Dial's career as a bandleader included a series of sides for Vocalion beginning in 1930. The group, whose recordings included the deadly Poison, was known as Harry Dial's Blusicians (sic), and included players such as banjoist Eursten Woodfork, trumpeter Shirley Clay (a man), and the fine alto saxophonist Lester Boone. Some of this material has been reissued on the compilation Chicago 1929-1930: That's My Stuff. He was already recording with Armstrong around this time, and began cutting tracks with Waller as as member of Fats Waller's Rhythm before the middle of that decade. It might have taken him an additional ten years to master the art of playing the maracas, since he seemed to find a way to include the delicate shakers on just about every funny style of music he played with Jordan beginning in the mid-'40s when he enlisted in the Tympany Five. In the late '40s, he took another crack at recording under his own name, producing Prince's Boogie for Decca with one of the earliest versions of the catchy Diddy Wah Diddy on the flipside. Dial liked to write as well, beginning with a song entitled Don't Play Me Cheap, recorded by the famous Armstrong. His songs were also recorded by the merely infamous, a category that would not exist if it didn't include a singer named Bea Booze, who cut Dial's Catchin' as Catch Can for Decca in 1942. Many years later, the drummer published his -All This Jazz About Jazz: The Autobiography of Harry Dial. He is no relation to the young Tennessee blues and country guitarist and songwriter Harry Dial, and also was not the inspiration for the Harry Dial character played on #Murder She Wrote by tough guy Vince Edwards. Finally, the dapper, suave Dial would have felt it important that he is most certainly not the Harry Dial who made it into -the Guiness Book of World Records by claiming to have gone 78 years without bathing. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi