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- <text id=90TT0143>
- <title>
- Jan. 15, 1990: Everybody's Wild About Harry
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 15, 1990 Antarctica
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 74
- Everybody's Wild About Harry
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The age's "new" Sinatra hits his snazzy stride
- </p>
- <p>By Elizabeth L. Bland
- </p>
- <p> Females from 15 to 50 have been lining up outside stage
- doors across the country, waiting for glimpses of this
- 22-year-old crooner, and with good reason: coming from his
- sensuous mouth, It Had to Be You never sounded so fresh. He
- plays a mean piano too, and has been known to break into a
- soft-shoe, sit in for his drummer or do a send-up of Liza
- Minnelli. In short, Harry Connick Jr. is a showman, right down
- to his snakeskin shoes.
- </p>
- <p> With a big band behind him and several thousand enthusiastic
- fans in front, Connick and his piano have taken center stage.
- On tour since November with his top-selling sound track from
- the summer hit When Harry (no relation) Met Sally..., he has
- extended his run through February to satisfy the crowds. And
- his retro good looks and easy charm have also helped land him
- his first film role, as a tail gunner in David Puttnam's World
- War II movie Memphis Belle, due by Labor Day.
- </p>
- <p> But Connick is more than a flavor-of-the-month matinee idol.
- He is a musician of serious intent. His first major-label
- album, a self-titled jazz collection that included a superb
- rendition of the classic On Green Dolphin Street, was followed
- by a second, 20 (Connick's age at the time), that introduced
- his Sinatra-style vocals ("I am not a jazz singer. I call it
- swing"). The chart-topping When Harry Met Sally...will be
- followed this spring by two new recordings, one with vocals and
- a big band and another with a jazz trio, "for my soul. I need
- to play some piano."
- </p>
- <p> It was the piano, after all, that got him going. Young Harry
- was flirting with the keys by age three and at five was good
- enough to play The Star-Spangled Banner at his father's
- inauguration as New Orleans district attorney. (His late mother
- was a judge.) His parents, who put themselves through law
- school by running a record store, loved to take their two
- children to the French Quarter on weekends to listen to the
- Dixieland and bebop bands on Bourbon Street. Local musicians,
- many of whom had dealings with the D.A., were glad to have
- Harry Jr. onstage. Having an audience was intoxicating, Connick
- says. "Even now, if I see a piano, I have to play. I don't
- care where it is. I guess it's from getting that attention
- every weekend."
- </p>
- <p> Big Easy musicians, with their color-blind generosity and
- love of music, made excellent teachers. The renowned
- rhythm-and-blues pianist James Booker used to come round to the
- Connick home to teach young Harry. "Booker was a genius," says
- Connick. "The piano has been around for hundreds of years, and
- he figured out a new way to play it. I have more respect for
- him than for anyone I have ever known." Booker taught another
- lesson: Connick attributes his clean living, in part, to
- Booker's early death from drug and alcohol abuse when Connick
- was 13.
- </p>
- <p> Pianist Ellis Marsalis, patriarch of the jazz clan, was
- another respected teacher, but it was his son Wynton who
- ultimately had more influence. Six years older than Connick,
- Wynton had made a national splash with his horn while Harry was
- still in high school. "I wanted to be Wynton. I wanted to be
- in his band. I dressed like him. I talked like him."
- </p>
- <p> These days, though, Connick finds the studious Marsalis
- approach no longer suits, and he strictly follows his own path.
- Looking back to Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington, he notes
- that those jazz greats had a proud history of performing. "Tell
- me they weren't entertainers, man. They would go out there and
- give the people a good time." To that end, Connick's latest role
- model is Frank Sinatra. Not only does Connick aspire to
- additional--though occasional--film roles, as well as to
- continue singing swing and playing the piano, but he may, like
- it or not, be on his way to becoming something of a sensation.
- So for now, Harry, it has to be you.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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