Harry Goodman
Biography
Harry Goodman (born June 21, 1906, in Chicago, Illinois, US; died October 22, 1997, in Gstaad, Switzerland) was an American jazz musician (double bass and tuba) who later became a music publisher. He was an active professional musician from the mid-1920s through 1939, participating in 208 recording sessions. His first recording (“’Deed I Do”) was made in late 1926 with Ben Pollack and His Californians, which also included Glenn Miller, his brother Benny Goodman, Gil Rodin, Fud Livingston, and vocalist Frank Sylvano. In the following years, he played on recordings with the studio bands of Benny Goodman, Jimmy McHugh, Jack Pettis, and producer Irving Mills. In the 1930s, he also participated in recordings by Hoagy Carmichael (“Rockin’ Chair”), Jack Teagarden, Red Nichols, Gil Rodin, The Charleston Chasers, Wingy Manone, Harry Rosenthal, Red McKenzie’s Mound City Blue Blowers, Teddy Wilson, and Lionel Hampton, among others. He was a member of the Benny Goodman Orchestra from 1934 to 1939, including the 1938 concert that was the first jazz performance at Carnegie Hall. He also appeared in the television series American Masters. After he left his brother’s band in the spring of 1939, he never performed as a bassist again. He ran various businesses, including a restaurant in Manhattan. He and his younger brother Gene (Eugene) Goodman founded a music publishing company, Regent Music. They later started Jewel Music and, in 1953, ARC Music, with Leonard and Phil Chess. Goodman spent much of later years in France and died in Switzerland at age 91. Although Harry Goodman played with many of the great swing music ensembles, he was not considered one of the great bassists. John Goldsby called him “a good journeyman player with the right family name.” Gunther Schuller wrote "Harry Goodman was at best competent but, more often than not, weak."
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.

The Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert - Volume I
1950

The Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert
1950

The King Of Swing Vol. 1 (1937-38 Jazz Concert No. 2)
1956

The Great Benny Goodman
1956

The Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert - Volume II

All-Time Greatest Hits
1972

This Is The Big Band Era
1971

Jivin' The Vibes
1957

1937/38 Jazz Concert No. 2, Vol. 1
1950

The Best Of Ken Burns Jazz
2000

History Of Jazz
1978

This Is Benny Goodman Vol. 2
1972

In The Groove With The Kings Of Swing
1967

Sittin' In
1958

1937-38 Jazz Concert No. 2
1952

1937/38 Jazz Concert No. 2 Vol. 2
1950

The Complete Lionel Hampton 1937-1941
1976

Vol. 1 Stompology
1971

King Of The Blues Trombone
1963
Credited work
771 releases · 176 albums · active 1950–2018
- Performance · 1,832
- Other credits · 2
- Production · 2
Studios: Carnegie Hall · Madhattan Room, Hotel Pennsylvania, New York City · Congress Hotel, Chicago · Paramount Pictures
Frequent collaborators
- Benny Goodman
- Various
- Benny Goodman And His Orchestra
- Jack Teagarden
- Lionel Hampton
- Teddy Wilson And His Orchestra
- Ella Fitzgerald
- Bunny Berigan
