Stan Harper
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Stanley Harper ''(né'' Stanley Theodore Wisser; 2 September 1921 – 29 June 2016) was an American virtuoso classical harmonica artist, arranger, and composer. He died June 29, 2016, in a home for the elderly in New Jersey. He raised the popularity of classical harmonica by influencing composers to write for the instrument and by transcribing serious classical works, himself. Through his virtuosity, he widened the recognition of classical harmonica in solo, chamber, and major orchestral settings.


Career history

Harper began his professional harmonica career in 1935, at age 14. In 1941, he went professionally for a short while by the name Ted Stanley. He went on to perform and record nationally on radio, television, record, theaters, and film until 2015. In the mid to late 1930s, Harper performed with The Harmonica Scamps and Three Harpers, both based in New York City. He apparently only began using the name Stan Harper after World War II. Over the years, he performed with other renown harmonica players and a range of entertainers and artists, including
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, Sam Wanamaker, and Leon Kirchner. Up until the death of Charley Leighton, Harper was a regular member of a harmonica jam session held every Tuesday at 3 PM at Charley Leighton's apartment in New York City. In addition to
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, regulars included Charles Spranklin (Charles Edward Spranklin; born 1932),
William Galison William Alexander Galison (born February 19, 1958) is an American harmonica player. Early life Galison was born and raised in New York City. As a child, he started to study piano, but at the age of eight he decided to switch to guitar, having bee ...
, Randy Weinstein, Stanley Silverstone, Gregoire Maret, Phil Caltabelotta, and
Rob Paparozzi Robert Steven "Rob" Paparozzi (born October 14, 1952) is an American Grammy-nominated harmonica player and vocalist from New Jersey. In the early 1970s, Paparozzi fronted the Psychotic Blues Band, a blues rock group which played extensively in t ...
.


Selected discography


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and
CDs The compact disc (CD) is a digital optical disc data storage format that was co-developed by Philips and Sony to store and play digital audio recordings. In August 1982, the first compact disc was manufactured. It was then released in Octo ...


Audiocassettes

"Stan Harper Plays Mozart and Farnon" (privately published) Side A: Concerto for Clarinet K622 • W.A. Mozart • First and Second Movements • The Aeolian Orchestra - Dr. Anton Delbec, Conductor • Charles Leighton: Recording Engineer Side B: 1) Concerto for Clarinet • W.A. Mozart - Third Movement with Orchestra; 2) Prelude and Dance for Harmonica • Robert Farnon • Stan Harper, Harmonica; Don Smith, Piano


Singles


Publications

''Stan Harper's Harmonica Repair Manual (For Chromatic and Diatonic)'' (undated)


Notable broadcast and live performances

* Television – '' Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts'', solo appearance, May 7, 1951 * Television – '' Today'', hosted by Hugh Downs, solo appearance, November 24, 1963 * Convention for World Records, New York City, 1977 – Following a performance by Morris Samskin (1924–2000) performing on a 2-inch violin, the world's smallest, Harper performed on a 1-inch harmonica, also the world's smallest. The two performances were chronicled as world records by '' Ripley's Believe It or Not'' *
Carnegie Recital Hall Carnegie Hall ( ) is a concert venue in Midtown Manhattan in New York City. It is at 881 Seventh Avenue (Manhattan), Seventh Avenue, occupying the east side of Seventh Avenue between West 56th Street (Manhattan), 56th and 57th Street (Manhatta ...
, harmonica & piano, Helen Wheaton Benham (born 1941) (piano), Saturday, November 6, 1980, 2:30 * Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., solo appearance, 1991, demonstrating his skills using 5 to 6 different sized harmonicas


Filmography

* ...One Third of a Nation..., 1939, harmonica player (uncredited) (A clip is shown in "If You're Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast". See below.) * [Uncredited performances in bands appearing in movies from 1940s until the 1960s. He appeared in five or six movie shorts, one including “Pinky” Perelmuth (later known as the celebrated singer Jan Peerce (1904–1984)), who was a violinist then.] * "Pocket Full of Soul: The Harmonica Documentary" 2013, Omni-Harmonic, LLC (http://pocketfullofsoulmovie.com) * "If You're Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast" (An HBO documentary film where 95-year-old comedy legend Carl Reiner tracks celebrated people in their '90s. Started airing on June 5, 2017. http://www.hbo.com/documentaries/if-youre-not-in-the-obit-eat-breakfast)


Harper's surname as a hamonica namesake

Hering Harmonicas, hand maker of diatonic and chromatic harmonicas, located in Blumenau, Santa Catarina, Brazil, started producing in 2009 a popular model bearing Harper's name: ''The Stan Harper Chromatic 56,'' a three-octave, 14-hole instrument with 56 brass reeds sealed by a pearwood body bolted to a hardwood comb with chrome-plated cover plates, mouthpiece and slide assembly. The Hering Harmonica Company worked with Stan to produce a 3.5 octave chromatic harmonica (14 holes). It is unique in that once can play classical music on it easily, since it starts with a “G” note; that unique element was Stan Harper’s idea.


Selected published music

* "Baby Sitter Polka," music by Stan Harper, Dana Music Co., 115 W 45 St., New York, New York, © May 2, 1952 * "Mosquito Polka," music by Stan Harper, Dana Music Co. © April 28, 1952 * Composed the musical score for "And Now Miguel" (1966).


Popular culture

* ''The Guinness Book of World Records'', 1978 edition (p. 222), 1979 edition (p. 223), and the 1982 edition (p. 232)-and possibly also the years in between, show a photograph of Stan Harper playing the largest harmonic, the Hohner 48 Chord Harmonica, which, when separated, measures 4 feet long. it has 384 separate holes and can play in a total of 48 major, minor and diminished chords.


Family

Stanley Theodore Wisser grew up in a Jewish home and was the youngest of six born to a Ukrainian-born American father, Abraham Wisser ''(né'' Konvisser) (1879-1955), and Moldovan-born American mother, Rose ''(née'' Kramer; 1885-1950) — his father was born in a village near Nizhyn, Ukraine, and his mother in
Briceni Briceni (, uk, Брича́ни, yi, בריטשאן, Britshan, pl, Bryczany) is a city in northern Moldova. It is the seat of Briceni District. Demographics At the 2004 census, the city had a population of 8,765. At the 1930 census, there ...
, Moldova. His mother came from a family of cantors. Harper had been a widower of Era Maria Tognoli (1919–2011), a 1940s opera soprano who, in 1959, founded the Metro Lyric Opera Company in Allenhurst, New Jersey, and for 52 years (until her death), directed it. Harper and Tongoli were married March 17, 1964, in
Asbury Park, New Jersey Asbury Park () is a beachfront city located on the Jersey Shore in Monmouth County in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It is part of the New York metropolitan area. As of the 2020 U.S. census, the city's population was 15,188
.


References


Notes


General references

* Publicity poster: ''Hohner National Harmonica Contest,'' University of Mississippi Library, Digital Collections, Blues Photograph Collection (undated; 1987?);


Inline citations

{{DEFAULTSORT:Harper, Stan 1921 births 2016 deaths American harmonica players Jersey Shore musicians Musicians from Brooklyn