Showing posts with label Buddy Johnson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddy Johnson. Show all posts

Monday, June 15, 2015

Buddy Johnson At The Savoy Ballroom 1945 - 46

A fantastic radio broadcast ripped at 24/48 and transferred to FLAC.  Interesting... Dupree Bolton is in the band.  Enjoy!!!

Alto-Sax – Joe O'Laughton
Baritone-Sax – Teddy Conyers
Bass – Leon Spann
Drums – Teddy Stewart
Guitar – Jerome Darr
Piano – Buddy Johnson
Tenor-Sax – Dave van Dyke, Jimmy Stamford
Trombone – Bernard Archer, Gordon Thomas, Leonard Briggs
Trumpet – Dupree Bolton, Frank Brown, John Wilson, Willis Nelson
Vocals – Arthur Prysock
Vovals – Ella Johnson





A1 (Theme) Wlak'em - Opus #2
A2 Since I Fell For You
A3 St. Louis Blues
A4 Waitin' For The Train To Come In
A5 Night Shift
A6 Jodi
B1 One O'Clock Boogie
B2 The Other Side Of The Rainbow
B3 Exactly Like You
B4 One For A Nickel
B5 Gee, It's Good To Hold You
B6 In There
B7 Traffic Jam
B8 (Theme) If You Never Return

Jazz Archives JA-25
1975

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Buddy And Ella Johnson 1953 - 1964

Buddy Johnson (January 10, 1915 – February 9, 1977) was an American jazz and New York blues pianist and bandleader, active from the 1930s through the 1960s. His songs were often performed by his sister Ella Johnson, most notably "Since I Fell for You" which later became a jazz standard.

Born Woodrow Wilson Johnson in Darlington, South Carolina, Johnson took piano lessons as a child, and classical music remained one of his passions. In 1938 he moved to New York, and the following year toured Europe with the Cotton Club Revue, being expelled from Nazi Germany. Later in 1939 he first recorded for Decca Records with his band, soon afterwards being joined by his sister Ella as vocalist.

By 1941 he had assembled a nine-piece orchestra, and soon began a series of R&B and pop chart hits. These included "Let's Beat Out Some Love" (#2 R&B, 1943, with Johnson on vocals), "Baby Don't You Cry" (#3 R&B, 1943, with Warren Evans on vocals), his biggest hit "When My Man Comes Home" (#1 R&B, No. 18 pop, 1944, with Ella Johnson on vocals), and "They All Say I'm The Biggest Fool" (#5 R&B, 1946, with Arthur Prysock on vocals). Ella Johnson recorded her version of "Since I Fell for You" in 1945, but it did not become a major hit until recorded by Lenny Welch in the early 1960s.

In 1946 Johnson composed a Blues Concerto, which he performed at Carnegie Hall in 1948. His orchestra remained a major touring attraction through the late 1940s and early 1950s, and continued to record in the jump blues style with some success on record on the Mercury label like "Hittin' on Me" and "I'm Just Your Fool". His song Bring It Home To Me appears on the 1996 Rocket Sixty-Nine release Jump Shot!.

Johnson died, at the age of 62, from a brain tumor and sickle cell anemia, in 1977 in New York.

Ella Johnson died in New York of Alzheimer's in February, 2004; she was 84 years old.