Eddie Habat was born in Cleveland, Ohio on
September 16, 1926, the youngest child of John and Anna Habat. He had
two brothers, John and Herman, and two sisters, Betty and Anna. When
Eddie was eighteen months old, his mother was tragically killed in an
auto accident. His father then returned to his homeland of Slovenia
where he married Mary Cerar from Domzale, who came to Cleveland and
raised the five Habat children.
Eddie
led one of the five outstanding Cleveland-based orchestras (the others
being Yankovic, Pecon, Vadnal and Bass) that achieved national
prominence recording and performing Cleveland-style Slovenian polkas and
waltzes. The youngest of the five leaders, he utilized his Slovenian
musical heritage and developed a personally unique orchestral style that
enjoyed widespread appeal across the nation.
Eddie was born with a natural talent for
music and composition, and needed to hear a song only a few times before
playing it perfectly, often improving on the original. Having little
formal training on the accordion, he had a unique ability for chording
and interpretation, and developed a personally unique orchestral style
that enjoyed widespread appeal. He has been called one of the best
accordion players of Slovenian music in the United States.
He began playing the accordion at the age
of seven and by the age of eleven was playing weddings and private
parties. As a child, he had listened faithfully to Martin Antoncic and
his transcriptions on the radio of Yankovic, Pecon and Joe Sodja, and
was soon able to play exactly what he heard. William (Doc) Lausche and
especially Matt Hoyer were his inspirations.
In 1942 at the age of sixteen, Eddie was
asked to assume leadership of the Johnny Pecon Orchestra while Pecon was
in the Navy. It was a tremendous honor for teenage Eddie to be asked to
take over one of the best bands of its time. After being called to serve
in the Navy himself, Eddie rejoined the Pecon band, but later left to
work on his own. In 1948, along with Kenny Bass and Pete Sokatch, he
formed the Tunemixers who were given on WSRS a weekly half-hour radio
show which was an instant hit with a #1 rating. A Decca recording
contract followed and eight major hits were recorded, three of them
original Eddie Habat compositions.
After the Tunemixer’s contract, Decca
offered Eddie an exclusive contract which lasted for thirteen years. He
made over 150 records and albums, some of which were advertised in
"Billboard," a national publication of the music industry.
In 1955, the Habat band was given its own
thirteen week television show on WEWS and later made numerous
appearances on the "Old Dutch Show" and on "Polka Varieties." Along with
playing four nights a week locally, the band played three to four times
a month outside of the Cleveland area in the Midwest region and always
drew huge crowds.
The Eddie Habat Orchestra was one of the
country’s most successful. His original composition of "Go, Man, Go"
sold 50,000 records in the first two weeks after it was released and was
distributed internationally. Cleveland’s Bill Randle, one of the
nation’s top disc jockeys, called it "the best football song of its
time."
His playing style was and is still imitated
by many others, including Canada’s Polka King Walter Ostanek, who used
to drive to Cleveland from Canada just to hear Eddie play. Over 25 of
Eddie’s original polka and waltz compositions, bit hits like "Riverboat
Polka," "Uncle Nick's Polka," "Hi Lee, Hi Lo" and "Strawberry Hill
Polka" have been recorded by many other groups.
Many honors have been awarded to Eddie
throughout the years including Ohio’s Polka King in 1949 and again in
1981, Penn-Ohio Polka Pals Man of the Year in 1985, Man of the Year of
the Akron-Barberton-Canton Polka Club in 1990 and in 1991 the Lifetime
Achievement Award of the National Cleveland Style Polka Hall of Fame.
"Go, Man, Go" (2000) and "Jack on St. Clair" (1999), both Eddie Habat
hits, were winners in the Cleveland Polka Hall of Fame’s Greatest
All-Time Cleveland-Style Polka Hits.
A retired painter, Eddie lived in
Wickliffe, Ohio, with his second wife, Patricia, whom he married in
1987. His first wife, Diane, died in 1984 and was the mother of his six
children: Mark, Eddie, Wayne, Jeff, Paul and Patty. There are 18
grandchildren and three great grandchildren. Eddie enjoyed building
artistic balsa wood model airplanes. One of his planes, a model of a
B-24, is in a museum at Sv. Trojica in Slovenia.
As Bob Dolgan of the Cleveland Plain Dealer
said, "No one could turn on the emotion like Habat. He gave you the
impression that he would gladly play for free." His last album, "From
The Heart" certainly describes his love of Slovenian music.
Eddie Habat died in Cleveland on May 13, 2005.