Perceived by casual oldies fans as a two-hit wonder (for his 1959 chart-topper "Kansas City" and a heartwarming "Let's Work Together" a full decade later),
Wilbert Harrison actually left behind a varied body of work that blended an intriguing mélange of musical idioms into something quite distinctive.
Country and gospel strains filtered into
Wilbert Harrison's consciousness as a youth in North Carolina. When he got out of the Navy in Miami around 1950, he began performing in a calypso-based style. Miami entrepreneur
Henry Stone signed
Harrison to his Rockin' logo in 1953; his debut single, "This Woman of Mine," utilized the very same melody as his later reading of "Kansas City" (the first rendition of the
Jerry Leiber/
Mike Stoller composition by pianist
Little Willie Littlefield came out in 1952, doubtless making an impression). Its flip, a country-tinged "Letter Edged in Black," exhibited
Harrison's eclectic mindset.
After moving to Newark, New Jersey,
Harrison wandered by the headquarters of Savoy Records one fortuitous day and was snapped up by producer
Fred Mendelsohn.
Harrison recorded several sessions for Savoy, beginning with a catchy cover of
Terry Fell's country tune "Don't Drop It." Top New York sessioneers -- arranger
Leroy Kirkland, saxist
Buddy Lucas and guitarists
Mickey Baker and
Kenny Burrell -- backed
Harrison on his 1954-1956 Savoy output, but hits weren't forthcoming.
That changed instantly when
Harrison waxed his driving "Kansas City" for Harlem entrepreneur
Bobby Robinson in 1959. With a barbed-wire guitar solo by
Wild Jimmy Spruill igniting
Harrison's no-frills piano and clenched vocal, "Kansas City" paced both the R&B and pop charts soon after its issue on Fury Records (not bad for a $40 session). Only one minor problem:
Harrison was still technically under contract to Savoy (though label head
Herman Lubinsky had literally run him out of his office some years earlier!), leading to all sorts of legal wrangles that finally went
Robinson's way. Momentum for any Fury follow-ups had been fatally blunted in the interim, despite fine attempts with "Cheatin' Baby," the sequel "Goodbye Kansas City," and "Let's Stick Together."
Harrison bounced from Neptune to Doc to Constellation to Port to Vest with little in the way of tangible rewards before unexpectedly making a comeback in 1969 with an infectious re-recording of his 1962 "Let's Stick Together" single under the title "Let's Work Together" for
Juggy Murray's Sue imprint. The song proved a popular cover item --
Canned Heat revived it shortly thereafter, and
Bryan Ferry chimed in with his treatment of the original "Let's Stick Together" later on. Alas, it was an isolated happenstance -- apart from "My Heart Is Yours," a bottom-end chart entry on SSS International in 1971, no more hits were in
Wilbert's future. But
Harrison soldiered on, sometimes as a one-man band, for years to come. ~ Bill Dahl