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James P. Johnson

 
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James P. Johnson


Pianist

Acknowledged as the "Grandfather of Hot Piano," jazz pianist James P. Johnson emerged during the transitional period between ragtime—a music performed strictly from written scores—and the improvisatory and rhythmically more relaxed foundations of shout piano, or what became known as stride piano. Bringing together elements of ragtime, blues, African American religious music, and classical themes, Johnson originated a piano style that dominated New York City’s African American musical world during the early decades of the twentieth century. Though his composition "Charleston" became the anthem for the "flaming youth" of the 1920s, his musical ability extended beyond the writing of popular songs. In his 37-year career, he also wrote 19 symphonic works, scored 11 stage musicals, and contributed to numerous stage productions.

A forefather of the stride style, Johnson brought the idiom into its most complex form. Opposed to the two-beat configuration of ragtime, stride piano accentuated a more steady, loping four-four feel, exhibiting a left-hand "oom-pah" bass pattern. As Frank Kappler pointed out in the liner notes to Giants of Jazz, "The left hand is the motor in stride, providing propulsion, leaving the right to create the characteristic rhythm." As one of stride’s greatest practitioners, Johnson "played more quickly and accurately than his peers," commented Mike Lipskin in the notes to The Fats Waller Piano Solos. "[He] was capable of the most spontaneous improvising, with a singular anachronistic inventiveness that still amazes listeners today."

Beginnings of a Jazz Giant
James Price Johnson was born on February 1, 1894, in New Brunswick, New Jersey. His mother, Josephine, sang in the Methodist choir and held Saturday night dance parties, where James heard the playing of guitars, mandolins, and Jew’s harps (tiny lyre-shaped instruments held between the lips and played with a finger). With money she earned working as a maid, she bought an upright piano from her employers and soon taught herself to play popular tunes. As a small child, wrote Kappler in Giants of Jazz, Johnson "played with the pedals until he grew tall enough to reach the keyboard, then starting picking out’Little Brown Jug’ and other tunes he had heard his mother play."

When James was eight, the Johnson family moved to a Jersey City neighborhood near a railroad stop lined with gambling houses and nightspots. Around this time, he played his first gig, earning 25 cents from a woman who invited him to play in her parlor. Told to perform with his back to the guests, Johnson entertained for several hours, playing popular tunes, hymns, and nursery

rhymes. Once exposed to the opulently dressed ticklers (the name given to ragtime and stride keyboardists), he decided to become a first-class pianoman.

In 1908 the Johnsons relocated to the San Juan section of New York City on Manhattan’s West Side. Attending P.S. 69, he performed in school assemblies and sang soprano in the choir under the direction of Frank Dam-rosch. Though he attended concerts of the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, his main musical interest remained with the uptown cabaret pianomen.

In 1911 Johnson made his way to a 100th Street cellar club owned by an able ragtime pianist. At 2:00 each morning, the owner reportedly pulled the club’s piano to the middle of the floor and, after displaying his own talents, allowed Johnson to take over at the keyboard. "He’d let me play and hit the piano until 4:00 A.M.," recalled Johnson, as quoted in Ragtime: Its History, Composers, and Music. "I kept my schoolbooks in the coal bin and went on to school after a little sleep." While still a youth in short pants, the fledgling musician gained entrance to Barron Wilkins’s famed Harlem nightclub, where he marveled at the rakish clothes and finger-stylings of New Orleans piano great Jelly Roll Morton. During the summer of 1912, he took his first professional job at Far Rockaway, a resort cabaret.

From Student to Master
Instead of returning to school that fall, Johnson landed a gig at a Jersey City nightclub owned by Freddie Doyle. Jobs at Jim Allen’s cellar club on 61st Street and the Jungles Casino followed. Licensed as a dance school, the Jungles Casino drew Southern stevedores and Gullahs (people of color living along the coast and on the sea islands of South Carolina, Georgia, and northern Florida) who danced so-called "Geechie dances" and unique steps like the "Metropolitan Glide." From these dances, Johnson composed eight Charlestons, one of which would emerge as his famous stage hit.

