Harr, Haskell

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Haskell Harr

Biography

Born: June 27, 1894

Died: September 24, 1986, Glendora, California

Country: Baraboo, Wisconsin, U.S.A.

Studies:

Teachers: Roy Knapp, George H. Green

Mention: elected to the Percussive Arts Society "Hall of Fame" (1972)



PAS Hall of Fame member Haskell Harr may be best remembered as the author of the popular elementary drum methods, but he was also an active performer and educator throughout his long career.

Harr began playing music at the age of thirteen and was soon working with local bands and combos. He formed The Haskell Novelty Trio with a saxophonist and pianist, and the group performed frequently on radio and in the theaters. A Chicago area reviewer described Harr as a wizard on the xylophone, comparing his playing to George Hamilton Green, Homer Chaffee, Frisco, Shutts, and all the leading exponents of this instrument.

In 1933 Harr played at the Chicago World's Fair, where he accompanied the famous Sally Rand during her 'fan dance.' At the end of each performance, Rand would wave to the audience from the stage curtain, where she would lean on Harr's xylophone. Harr had placed a small towel on this spot so the dancer wouldn't get chilled, and she responded with an autograph, 'Hurrah for Mr. Harr, and my "back-up" xylophone.[1]


Works for Percussion

References

  1. Haskell Harr Retrieved 06/12/2012