Benny Anthony Harley was born on September 26, 1963, in Washington D.C. His father Frank Harley sang in a band called "Bell Chorda". He grew up playing the electric guitar, but soon grew enamored by the trumpet. As Little Benny once said, "I saw this guy playing a horn in the parking lot and told him, let me see that thing. How do you play this?"
Harley was a senior at Ballou Senior High School in Southeast, Washington, D.C., when go-go music emerged on the scene. Washington D.C. based funk and go-go artist Chuck Brown is considered the founder of the genre, which included incessant beats and the use of conga drums, cow bells and call-and-response chants. Go-go gained widespread attention in the late-70s with the song "Bustin' Loose". After Brown went on tour, other bands popped up in and around the Washington metropolitan area. Harley joined Rare Essence in 1974, who were originally called The Young Dynamos. Harley's band, Rare Essence, was one of the most notable go-go bands and is considered to be an influential force in the genre. "When you look at go-go from a historical standpoint, Little Benny, he stands out as one of the founding fathers. Chuck Brown laid the foundation, but Rare Essence — and Benny was part of it during that time — built the house," said Kato Hammond, founder and editor of Take Me Out to the Go Go magazine. Little Benny & the Masters had one huge go-go hit "Who Comes to Boogie" in 1984, studio albumsThe Cat In the Hat in 1987 and Gett Your Drink On in 1997, and live albumLive at the Cafe in 2000. Harley was known for his energetic stage presence, his powerful voice, and the ability to play two trumpets at once.
Later career
Harley left Rare Essence in the mid-80s to form another group called Little Benny & the Masters. He later played with the go-go band Proper Utensils and had several reunions with original members of Rare Essence. Later in life, he played often with Chuck Brown, including a show in Washington the night before his death. He died on May 30, 2010, at his brother's home in Washington D.C.