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Johnny Young

 
Artist: Johnny Young

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John Lee Granderson, Pete Welding, Otis Spann, Robert Nighthawk
  • Born: January 01, 1918, Vicksburg, MS
  • Died: April 18, 1974, Chicago, IL
  • Active: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s
  • Genres: Blues
  • Instrument: Mandolin, Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "Chicago Blues," "Johnny Young and His Friends," "Johnny Young and His Chicago Blues Band"
  • Representative Songs: "Money Taking Woman," "Wild, Wild Woman," "I'm Having a Ball"

Biography

Although the mandolin is not an instrument commonly associated with Chicago blues, it has been used by Chicago-based string bands or on Chicago-made recordings by artists such as Carl Martin, Charles and Joe McCoy, and Yank Rachell. However, the only artist to use it successfully in the later electric blues format was Mississippi-born bluesman Johnny Young. An important figure in blues history, Young loved the rough-and-tumble string-band tradition of the Delta, a style that readily coexisted with blues.

Young's initial 1947 Chicago classic, "Money Taking Women," exhibits the same exuberant down-home sound, fusing blues with the older country breakdown traditions. The string-band ensemble sound suited street performance as well, whether in Memphis or in Chicago's open-air Maxwell Street Market, where Young and his cronies were brought in off the streets to record. Over the years, Young's mandolin activity declined as Chicago's African-American blues audience demanded a more modern and urban sound. Since Young was also a skilled guitarist and a fine vocalist, he easily weathered the transition.

During the late '60s, an emerging White blues-revival audience proved eager for Young's mandolin styling. Unlike Yank Rachell, whose mandolin playing retained an older string-band feel, Young's style was firmly grounded in a more contemporary postwar blues idiom, and he interacted well with other electric blues artists. Through his life, he had worked with the major figures of blues history, including Sonny Boy Williamson, Muddy Waters, Walter Horton, and Otis Spann. He was, he insisted, born to be a musician. When I interviewed him shortly before he died, he told me how he had struggled all his life trying to make it in the music business. An emotional man, he hoped he would live long enough to make enough money to buy a house. He never made it. ~ Barry Lee Pearson, All Music Guide
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Johnny Young (born John Benjamin de Jong, 11 March 1947) is an Australian singer, composer, record producer, disc jockey and television producer and host.

Contents

Early life

Young was born in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. He grew up in the Perth Hills suburb of Kalamunda, Western Australia.

After leaving school, he worked as a trainee disc jockey and started singing at local dances. For 18 months he was lead vocalist with a group called The Nomads, which was later known as The Strangers (no relation to the Melbourne group The Strangers.

Career

Young had his first break when he became host of TVW-7 Perth television pop music show Club Seventeen in early 1965. At the same time, he released two singles, Club 17/Hi Ho and Go Johnny Go, both on the 7-Teen label.[1]

The following year he formed a backing band called Johnny Young and Kompany. Kompany members were John Eddy (guitar), Tony Sommers (guitar), Jim Griffiths (bass) and Warwick Findlay (drums). An Easybeats tour to Perth in early 1966 resulted in them presenting him with the rights to Step Back which was co-written by Stevie Wright and George Young. The single was released in May 1966, with Cara-Lin by the The Strangeloves on the B-side.[2] The single was a number-one hit in Perth, Sydney and Melbourne in July and was the second biggest-selling Australian single of the 1960s, behind Normie Rowe's Que Sera Sera/Shakin' All Over. In October, his EP Let It Be Me went to number-one in Sydney and number-four in Melbourne. Another major hit was a slow cover version of The Beatles' All My Loving for which he was later strongly identified with as it was used as the closing song for his long-running TV series Young Talent Time.[3]

Young and Kompany moved to Melbourne in late 1966 and in January 1967 released covers of the Everly Brothers' When Will I Be Loved? / Kiss Me Now which made national Top-ten charts. Soon after however, he disbanded Kompany to go solo and supported Roy Orbison, The Walker Brothers, The Mixtures and The Yardbirds at the Festival Hall, Melbourne on Australia Day, 1967. Later that year he hosted the short-lived television pop show Too Much and then took over the host role of The Go!! Show, following the resignation of Ian Turpie. He also won a Logie for 'Best Teenage Performer' in 1967.

In 1971 Young developed Young Talent Time, a children's variety show. The show was a launching pad for several notable Australian singers including Jamie Redfern, Debra Byrne, Dannii Minogue and Tina Arena. It ran 18 years, to 1989. While not part of Young Talent Time, Australian Idol runner-up Anthony Callea also trained with the Johnny Young Talent School.

As a songwriter, Young's most notable work is probably the psychedelic classic "The Real Thing", a seminal Australian pop song of the late 1960s recorded by Russell Morris and produced by another Australian music industry notable, Ian 'Molly' Meldrum. He also wrote and produced hits for Ronnie Burns (Australian) (Smiley) and former boxing champion Lionel Rose (I Thank You).

At several points in his long career, Young has worked as a radio disc jockey and he still occasionally performs live. He is currently the breakfast host on Perth AM station 6IX and was briefly host of 'The Pet Show' on ABC television.

Philippines controversy

Young was arrested in the Philippines in 2000 under charges of involvement in running an illegal AIDS clinic after accompanying an old friend (a former director of Young Talent Time), who had been stricken with AIDS to the clinic. All charges were dropped, but Young's public image was damaged by media coverage of baseless rumours regarding his sexuality.

ABC Television produced an "Australian Story" feature of Young in February 2000[4] in which he discussed the events and their effect on his life and career.

References

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Johnny Young" Read more

 

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