Harold Bradley

  • Nashville, TN
    hometown
  • Country
    genre
  • 1940
    started
  • Bio
    full story
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About Harold Bradley


The brother of country music legend Owen Bradley, Harold Ray Bradley is reportedly the most recorded guitar player in history. Not a ridiculous assumption considering Bradley has been a Nashville session musician for over 50 years.

Born in Nashville, Bradley first became interested in the banjo, but switched over to the guitar after his older brother Owen convinced him that the banjo was going out of style. His first professional experience also came at the hands of his older brother who, by the early '40s, was already a respected bandleader on WLAC. The eldest Bradley arranged for Harold to tour with Ernest Tubb during the break between his junior and senior years in high school. After graduating and spending a stint in the Navy, Harold enrolled at George Peabody College in Nashville, where he studied music and made extra money by backing singers at the Opry.

By the late '40s Owen was one of the most popular bandleaders in the country and, along with Harold, decided to build Nashville's first recording facility, Castle Recording Studio. The small studio lasted several years, until the Bradley brothers built a larger facility capable of making stereo recordings. Around the same time Harold's session career began taking off as well and, throughout the '50s and '60s, his reputation for dependability and excellence landed him session work with some of the best names in the business, including Patsy Cline, Willie Nelson, Roy Orbison, and Elvis.

Playing bass guitar, Harold also invented the "tic-tac" style of muting the bass notes. Throughout his career, he has never strayed far from his brother Owen and, in a large way, the Bradleys were among the key architects of the Nashville sound and style of recording, helping to build a recording industry where previously there was none. ~ Steve Kurutz, Rovi

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Photos

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  • Harold Bradley (left), Shelby Lynne, George Jones and Mel Tillis enjoy their time at the 2010 Medallion Ceremony at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum on May 23, 2010.
    Harold Bradley
    Harold Bradley (left), Shelby Lynne, George Jones and Mel Tillis enjoy their time at the 2010 Medallion Ceremony at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum on May 23, 2010.
    Donn Jones
  • Country Music Hall of Fame members join together to sing "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville on May 17, 2009.
    Harold Bradley
    Country Music Hall of Fame members join together to sing "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville on May 17, 2009.
    Ed Rode
  • Charlie McCoy (left) and Harold Bradley smile for photographers during the  Country Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Nashville on May 17, 2009.
    Harold Bradley
    Charlie McCoy (left) and Harold Bradley smile for photographers during the Country Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Nashville on May 17, 2009.
    Ed Rode
  • Harold Bradley
    Harold Bradley
    Harold Bradley
  • Harold Bradley
    Harold Bradley
    Harold Bradley
  • Jerry Bradley (left), songwriter Fred Knobloch along with Connie, Patsy and Harold Bradley and Leadership Music's Kira Florita at Bradley Family tribute on Aug. 26, 2008 in Nashville
    Harold Bradley
    Jerry Bradley (left), songwriter Fred Knobloch along with Connie, Patsy and Harold Bradley and Leadership Music's Kira Florita at Bradley Family tribute on Aug. 26, 2008 in Nashville
    Alan Mayor
  • Brenda Lee (center) with Jerry Bradley (left), Nashville Mayor Karl Dean, Connie, Patsy and Harold Bradley at the Bradley Family tribute Aug. 26, 2008, in Nashville
    Harold Bradley
    Brenda Lee (center) with Jerry Bradley (left), Nashville Mayor Karl Dean, Connie, Patsy and Harold Bradley at the Bradley Family tribute Aug. 26, 2008, in Nashville
    Alan Mayor

Discography

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  • Guitar for Sentimental Lovers (1972)
    Harold Bradley
    Guitar for Sentimental Lovers (1972)
    Harmony
  • Guitar for Lovers Only (1966)
    Harold Bradley
    Guitar for Lovers Only (1966)
    Columbia
  • Bossa Nova Guitar Goes to Nashville (1963)
    Harold Bradley
    Bossa Nova Guitar Goes to Nashville (1963)
    Columbia
  • Misty Guitar (1963)
    Harold Bradley
    Misty Guitar (1963)
    Columbia
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