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Moondog biography

Moondog was a street musician and
poet who hung around the 52nd to 54th Street area and around the
old Madison square Garden in Manhattan in the 40's and 50's,
through to the 70's. He often dressed in Viking regalia
considering himself to be Nordic in sensibility. His costume
would consist of homemade robe, sandals, a flowing cape, a horned
Viking helmet, with a long spear of his own manufacture in his
hand. Passers-by called him "the Viking of Sixth
Avenue". Reaction to this garb was to hamper his musical
development due to him being considered a crank. In later years
he was persuaded to abandon it for more conventional dress (by
his own admission, this was a good move). He was a mainly
self-taught composer who worked with home made instruments and
produced eccentric jazz and classical based pieces as well as
vocal rounds. Part of the charm of his work is the brevity of
much of it.
He was born, Louis Hardin, in
Marysville, Kansas on May 26, 1916 but his family moved to
Wyoming. He was interested in drums and drum rhythms from an
early age. He played drums in Hurley High School in 1929 and in
1949, he played tomtom and flute at a Sun Dance held by the
Blackfoot in Idaho. By then he was already blind as he lost his
sight in his early teens when a dynamite cap exploded. He studied
music and finished high school at the Iowa School for the Blind,
and in 1933 studied braille at the Missouri School for the Blind
in St. Louis. He composed all his pieces in braille.
In 1942 Hardin got a scholarship
to study in Memphis but he mostly taught himself ear training and
other musical skills and theory from books in braille. In 1943,
he came to New York and met Artur Rodzinski, Leonard Bernstein,
and Toscanini. Supposedly he bowed to kiss Toscanini's hand but
Toscanini pulled it away saying,' I am not a beautiful woman ' .
Hardin also began to meet jazz performers such as Charlie Parker
and Benny Goodman. This gave his work a jazz feel which together
with a certain beat quality in the form of humorous philosophical
statements and the use of background sounds gives makes him a
true eccentric.
Hardin began to call himself
Moondog from 1947 in honor of a dog "who used to howl at the
moon more than any dog I knew of".
Despite his status as street
musician he intermittently recorded for the CBS, Prestige, Epic,
Angel and Mars labels. One of his songs, "All Is
Loneliness," (on "More Moondog" for Prestige and
"Moondog 2" on CBS) was recorded by Janis Joplin. He
also wrote music for radio and television commercials, and his
music was used on the soundtracks for Jack Nicholson's
"Drive, He Said," and the Coen Brothers "Big
Lebowsky". Moondog also worked on an album of "Mother
Goose Songs" with Julie Andrews. He was also feted by jazz
musicians - Benny Goodman, Charlie Parker, 50's beat poets and
60s flower children. His CBS "Moondog" album came about
when James William Guercio - producer of Chicago and director of
cult film "Electra Glide in Blue" - heard him and
decided to record him. Moondog was also interviewed on many
television shows, including both "Today" and "The
Tonight Show."
In the fifties Moondog sued the disc jockey
Alan Freed, the rock and roll king. Freed used the name Moondog
as well as one of his records because it had a howling wolf in
it. Then, when he came to New York, he had a program called the
Moondog Show. Moondog won the case and Freed stopped using the
name. There is a rumour that Stravinski intervened by speaking to
the judge.
Moondog disappeared from the streets of New York
in 1974 because he had been invited to perform in Germany. After his performances
in Hamburg, he began to perform on the streets of Europe where he met Mrs. Sommer
who transcribed his music and acted as his publisher and business manager. Her
father supported Moondog in his later years. He produced at least five albums
in Europe, including a "sound saga" titled "The Creation,"
and regularly performed his compositions with chamber and symphony orchestras
in Paris, Stockholm and cities in Germany. Moondog died of heart failure on
Wednesday, September 8, 1999 in a hospital in Munster, Germany. He was 83.
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