in the 1980s. His success with Lynda led to requests to conduct
other TV specials for CBS including shows by Jack Jones, Vikki Carr,
Lisa Minnelli and Goldie Hawn and Diana Ross where he also got to
work with Michael Jackson. There were also live concerts where Johnny
conducted for Kenny Rogers, Johnny Mathis and also continued to
arrange and compose for artists such as Sammy Davis Jnr, Barbra
Streisand, Sacha Distell, Shirley MacLaine and Anthony Newley.
Johnny's success with the "Wonder Woman" series
led to writing music for another cult sci-fi series "Buck Rogers
In The 25th Century" for Universal. Here he had the luxury of working
with a 40-piece orchestra on the lot although he found the work
quite stressful creating new music for 26 shows a year. However
as a result of the series the composer suddenly found himself in
the charts when a piece of music from the series was turned into
a disco track. One of the episodes centred around a mythical futuristic
pop group and Johnny was required to write a piece of "space age
pop" for them to be seen playing. With help from a synthesiser and
a funky rhythm section the orchestra jammed for several minutes
until the required sound was achieved. The result was a fast and
funky 6 minute disco track which so impressed Howard Casey of KC
and The Sunshine Band that he put the track out under the title
"Odyssey" on his own label which became a huge hit in the clubs
in the summer of 1980.
In 1990 Johnny was asked to supply the music for
the newly launched Palm Spring Follies shows. These were the brainchild
of retired TV producer Riff Markovitz who came up with idea of staging
1930s-style song and dance shows at the then-vacant Plaza Theatre
in the heart of Palm Springs in California. And the neat part was
that all the performers taking part were aged 50 or over having
been coaxed out of retirement and were veterans of the vaudeville
era. Some critics thought the idea was a total folly, however the
shows quickly grew in popularity and were soon completely sold out
every night. Johnny had been recommended by his friend TV composer
Earle Hagen and was required to reproduce a Broadway-style orchestra
to back the various singers, dancers and comedians for a three hour
show which he worked on in association with vocal arrangers Earl
Brown and Scott Lavender. As well as resident performers guests
artists have also appeared including Frankie Laine, Tony Martin,
Gloria DeHaven and The Mills Brothers who were all very well received.
Johnny also takes part in the show conducting the overture, however
the music is all pre-recorded and he is actually directing a non-existent
orchestra although the sound is so good the audience think there
are real musicians in the pit!
The work at The Follies has kept Johnny busy seven
months a year for the last twelve years however he still manages
to devote time to other projects. He now lives in Rancho Mirage,
California with his second wife Laura and their young son Emerson
and he has built himself a state-of-the-art studio in his garage
which includes a place to record live musicians and its own digital
control room. This enables him to work from home where he is able
to prepare all the music for the Follies shows and to rehearse live
material and try out new ideas.
Johnny is currently working on a few projects including
"Musical Names" where pieces of orchestral music are created using
womens names. The letters of a name have notes assigned to
them and a piece of music is built around it resulting in a full
orchestral love theme which is presented on a CD as a unique gift
idea. Johnny is also busy working on songs with Alan J. Freedman
and Bob Merrill for a new pop opera based around the children's
story "Pinnochio" which is planned to star Howard Keel and will
debut next year. Recently he was also asked to re-record the "Movements"
track "Stepping Stones" for use in a TV ad for Levis jeans. It seems
that the ad agency had approached Warners to use the original but
were put off by the $100,000 price tag and enquired if Johnny would
be prepared top remake it. He said he could and brought in guitarist
Paul Jackson and well-known jazz player Tom Scott on flute and recreated
the sound using samples, painstakingly transcribing Harold Fisher's
drums note for note from the original. He did such a good job that
very few people realised that it wasn't the original recording and
the track was released as a single which reached the charts.
This single bought Harris' name to the attention
of a whole new audience who searched out copies of his original
albums, which in turn led to deejays and dance acts sampling tracks
from "Movements" and Shirley Bassey albums. His music also became
big in the clubs where "Stepping Stones" and "Odyssey" so entranced
listeners that the tracks were featured on a number of dance compilations.
There was also the recent Shirley Bassey remix album which included
new mixes of many of her old numbers including several Johnny Harris
productions which proved to be very popular. This renewed interest
in his old work has completely taken Johnny by surprise but he is
always delighted when fans track him down to his west coast hideaway.
"It's amazing to me that people are still interested and I'm getting
e-mails from so many people" he revealed, both shocked and pleased
by his new-found fame.
Recently he announced that he is devoting his spare
time to ideas for "Movements 2" which will hopefully include contributions
from all members of his family who are all involved in some capacity
in the music business. "I just want to do another album, to do what
I want to do" he said and revealed that the set might include his
arrangement of the Leslie Bricusse song "Pure Imagination". However
as he doesn't have much spare time at the moment it might be quite
a while before we get to hear this sequel to his classic 1970 album.
But one thing's for sure, it will be well worth the wait...
Johnny Harris Discography (All UK releases
except*).
Albums
- Heart Of Bart (United Artists, 1966)
- A Handful Of Songs (United Artists) * The Guitar Workshop (PYE,
1966)
- Festival of International Hits (Readers Digest RDS 6423, 1969)
- Movements (Warner Bros WS 3002/K46054,1970)
- Man In The Wilderness (Warner Bros K46126, 1972)
- Bloomfield (PYE NSPL 18376, 1972)
- Johnny Harris Plays Lionel Bart (Sunset SLS 50212, 1971)
- All to Bring You Morning (Warner Bros K46187, 1973)
- Various -TK Disco Singles (TK, 1996) Inc Odyssey *
- Various- Stay Tuned (1998) Inc Stepping Stones
- Various- Loft Classics (Nuphonic NUX36, 1999) Inc Odyssey*
- Bloomfield (Cinephile CINCD 031,2000)
- Movements (Warner Bros. 8122-73602-2, 2002)
Singles
- Mynahg Hop/Here Comes The Boot (Mercury MF949, 1965)
- Footprints On The Moon/Lulu's Theme (Warner Bros WB 8000, 1969)
- Fragment Of Fear/Stepping Stones (Warner Bros WB 8016, 1970)
- Footprints On The Moon/Sacha's song (Lyons SFI 83, 1971 )
- Jubilation/Tip Top Theme (United Artists, 1976)*
- Odyssey parts 1 and 2 (TK, TKO-4314, 1980) *
- Stepping Stones (remixes) (EMI, 1997)

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