UNCUT

Not Fade Away

PAUL HARRIS

Manassas and Nick Drake keyboardist (1944–2023)

PAUL Harris is one of those names found scattered liberally in the small print throughout any good record collection. His most high-profile gig was with Stephen Stills’ Manassas: his piano, organ and clavinet can be heard all over the group’s eponymous 1972 masterpiece, and he also played on the follow-up, 1973’s Down The Road. When the band broke up and Stills returned to the CSNY fold, Manassas refugee and ex-Byrd Chris Hillman took Harris and pedal-steel player Al Perkins with him to join the Souther-Hillman-Furay Band, who recorded two country-tinged canyon rock albums before dissolving in 1976.

Born in Queens and classically trained, Harris had only to make a short trip across New York to immerse himself in the Greenwich Village folk scene of the 1960s, and was soon playing on albums by the likes of David Blue, Tom Paxton, Tom Rush and Richie Havens. In the Village he was also befriended by Joe Boyd, an upcoming young producer who would soon relocate to London.. His sensitive playing on the glorious “Time Has Told Me” was particularly notable, and he returned to play on Drake’s second album, 1971’s . Boyd gave him an even bigger role on John and Beverley Martyn’s 1970 album , on which he not only played keyboards but acted as arranger and musical director.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from UNCUT

UNCUT2 min read
Q&A
What did you think of Rolling Stone and other publications centring so heavily on the Hendrix comparisons? I felt what we were doing was something unique, and that can make it difficult to pin down. It’s not always easy to find helpful reference poin
UNCUT3 min read
Ezra Feinberg
Soft Power TONAL UNION 8/10 EVERY so oft en, an ageing agit-rocker will crawl out of the woodwork to bemoan that the abject state of our governments is not being met with suitable ire from the current generation of songwriters. Where are our Bob Dyla
UNCUT4 min read
Teenage Cancer Trust: Ovation
Royal Albert Hall, London, March 24 IT’S been a long and impressive stint, but tonight, at 80, Roger Daltrey is stepping back from Teenage Cancer Trust. Powered by 24 years of Albert Hall benefit gigs, the charity has founded 28 specialist UK wards (

Related Books & Audiobooks