Johnson’s first formal piano lessons came in 1913, when his friend’s mother arranged for him to study under symphonically trained Bruno Giannini, an Italian voice and music instructor. Under Giannini’s tutelage, Johnson learned harmony, counterpoint, and formal finger positions. To master his instrument, Johnson often practiced in the dark or with a sheet over the keyboard. Like earlier pianomen, he learned to "rag" the classics by imitating the string sections and incorporating melodies of such European concert masters as Franz Lizst, Edvard Grieg, and Sergei Rachmaninoff.

But Johnson soon tired of Giannini’s exercises and resumed his system of self-study, observing New York’s finest stride pianists—keyboardists like the exponent of the "backward 10th" Freddie Bryant and Richard "Abba Labba" McLean. "When you heard James P. at his best," recalled clarinetist Garvin Bushell in Jazz from the Beginning, "you were hearing Abba Labba’s style, except that James P., who had studied, played with a little more finesse and taste." Other musicians of great influence included flamboyant "finger-stretcher" Charles Luckeyeth ("Luckey") Roberts, and Yiddish World War I veteran Willie "The Lion" Smith.

By 1916 Johnson had taken his place within the vanguard of New York’s finest pianomen. A year later, he entered the profitable world of recording piano rolls for Imperial, Perfection, Universal, Metro-Art, and QRS. "The piano rolls of this period," related Scott E. Brown in James P. Johnson, "show Johnson to be a ragtime player of great proficiency. At times, his playing sounds restless as he tries to break from the rhythmic and melodic formalisms of ragtime. His [style was] becoming increasingly sophisticated, enabling him to convey the full intensity and range of expression of the shout dances."

Upon America’s entry into World War I in 1917, Johnson contributed to President Woodrow Wilson’s preparedness campaign by composing the march fantasia Liberty. After the Allied victory, he performed in a band led by Happy Rhone and in the ensembles assembled by the Clef Club, the prestigious New York-based African American musician’s union. In 1918 Johnson and his wife, Lillie Mae Wright, worked with the all-black touring show Dudley’s Smart Set.

The Roaring Twenties
Sparked by the Harlem Renaissance and the popularity of African American music, Johnson’s career took off. He earned great praise within New York’s musical world. As Kappler put it in Giants of Jazz, "The roaring’20s saw the flowering of musical talent in jazz, but few, perhaps only [George] Gershwin and [Duke] Ellington, could match James P. Johnson for the quality, quantity and variety of musical output." In 1921 Johnson recorded his first side, "Harlem Strut, "followed by the classic stride numbers "Keep off the Grass" and "Carolina Shout" —a composition which, since its first appearance on piano roll, emerged as a test piece for aspiring ticklers, including young Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington.

In 1923 Johnson traveled to England as musical director for the production of Plantation Days and scored the music for the stage show Runnin’ Wild. After opening on October 29, 1923, to generally favorable reviews, two hits emerged from Runnin’ Wild— "Old Fashioned Love" and the legendary "Charleston." With this success, Johnson turned to writing extended stage and symphonic works. Inthe winter of 1928, he penned the score to Keep Shufflin’. Later that year, Johnson’s first extended work, Yamekraw— dedicated to Savannah, Georgia’s colorful waterfront section—was performed at Carnegie Hall. (When the producers of Keep Shufflin’ refused to allow Johnson to leave the show to perform his work Yamekraw, he had his young understudy, Fats Waller, take his place at the Carnegie Hall concert.) In 1929 Johnson directed the orchestra for St. Louis Blues— a film by blues singer Bessie Smith, who two years earlier had recorded "Preachin’ the Blues" and "Back Water Blues" backed by Johnson’s solo piano.

New Directions and a New Decade
Aside from recording piano numbers such as the 1930 classics "Jingles" and "You Got to Be Modernistic," Johnson spent the next decade concentrating on composing symphonic pieces and extended works. Though he sought to elevate jazz into a higher written form, economic depression and the wane of the Harlem Renaissance had devastating effects on the support and funding of his work. As Brown observed in the liner notes to Victory Stride, "Johnson applied for fellowships to support his studies, and he wrote to many conductors and musical benefactors for his pieces to be given a performance. His scrap books are filled with rejection letters."

