Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Buddy Johnson was born Woodrow Wilson Johnson on January 10, 1915 in Darlington, South Carolina. He 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, but was 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.
In 1941 he assembled a nine-piece orchestra and soon began a series of R&B and pop chart hits that included “They All Say I’m The Biggest Fool” with Arthur Prysock on vocals and his sister Ella’s recording of “Since I Fell for You” in 1945, that would later become a jazz standard. In 1946 Buddy composed a Blues Concerto, which he performed at Carnegie Hall two years later. 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 for Mercury Records. By the end of the 50s Buddy switched to Roulette Records the next year, and bowed out with a solitary session for Hy Weiss’s Old Town label in 1964.
Buddy Johnson, jazz and blues pianist and bandleader passed away on February 9, 1977 in New York at the age of 62 from a brain tumor and sickle cell anemia.
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