- Harvey Brooks
Infobox Musical artist
Name =Harvey Brooks
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Background =non_vocal_instrumentalist
Birth_name =Harvey Goldstein
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Born =July 4 ,1944 ,New York City
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Instrument =electric bass
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Years_active =1960s - present
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Associated_acts =Bob Dylan Miles Davis The Doors Richie Havens
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Notable_instruments =Harvey Brooks (born July 4, 1944,
New York City as Harvey Goldstein) is an Americanbassist . He has played in many styles of music (notablyjazz andpopular music ), and wasfolk rock 's first notablebass guitar ist.Brooks came out of a New York music scene that was crackling with activity in the early 1960s. One of the younger players on his instrument, he was a contemporary of
Andy Kulberg and other eclectic players in their late teens and early 20s, who saw a way to bridge the styles of folk, blues, rock, and jazz.Columbia Records producer Tom Wilson gave Brooks his first boost to fame when he picked him to play as part ofBob Dylan 's backing band on the sessions that yielded the song "Like a Rolling Stone " and the album "Highway 61 Revisited " — in contrast to the kind of folkie-electric sound generated by the band on his previous album, "Bringing It All Back Home ." Wilson and Dylan were looking for a harder, in-your-face electric sound, and Brooks, along with guitaristMichael Bloomfield and organistAl Kooper , provided exactly what was needed on one of the most famous recordings of the 1960s.Brooks was also part of Dylan's early backing band which performed to great notoriety at Forest Hills, Queens and other venues in 1965. This band also included
Robbie Robertson (guitar),Al Kooper (keyboards) andLevon Helm (drums). From the Dylan single and album, which became two of the most widely heard (and, at the time, most controversial) records of the 1960s, Brooks branched out in a multitude of directions, as he went on to play on records by folk artists likeEric Andersen atVanguard Records , andRichie Havens and Jim & Jean atVerve Records (where Wilson had jumped after leaving Columbia), and transitional electric folk-rockers such asDavid Blue (whose producer was looking for a sound similar to that on "Highway 61 Revisited"), and various blues-rock fusion projects involving Bloomfield and Kooper. Brooks played onMama Cass 's 1968 solo album, and also on some Doors sessions for whichRay Manzarek 's keyboard bass was judged inadequate, including the "Soft Parade " album, and was very visible on the Michael Bloomfield/Al Kooper/Steve Stills "Super Session " release, one of the iconic records of late 1960s rock music. His song, "Harvey's Tune," appeared on this album.It was through his participation in
The Electric Flag , an extension of Michael Bloomfield andBarry Goldberg 's interests in blues, that Brooks' career took an unexpected turn. The Flag only lasted in its original line-up for about a year, and much of that time was spent recording a sound track album to the film "The Trip" starring Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper, Susan Strasberg & written by Jack Nicholson and "The Electric Flag, An American Music Band. But in the course of this, Brooks became a producer atColumbia Records and connected with fellow producerTeo Macero who led him toMiles Davis .Working with Davis involved Brooks in a freer manner of making music than he'd been used to even on the most ambitious sessions with Bloomfield, though it also meant butting up against Davis's ego, personality, and musical sensibilities as a bandleader. Brooks worked with the legendary jazz trumpeter long enough to contribute memorably to the "
Bitches Brew " and "Big Fun " albums. From that point on — between the Dylan, Davis, Electric Flag, and Bloomfield and Kooper connections — Brooks' career was made. Even casual listeners became familiar with his name, and from the 1970s into the mid-1990s, Brooks was one of the busiest bassists in music, working with such varied artists as John Martyn,the Fabulous Thunderbirds ,Seals & Crofts ,Fontella Bass ,John Sebastian ,Loudon Wainwright III ,John Cale , the Fabulous Rhinestones, and Paul Burlison. He has been somewhat less active since the early 1990s, having relocated toArizona during that decade, but has continued to perform and record. Harvey also played withDonald Fagen (Rock 'n' Soul Revue). In 2007, Light In The Attic, a Seattle based record label,reissued "In My Own Dream" by Karen Dalton which was arranged and produced by Harvey Brooks. His current band is the 17th Street Band based inTuscon, Arizona . The 17th Street Band can be seen live every last Tuesday of each month at the Barrio Brewery on 17th St.External links
* [http://www.17thstreetband.com 17th Street Band]
* [http://www.harveybrooks.net Brooks page on YouTube]
* [http://www.treasureshidden.com 17th Street Market]
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