Nevertheless, Johnson spent the 1930s producing a number of symphonic pieces. In 1932 he wrote a four-movement programmatic work called Harlem Symphony, which was performed at the Brooklyn Museum seven years later. He also collaborated with lyricist Andy Razaf to compose the stage show Harlem Hotcha, featuring the piece "Drums—A Symphonic Poem." In 1934 he completed a piano concerto titled Jassamine and American Symphonic Suite—St. Louis Blues, based on W. C. Handy’s 1914 blues hit. The following year he wrote Symphony in Brown.

By 1938 Johnson was collaborating with legendary black poet Langston Hughes to produce the one-act blues opera De Organizer, which received a performance at Carnegie Hall in 1940. And in December of 1938, record producer and promoter John Hammond invited Johnson to appear in the Carnegie Hall concert From Spirituals to Swing, dedicated to the memory of Bessie Smith.

Stride Slowed by A Stroke
Johnson led his own bands at the Elks Rendezvous and Cafe Society until he suffered a mild stroke in 1940. He spent the rest of the year relaxing with his family. Returning to music after his recuperation, he became musical director for Pinkard’s Fantasies. In 1942 and 1943 he recorded for the Blue Note label with a core group, the "Blue Note Jazzmen" —an ensemble led by Johnson, with clarinetist Edmund Hall, trumpeter Sidney DeParis, and big band trombonist Vic Dickerson. Under his leadership, Johnson and the Blue Note Jazzmen recorded the 1944 side "Victory Stride," a 16-bar arrangement featuring Duke Ellington’s saxophonist Ben Webster. The Blue Note sessions also yielded Johnson’s first recorded version of his solo piano number "Carolina Balmoral."

In the mid-1940s, Johnson performed at guitarist Eddie Condon’s New York Town Hall concerts. He later returned to scoring the music for theater productions, including the California production of his revue Sugar Hill. After suffering a serious stroke in 1951, he spent his remaining years bedridden at his home. On November 17, 1955, Johnson died in Queens Hospital.

Looking back on New York City’s early jazz musicians, Duke Ellington noted, as quoted in Hear Me Talkin’ to Ya, that "the king at that time was James P. Johnson." The New Jersey-born pianist is part of a musical legacy whose strains can be heard in artists from Ellington to Thelonious Monk. His solo piano recordings still awe listeners with their profound sense of mastery. In 1987 New York’s Concordia Orchestra restored Johnson’s symphonic repertory—much of which had been lost for decades—and performed the scores at a 1992 concert at Lincoln Center. Johnson’s music will remain forever interwoven in the creative fabric of jazz music.

Selected discography
Giants of Jazz: James P. Johnson, Time-Life, 1981.
James P. Johnson: Snowy Morning Blues, Decca, 1991.
Victory Stride: The Symphonic Music of James P. Johnson, Music Masters, 1994.

Sources
Books
Brown., Scott E, James P. Johnson: A Case of Mistaken Identity, Scarecrow Press and the Institute of Jazz Studies, 1986.
Bushell, Garvin, and Mark Tucker, Jazz from the Beginning, University of Michigan Press, 1990.
Hadlock, Richard, Jazz Masters of the Twenties, Da Capo, 1988.
Ragtime: Its History, Composers, and Music, edited by John Edward Hasse, Schirmer Books, 1985.
Shapiro, Nat, and Nat Hentoff, Hear Me Talkin’ to Ya: The Story of Jazz As Told by the Men Who Made It, Dover Publications, 1955.
Additional information for this profile was taken from liner notes by Scott E. Brown to Victory Stride: The Symphonic Music of James P. Johnson, 1994; notes by Frank Kappler to Giants of Jazz, 1981; and notes by Mike Lipskin to The Fats Waller Piano Solos: Turn on the Heat, 1991.
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AMG AllMusic Guide: Pop Artists:

James P. Johnson

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  • Genres: Jazz

Biography

One of the great jazz pianists of all time, James P. Johnson was the king of stride pianists in the 1920s. He began working in New York clubs as early as 1913 and was quickly recognized as the pacesetter. In 1917, Johnson began making piano rolls. Duke Ellington learned from these (by slowing them down to half-speed), and a few years later, Johnson became Fats Waller's teacher and inspiration. During the '20s (starting in 1921), Johnson began to record, he was the nightly star at Harlem rent parties (accompanied by Waller and Willie "The Lion" Smith) and he wrote some of his most famous compositions during this period. For the 1923 Broadway show Running Wild (one of his dozen scores), Johnson composed "The Charleston" and "Old Fashioned Love," his earlier piano feature "Carolina Shout" became the test piece for other pianists, and some of his other songs included "If I Could Be with You One Hour Tonight" and "A Porter's Love Song to a Chambermaid."

Ironically, Johnson, the most sophisticated pianist of the 1920s, was also an expert accompanist for blues singers and he starred on several memorable Bessie Smith and Ethel Waters recordings. In addition to his solo recordings, Johnson led some hot combos on records and guested with Perry Bradford and Clarence Williams; he also shared the spotlight with Fats Waller on a few occasions. Because he was very interested in writing longer works, Johnson (who had composed "Yamekraw" in 1927) spent much of the '30s working on such pieces as "Harlem Symphony," "Symphony in Brown," and a blues opera. Unfortunately much of this music has been lost through the years. Johnson, who was only semi-active as a pianist throughout much of the '30s, started recording again in 1939, often sat in with Eddie Condon, and was active in the '40s despite some minor strokes. A major stroke in 1955 finished off his career. Most of his recordings have been reissued on CD. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

James P. Johnson

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James P. Johnson
Background information
Birth name James Price Johnson
Born February 1, 1894(1894-02-01)
Origin New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States
Died November 17, 1955(1955-11-17) (aged 61)
Genres Jazz
Occupations Composer
Musician
Instruments Piano

James P. Johnson (James Price Johnson, also known as Jimmy Johnson; February 1, 1894 – November 17, 1955) was an American pianist and composer. A pioneer of the stride style of jazz piano, he along with Jelly Roll Morton, were arguably the two most important pianists who bridged the ragtime and jazz eras, and the two most important catalysts in the evolution of ragtime piano into jazz. As such, he was a model for Count Basie, Duke Ellington, Art Tatum and his more famous pupil, Fats Waller. Johnson composed many hit tunes including the theme song of the Roaring Twenties, "Charleston" and "If I Could be With You One Hour Tonight" and remained the acknowledged king of New York jazz pianists until he was dethroned c. 1933 by the recently arrived Art Tatum, who is widely acknowledged by jazz critics as the most technically proficient jazz pianist of all time. Johnson's artistry, his significance in the subsequent development of jazz piano, and his large contribution to American musical theatre, are often overlooked, and as such, he has been referred to by Reed College musicologist David Schiff, as " The Invisible Pianist ".

Contents

Biography

Johnson was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, United States. The proximity to New York meant that the full cosmopolitan spectrum of the city's musical experience, from bars, to cabarets, to the symphony, were at the young Johnson's disposal. In 1908 his family moved to the San Juan Hill (near where Lincoln Center stands today) section of New York City. With perfect pitch and excellent recall he was soon able to pick out on the piano tunes that he had heard.

Johnson grew up listening to the ragtime of Scott Joplin and always retained links to the ragtime era, playing and recording Joplin's "Maple Leaf", as well as the more modern (according to Johnson) and demanding, "Euphonic Sounds", both several times in the 1940's. Johnson, like Joplin, when the royalties from his compositions made him financially secure, pursued a lifelong ambition of writing orchestral works.

Before 1920 Johnson had gained a reputation as a pianist on the East coast on a par with Eubie Blake and Luckey Roberts and made dozens of superb player piano roll recordings for Aeolian, Perfection (the label of the Standard Music Roll Co., Orange, NJ), Artempo (label of Bennett & White, Inc., Newark, NJ), Rythmodik, and QRS during the period from 1917–1927. During this period he met George Gershwin who was also a young piano-roll artist at Aeolian.

Johnson honed his craft, playing night after night, catering to the egos and idiosyncracies of the many singers he encountered, which necessitated being able to play a song in any key. He developed into a sensitive and facile accompanist, the favorite accompanist of Ethel Waters and Bessie Smith. Ethel Waters wrote in her autobiography that working with musicians such as, and most especially, Johnson " ...made you want to sing until your tonsils fell out".

As his piano style continued to evolve, his 1921 phonograph recordings of his own compositions, Harlem Strut, Keep Off the Grass", and Carolina Shout, were ( along with the Jelly Roll Morton's Genett recordings of 1923) among the first jazz piano solos to be put onto record. These technically challenging compositions would be learned by his contemporaries, and would serve as test pieces in solo competitions, in which the New York pianists would demonstrate their mastery of the keyboard, as well as the swing, harmonies, and improvisational skills which would further distinguish the great masters of the era. The majority of his phonograph recordings of the 1920s and early 1930s were done for Black Swan (founded by Johnson friend W.C. Handy, where William Grant Still served in an A & R [Artist and Repertoire] capacity) and Columbia.

James P. Johnson, Fess Williams, Freddie Moore, Joe Thomas 1948.
Photography by William P. Gottlieb.

In the depression era, Johnson's career slowed down somewhat. As the opportunities to record and perform live music were limited by the harsh economic realities of the time, the cushion of a modest but steady income from his composer's royalties allowed him to devote significant time to the furtherance of his education, as well as the realization of his desire to compose "serious" orchestral music. Although by this time he was an established composer, with a significant body of work, as well as a member or ASCAP, he was nonetheless unable to secure the financial support that he sought from either the Rosenwald Foundation,or a Guggenheim Fellowship, both of which he received endorsement for from the Columbia Records executive, and long time admirer, John Hammond. The Johnson archives include the letterhead of an organization called "Friends of James P. Johnson", ostensibly founded at the time (presumably in the late 1930s) in order to promote his then idling career. Names on the letter-head include Paul Robeson, Fats Waller, Walter White (President of the NAACP), the actress Mercedes Gilbert and Bessye Bearden, the mother of artist Romare Bearden. In the late 1930s Johnson slowly started to re-emerge with the rise of independent jazz labels and began to record, with his own and other groups, at first for the HRS label. Johnson's appearances at the Spirituals to Swing Concerts at Carnegie Hall in 1938 and 1939 were organized by his friend John Hammond, for whom he recorded a substantial series of solo and band sides in 1939.

Johnson suffered a stroke (likely a transient ischemic attack) in 1940. When he returned to the public eye his style was less clean and precise though his technique was still formidable. He began a heavy schedule of performing, composing, and recording, leading several small live and groups, now often with racially integrated bands led by musicians such as Eddie Condon, Yank Lawson, Sidney de Paris, Sidney Bechet, Rod Cless, and Edmond Hall. He recorded for jazz labels including Asch, Black and White, Blue Note, Commodore, Circle, and Decca. He was a regular guest star and featured soloist on Rudi Blesh's This is Jazz broadcasts, as well as at Eddie Condon's Town Hall concerts and studied with Maury Deutsch, who could also count Django Reinhardt and Charlie Parker among his pupils.

Johnson permanently retired from performing after suffering a severe, paralyzing stroke in 1951. He died four years later in Jamaica, New York and is buried in Mt Olivet Cemetery in Maspeth, Queens. Perfunctory obituaries appeared in even the New York Times. The pithiest and most angry remembrance of Johnson was written by his friend, the producer and impresario John Hammond.[1]

Legacy

Composer

Johnson composed many hit tunes in his work for the musical theatre, including "Charleston" (which debuted in his Broadway show Runnin' Wild in 1923,[2] although by some accounts Johnson had written it years earlier, and which became one of the most popular songs of the "Roaring Twenties"), "If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)", "You've Got to Be Modernistic", "Don't Cry, Baby", "Keep off the Grass", "Old Fashioned Love", "A Porter's Love Song to a Chambermaid", "Carolina Shout", and "Snowy Morning Blues". He wrote waltzes, ballet, symphonic pieces and light opera; many of these extended works exist in manuscript form in various stages of completeness in the collection of Johnson's papers housed at the Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University, Newark, New Jersey. Johnson's success as a popular composer qualified him as a member of ASCAP in 1926.

1928 saw the premier of Johnson's rhapsody Yamekraw, named after a black community in Savannah, Georgia. William Grant Still was orchestrator and Fats Waller the pianist as Johnson was contractually obliged to conduct his and Waller's hit Broadway show Keep Shufflin. Harlem Symphony, composed during the 1930s, was performed at Carnegie Hall in 1945 with Johnson at the piano and Joseph Cherniavsky as conductor. He collaborated with Langston Hughes on the one act opera, De Organizer. A fuller list of Johnson's film scores appears below.

Pianist

Along with Fats Waller and Willie 'The Lion' Smith, 'The Big Three', and Luckey Roberts, Johnson embodies the apex of the Harlem Stride piano style, an evolution of East Coast ragtime infused with elements of the blues. His "Carolina Shout" was a standard test piece/ right of passage for every contemporary pianist: Duke Ellington learned it note for note from the 1921 QRS Johnson piano roll. Johnson taught Fats Waller and got him his first piano roll and recording assignments. Eubie Blake played a somewhat less rhythmically developed style of East Coast ragtime than Roberts or Johnson, a transitional figure between classic ragtime and the hard-swinging, more harmonically advanced style of the stride pianists).

Harlem Stride is distinguished from ragtime by several essential characteristics: Ragtime introduced sustained syncopation into piano music, but stride pianists built a more freely swinging rhythm into their performances, with a certain degree of anticipation of the left (bass) hand by the right (melody) hand, a form of tension and release in the patterns played by the right hand, interpolated within the beat generated by the left. Stride more frequently incorporates elements of the blues, as well as harmonies more complex than usually found in the works of classic ragtime composers. Lastly, while ragtime was for the most part a composed music, based on European light classics such as marches, pianists such as Waller and Johnson introduced their own rhythmic, harmonic and melodic figures into their performances and, occasionally, spontaneous improvisation. This last point may seem somewhat counter-intuitive to the fan who associates jazz with a high degree of improvisation. As the contemporary ( second generation ) stride pianist Dick Wellstood has noted, in a very well done set of liner notes for the reclusive Newark, N.J. based stride pianist, Donald Lambert, most of the stride pianists of the 20's, 30's and 40's were not particularly good improvisers. Rather, they would play their own, very well worked out, and often rehearsed variations on popular songs of the day, with very little change from one performance to another. It was in in this respect that Johnson distinguished himself from his colleagues, in that ( in his own words ), he " could think of a trick a minute ". Comparison of many of Johnson's recording's of a given tune over the years does indeed demonstrate a good degree of variation from one performance to another, characterised by respect for the melody, and reliance upon a well worked out set of melodic, rhythmic, and harmonic devices, such as repeated chords, serial thirds ( hence his admiration for Bach ), and interpolated scales, on which the improvisations were based. This same set of variations might then appear in the performance of another tune. In public performance, stride pianists either used these well worked out variations on popular songs of the day, or pieces within the idiom specially composed by its main performers. Examples of these latter so called test pieces include Johnson's Carolina Shout, Keep Off the Grass, and Harlem Strut, Fats Waller's Handful of Keys, and Willie "the Lion' Smith's, Fingerbuster.

Johnson's musical legacy is present in the body of work of the more famous Fats Waller as well as scores of other pianists who were influenced by him, such as Art Tatum, Donald Lambert, Louis Mazetier, Pat Flowers, Joe Turner, Cliff Jackson, Hank Duncan, Claude Hopkins, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Don Ewell, Johnny Guarnieri, Dick Hyman, Dick Wellstood, Ralph Sutton, Neville Dickie, Mike Lipskin, Jim Turner, Bernd Lhotzky, Chris Hopkins and Butch Thompson.

