Harry Carney's baritone saxophone was the anchor, the lodestone, the foundation of a distinctive tonal blend that virtually defined
the Duke Ellington Orchestra for more than 45 years. A mainstay of the
Ellington experience, he remained with
Duke longer than anyone else and outlived him by only a little more than four months.
Harry Howell Carney was born in Boston on the first of April 1910 and grew up in the same neighborhood as alto saxophonists
Johnny Hodges and
Charlie Holmes. Together they gathered inspiration from 78-rpm jazz records.
Carney cited as primary influences
Sidney Bechet with
Clarence Williams,
Buster Bailey with
Fletcher Henderson, and Don Murray with
Jean Goldkette. At the age of 13, he blew clarinet with a band sponsored by the Knights of Pythias. After developing some proficiency on the alto sax, he visited New York with
Holmes and gigged at the Bamboo Inn shortly before it burned to the ground.
Carney then began sitting in with
Duke Ellington, who took him back to Boston for a series of one-nighters. After
Duke sweet-talked
Carney's mother into allowing the 17-year-old to continue his involvement with the band, a lifelong collaboration ensued. Over the years
Ellington took to riding in
Carney's Imperial automobile while the saxophonist quietly handled the steering wheel. This provided
Duke with a friendly and intimate atmosphere wherein some of his most memorable melodies were conceived.
Carney co-composed "Rockin' in Rhythm" and was usually responsible for executing the bubbling clarinet solo on this tune, but he generally confined himself to the big baritone sax. Examples of his arresting presence on this horn are myriad and include "Frustration," "Sono," "Perdido," and "La Plus Belle Africaine." A bonus track version of "Sophisticated Lady" on the CD reissue of the Verve album
Soul Call is a thrilling testimonial to
Carney's lyrical profundity as a balladeer and his resilience as a practitioner of circular breathing, two of the many ways in which he influenced
Rahsaan Roland Kirk, who in 1972 on his album
A Meeting of the Times presented a duple portrait of
Harry Carney and
Barney Bigard by simultaneously blowing a clarinet and a baritone sax.
Carney claimed to have originally mastered the baritone in order to help
Duke broaden the palette of the ensemble, initially emulating
Coleman Hawkins in the upper register and
Adrian Rollini in the basement of the horn. Around 1944 he also took up the bass clarinet.
Between 1946 and 1960,
Harry Carney recorded as a leader for the HRS, Wax, and Columbia labels. His wide-ranging adventures as a sideman further from or entirely outside of the
Ellington orbit include sessions with
Billy Taylor's Big Eight, the Coleman Hawkins Sax Ensemble,
Lionel Hampton,
Edmond Hall,
Earl Hines,
Harry James,
Al Killian,
Tyree Glenn,
Jimmy Jones,
Johnny Bothwell, and
Dizzy Gillespie. He also helped to provide accompaniments for vocalists
Billie Holiday,
Al Hibbler,
Nat King Cole,
Ella Fitzgerald,
Frank Sinatra,
Rosemary Clooney, Pleasant Joseph,
Buddy Clark, and
Johnny Rae. In 1937,
Carney sang in a vocal trio with
Rex Stewart and
Hayes Alvis behind
Ivie Anderson on "I've Got to Be a Rug Cutter." When
Johnny Hodges led a small group in live performance at the Berlin Sportpalast in 1966,
Harry Carney provided a thunderous backbone for their rendition of "Things Ain't What They Used to Be." His last testament, as it were, is a feature performance of "Drop Me Off in Harlem" on
Mercer Ellington's album
Continuum, recorded during the interim between the deaths of
Duke Ellington on May 24 and
Harry Carney on October 8, 1974. A moving tribute to
Carney, composed by
Sy Johnson, was recorded by
Charles Mingus in December of that year and included on his album
Changes Two. ~ arwulf arwulf