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Sid Harkreader

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Sid Harkreader
Birth nameSidney Johnson Harkreader
Born(1898-02-26)February 26, 1898
Gladeville, Tennessee,US
DiedMarch 19, 1988(1988-03-19)(aged 90)
GenresOld-time music
Occupation(s)musician, vocalist
Instrument(s)fiddle, vocals
Years active1920s–1969
LabelsVocalion, Paramount
Formerly ofUncle Dave Macon, Sid Harkreader & Company, The Round-Up Gang

Sidney Johnson "Fiddlin' Sid" Harkreader(February 26, 1898 — March 19, 1988) was an AmericanOld-timefiddle player andstring bandleader. He was an early member of theGrand Ole Opry,at first accompanying banjoistUncle Dave Maconand later performing on the program with his own band. In the 1940s, Harkreader formed and briefly toured with theWesternband "The Round-Up Gang" before returning again to the Opry.[1]

Harkreader was born inGladeville, Tennessee,a small town in thecedar gladesregion east ofNashville.His father encouraged him to develop musical abilities, and Harkreader learned to play fiddle at localsquare dances.[2]Determined to become a professional entertainer, Harkreader first toured as a fiddler for the Loewvaudevillecircuit. Around 1923, he paired with Uncle Dave Macon to play old-time music in Nashville, and the following year, the two recorded several sides forVocalion Records.[3]On November 6, 1925, Harkreader and Macon delivered a performance before a sold-out crowd at theRyman Auditorium,and the two began performing for the Grand Ole Opry (at the time called WSM'sBarn Dance) a few weeks later.[4]Harkreader's typical repertoire included "Old Joe" (which he learned from fellow Opry pioneerHumphrey Bate),[5]"Turkey in the Straw,""Sugar Walks Down the Street, "" Ain't Goin' to Rain No More, "and" Go Away Mule. "[6]

Harkreader recorded two dozen tracks forParamount Records,the first set coming in 1927 accompanied byHawaiian slide-guitaristGrady Moore, and the second coming the following year accompanied by guitarist Blythe Poteet. In 1935, Harkreader returned to the Opry at the head of a string band, "Sid Harkreader and Company." The band consisted of Harkreader on fiddle and vocals, Emory Martin onmandolin,and Mack McGar on banjo. Around 1940, Harkeader formed "The Round-Up Gang" to record Western music, which had grown steadily in popularity in the previous decade. Harkreader eventually returned to the Opry, however, making guest appearances throughout the 1950s and 1960s.[3]

Harkreader is buried at Caraway Cemetery in Gladeville.

Discography[edit]

  • I Wish I Was A Single Girl Again/New River Train(Vocalion Records15035, April 1924)— 10 "78 RPM record on brown vinyl
  • Nashville: The Early String Bands, Volume 1(County RecordsCO-3521, 2000)— contains version of "Old Joe" recorded by Harkreader and Grady Moore in 1927
  • Just from TennesseewithUncle Dave Maconand Sam McGee, (Old Homestead), released in 2012
  • Early Star of the Grand Ole Oprywith Grady Moore (British Archive CDD424, 2013)

References[edit]

  1. ^Charles Wolfe, "Dr. Humphrey Bate,"The Encyclopedia of Country Music: The Ultimate Guide to the Music(New York: Oxford University Press, 1998), 228.
  2. ^Eugene Chadbourne, "Sid Harkreader - Biography."Allmusic.com. Retrieved: 10 December 2008.
  3. ^abWolfe,Encyclopedia of Country Music,228.
  4. ^Jack Hurst,Nashville's Grand Ole Opry(New York: H.N. Abrams, 1975), 94.
  5. ^Charles Wolfe, "Notes to Volume 1."In Nashville: The Early String Bands, Vol. 1(p. 9) [CD liner notes]. County Records, 2000.
  6. ^Hurst, 94.

External links[edit]