When knowledgeable critics compose their " greatest of all time " lists, the jazz piano roster usally places Johnson in the company of his better known peers: Fats Waller, Art Tatum, Earl Hines and Teddy Wilson.

Honors and recognitions

Two Romare Bearden paintings bear the name of Johnson compositions: Carolina Shout, and Snow(y) Morning.

On September 16, 1995 the U.S. Post Office issues a James P. Johnson 32 cent commemorative postage stamp.[3]

Year Inducted Title
1970 Songwriters Hall of Fame
1973 Down Beat Jazz Hall of Fame
1980 Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame
2007 ASCAP Jazz Wall of Fame[4]

Unmarked since his death in 1955, his grave was re-consecrated with a headstone paid for with funds raised by an event arranged by the James P. Johnson Foundation, Spike Wilner and Dr. Scott Brown on October 4, 2009. James P. Johnson's Last Rent Party took place at Wilner's Greenwich Village venue, Small's Jazz Club.

Film scores

Johnson's compositions as a film score were used in a number of movies, which were compiled from previously written musical compositions. Partial list includes:[5]

Year Film Actor/Actress Songs
1929 The Show of Shows John Barrymore
Douglas Fairbanks Jr.
Myrna Loy
"Your Love is All I Crave"
1933 Dancing Lady Joan Crawford
Clark Gable
Fred Astaire
"Alabama Swing"
1938 The Big Broadcast of 1938 W.C. Fields
Dorothy Lamour
Bob Hope
"Charleston"
1939 The Roaring Twenties James Cagney
Humphrey Bogart
"If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)"
1942 Casablanca Humphrey Bogart
Ingrid Bergman
Dooley Wilson
"If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)"
1943 Stormy Weather Lena Horne
Cab Calloway
Fats Waller
Dooley Wilson
"There's No Two Ways About Love"
1946 It's a Wonderful Life James Stewart
Donna Reed
Lionel Barrymore
"Charleston"
1947 The Man I Love Ida Lupino
Robert Alda
"If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)"
1949 Flamingo Road Joan Crawford "If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)"
1957 The Joker Is Wild Frank Sinatra "If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)"
1991 Rambling Rose Laura Dern
Robert Duvall
"If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight)"
1991 Billy Bathgate Dustin Hoffman
Bruce Willis
Nicole Kidman
"The Mule Walk"
1994 Cobb Tommy Lee Jones
Lolita Davidovich
"Bleeding Hearted Blues"
2001 The Majestic Jim Carrey "Blue Note Boogie"
2003 Alex & Emma Kate Hudson
Luke Wilson
"Charleston" (1923)
2006 Southland Tales Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson "If I Could Be with You (One Hour Tonight)" (1926)
2007 Perfect Stranger Halle Berry
Bruce Willis
"Don't Cry Baby"

Discography

  • 1950: Jazz, Vol. 1: South Folkways Records
  • 1953: Jazz, Vol. 7: New York (1922-1934) Folkways
  • 1953: Jazz, Vol. 9: Piano Folkways
  • 1960: Jazz of the Forties, Vol. 1: Jazz at Town Hall Folkways
  • 1961: A History of Jazz: The New York Scene Folkways
  • 1964: The Piano Roll Folkways
  • 1966: The Asch Recordings, 1939 to 1947 - Vol. 1: Blues, Gospel, and Jazz Folkways
  • 1973: The Original James P. Johnson Folkways
  • 1974: Toe Tappin' Ragtime Folkway
  • 1977: Early Ragtime Piano Folkways
  • 1981: Striding in Dixieland Folkways
  • 1996: The Original James P. Johnson: 1942-1945, Piano Solos Smithsonian Folkways
  • 2001: Every Tone a Testimony Smithsonian Folkways
  • 2008: Classic Piano Blues from Smithsonian Folkways Smithsonian Folkways

Re-issues

Multiple CDs of Johnson's recordings have been reissued. The French Chronogical(sic) Classics series includes six discs devoted to Johnson. The Decca CD, Snowy Morning Blues, contains 20 sides done for the Brunswick and Decca labels, between 1930 and 1944. This CD includes an 8 tune, Fats Waller Memorial set, and 2 solos, "Jingles", and "You've Got to be Modernistic", which arguably demonstrate the best of Johnson's hard swinging stride style. The LP, and CD, Father of the Stride Piano, collects some of Johnson's best recordings for the Columbia family of labels, done between 1921 and 1939. It includes "Carolina Shout", "Worried and Lonesome Blues", and "Hungry Blues" (from De Organizer).

