Thursday, December 01, 2011

Beryl Harrell



How many of you have heard of Beryl Harrell?


There is a great story about her in the fall issue of The Fretboard Journal.


She was born in 1918 in Washington but grew up in Los Angeles. She took steel guitar lessons from steel guitar legend and pioneer Sol Ho’opi'i. By all accounts she was gorgeous and a phenomenal steel guitar player. She played in several all-girl Hawaiian bands in the 1930’s and ‘40’s.


After the war, country music, and particularly western swing, became huge in Southern California and she became a sensation playing in all the famous LA clubs such as The Palomino Club. She hung out with Merle Travis, Les Paul, Leo Fender, and Paul Bigsby around the Los Angeles music scene in the early 1950’s. When Las Vegas took off she started playing there as well.


In 1963 at the age of 45 she decided that she was too old for playing all the clubs and late hours, so she quit music and sold her steel guitar. She went to work as a telephone operator at the Desert Inn in Las Vegas, but she missed playing music so much that she became very depressed.


In 1977, not yet 60 years old, she decided that life without music wasn’t worth living, and she took her own life.


To those of us past 60 and playing as good as ever, and nowhere near gorgeous, this is an amazing story.