The Boston Globe

Happy Traum, mainstay of the folk music world; at 86

- By Alex Williams

Happy traum, a celebrated folk singer, guitarist, and banjo player who was a mainstay of New York city’s greenwich village coffeehous­e scene of the early 1960s, recorded with Bob Dylan, and had an influentia­l career as a music instructor, died July 17 in manhattan. He was 86.

His wife, Jane, said he died of pancreatic cancer in a physical rehabilita­tion facility after undergoing surgery for the disease. He lived in woodstock, N.Y.

Known for his easy vocal approach and his prowess as a finger-style guitarist and five-string banjo player, the Bronx-bred mr. traum was an enduring presence in the folk world for more than six decades.

“revered by most in the musical know, he is easily one of the most significan­t acoustic-roots musicians and guitar pickers of his — and many other — generation­s,” Blues magazine observed in the introducti­on to a 2016 interview with mr. traum.

will Hermes of rolling Stone described him as a “folk revivalist straight out of ‘inside Llewyn Davis,’” a reference to the coen brothers’ 2013 folk-world odyssey, in a four-star review of mr. traum’s album “Just for the Love of it.” it was the seventh of eight albums he released as a leader, starting with “relax Your mind” in 1975.

in the late 1960s, mr. traum performed in a highly regarded duo with his younger brother, Artie. they performed at the Newport Folk Festival in rhode island in 1969, toured the world, and released five albums, starti n g w i t h “Ha p p y a n d A r t i e traum” in 1970. Artie traum died of liver cancer in 2008.

A sought-after sideman, mr. traum recorded and performed with luminaries such as Dylan, pete Seeger, Levon Helm of the Band, and reggae star peter tosh.

He earned a place in folk history at a storied 1963 recording session that featured his band, along with Dylan, Seeger, phil Ochs, and others; it resulted in the seminal folk album “Broadside Ballads, vol. 1.” Among the tracks on that album was mr. traum’s duet with Dylan, performing under the pseudonym Blind Boy grunt, on Dylan’s antiwar song “Let me Die in my Footsteps.”

in October 1971, Dylan, who by then was living near the traums in woodstock, called and asked mr. traum to bring a guitar, banjo, and bass to the columbia records studio on west 54th Street in manhattan the next day.

“Never mind that i didn’t own a bass,” mr. traum recalled on his official website, “and had never played one in public before. i borrowed one — fast.”

with mr. traum plucking away and lending lilting harmonies, the two recorded several tracks, two of which D ylan would include on his forthcomin­g compilatio­n, “greatest Hits, volume ii.”

One of them was a version of “i Shall Be released” — perkier than the one Dylan had originally recorded with the Band in 1967 during the famous “Basement tapes” sessions.

Looking back on that session years later, mr. traum said, “there’s a relaxed intimacy there that i like to think is partly due to our friendship, and to the many occasions in which we sat around the house playing the old songs.”

Harry peter traum was born may 9, 1938, in the Bronx, the eld e s t o f t w o s o n s o f ma r t i n traum, a dentist, and ruth (Hyams) traum, a visual artist. He carried the nickname Happy since infancy.

He grew up in the west Bronx and took an interest in folk music while studying art at what is now the Fiorello H. Laguardia High School of music & Art and performing Arts. He became friends there with peter Yarrow, later of peter, paul and mary, and Eric weissberg, who would gain fame with “Dueling Banjos.”

After graduating in 1956, he enrolled at New York University. By then, he was already honing his musical chops under the tutelage of blues musician Brownie mcghee. He received a bachelor’s degree in English in 1960.

He joined the folk group the New world Singers, who counted Dylan, still a rising young folky from minnesota, as a friend and a fan.

During the 1963 Broadside sessions, the New world Singers cut the first recording of the Dylan classic “Blowin’ in the wind,” which Dylan had given the band to perform in local venues.

“we knew it was a special song, but we didn’t know how special,” mr. traum said. “we didn’t know, historical­ly, that we’d still be talking about it 60 years later.”

D ylan also provided mr. traum and the New world Singers with another of his future classics, “Don’t think twice, it’s All right,” which they released as a single — the first recorded version of the song, mr. traum later said. they included it on their debut album, released by Atlantic records in 1963.

“And then, of course, ‘Freewheeli­n’’ came out, and everybody and his brother and sister recorded that song,” mr. traum said, referring to the album “the Freewheeli­n’ Bob Dylan,” released the same year. “there’s probably a thousand recordings of that song. i don’t think it says in any history books, but ours was definitely the first time it was recorded.”

in addition to his wife, mr. traum leaves his daughters, merry and April traum; his son, Adam; and four grandchild­ren.

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