Johnson's complete Blue Note recordings (solos, band sides in groups led by himself as well as Edmond Hall and Sidney DeParis) were made available in a collection issued by Mosaic Records. The largest, and probably the best anthology of Johnson's recordings was compiled in the Giants of Jazz series by Time-Life Music. This three LP collection contains 40 sides recorded from 1921 to 1945, and is supplemented with extensive liner notes, including a biographical essay by Frank Kappler, and erudite criticism of the musical selections by the noted contemporary stride pianist Dick Wellstood, and the musicologist, Willa Rouder . Johnson was also a premier piano roll artist, recording approximately 60 rolls between 1917 and 1927. Many of these have been issued on CD, on the Biograph Label. A book of musical transcriptions of Johnson's piano roll performances of his own compositions has been prepared by Dr. Robert Pinsker, to be published through the auspices of the James P. Johnson Foundation.

References

  1. ^ This appeared in Down Beat under the title "Talents of James P. Johnson Went Unappreciated" and is reproduced in its entirety on the website of the James P. Johnson Foundation.
  2. ^ Internet Broadway Database
  3. ^ James P. Johnson Commemorative postage stamp
  4. ^ The ASCP Jazz Wall of Fame list
  5. ^ Filmography: James P. Johnson

Schiff, David: A Pianist with Harlem on His Mind, New York Times, 2/16/1992

Further reading and listening

  • Schiff, David: A Pianist with Harlem on His Mind, New York Times, 2/16/1992 ( A portrait and review of the repremier of Johnson's Harlem Symphony, among other works, as realized by conductor Marin Alsop, pianist Leslie Stifleman, and The Concordia Orchestra ).
  • Scott E. Brown, A Case Of Mistaken Identity: The Life and Music of James P. Johnson, Scarecrow Press, 1984. (Part of a series of published by the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University. A definitive study, this remains the only book length biography of this hugely important figure. It began as Dr. Brown's senior thesis at Yale ' 82, and was expanded into book form while he was in medical school. An updated edition is in preparation. It is supplemented with an extensive pre-CD era discography by Robert Hilbert.)
  • Good Buddies: Waller and Johnson , Jazz Rhythm Program # 174, www.jazzhotbigstep.com, 2004 (produced by Dave Radlauer, with guest, Mark Borowsky,M.D., James P. Johnson Foundation)
  • Celebrating James P. Johnson, Jazz Rhythm Programs #137 138, 139, www.jazzhotbigstep.com, 2003 (produced by Dave Radlauer, with guest, Mark Borowsky, James P. Johnson Foundation)
  • Todd Mundt Show, Radio Program, NPR, January 2, 2003, (Includes a 25 minute interview with Mark Borowsky of the James P. Johnson Foundation and a discussion about the discovery and performance of James P. Johnson and Langston Hughes' operetta, De-Organizer. Long thought to have been lost, a score of singing parts was discovered by the noted University of Michigan jazz pianist and scholar, Prof James Dapogny. Dapogny's restoration was performed in 2003, followed in 2006 by a Dapogny restored version of "Dreamy Kid".)
  • Fats Waller and James P. Johnson: Student/Teacher, Protege/Master, Colleagues/Best Friends. Lecture, by Dr. Mark Borowsky, Dr. Robert Pinsker, James P. Johnson Foundation. Fats Waller Centennial Conference, Institute of Jazz Studies, Rutgers University, May 8, 2004.
  • From Joplin to Blake to Johnson: A Ragtime Triple Play. Lecture, by Robert Pinsker, Ph.D., Mark Borowsky, M.D., James P. Johnson Foundation. Sutter Creek Ragtime Festival, August 2002

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