Charlie McCoy
white blues harmonica player, 1960s-present
United States • b. 1941-03-28
Biography
Charles Ray McCoy (born March 28, 1941) is an American harmonicist and multi-instrumentalist. He is best known for his harmonica solos on iconic recordings such as "Candy Man" (Roy Orbison), "He Stopped Loving Her Today" (George Jones), "I Was Country When Country Wasn't Cool" (Barbara Mandrell), and others. He was a member of the progressive country rock bands Area Code 615 and Barefoot Jerry. After recording with Bob Dylan in New York, McCoy is credited for unknowingly influencing Dylan to decide to come to Nashville to record the critically acclaimed 1966 album Blonde on Blonde. A prolific session musician, McCoy performed on many recordings by established artists, including Elvis Presley (on eight of his film sound tracks), Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash, Chet Atkins, Waylon Jennings, Roy Orbison, Leon Russell, and Loretta Lynn. In the recording industry, he was known as the "utility man" because of his ability to play with sufficient skill on many different instruments in addition to the harmonica; for example, he played trumpet on Dylan's "Rainy Day Women ♯12 & 35", saxophone on Roy Orbison's "Oh, Pretty Woman", and bass harmonica on Simon and Garfunkel's "The Boxer". On Elvis Presley's 1965 soundtrack album Harum Scarum, he played guitar, harmonica, organ, and vibraphone. He is a member of three halls of fame, including the Country Music Hall of Fame and the West Virginia Music Hall of Fame; he was inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame and Museum in 2007 as a part of a group of session musicians dubbed "The Nashville A-Team". For 19 years, McCoy worked as music director for Nashville's popular television show, Hee Haw. In 2022, he became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. His memoir, Fifty Cents and a Box Top– The Creative Life of Nashville Session Musician Charlie McCoy, was published in 2017.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

Highway 61 Revisited
1965

Blonde On Blonde
1966

Bringing It All Back Home
1965

Nashville Skyline
1969

John Wesley Harding
1968

Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Volume II
1971

Paul Simon
1972

Gord's Gold

Self Portrait
1970

The Essential Bob Dylan
2000

The Silver Tongued Devil And I
1971

Kristofferson
1970

Number 5
1970

The Cutting Edge 1965 – 1966
2015

Orange Blossom Special
1965

The Original Mono Recordings
2010

Blessed Are...
1971

Another Self Portrait (1969-1971)
2013

Dreaming My Dreams
1975

Our Mother The Mountain
1969

Country, My Way
1967

No Direction Home: The Soundtrack (A Martin Scorsese Picture)
2006

12 Golden Country Greats
1996

Border Lord
1972
Credited work
5,300 releases · 848 albums · active 1960–2026
- Other credits · 4,719
- Performance · 4,488
- Production · 146
- Engineering · 2
- Mastering · 1
Studios: Quadrafonic Sound Studios · Columbia Recording Studios, Nashville · Woodland Studios · Bradley's Barn
