Eddie Johnson (musician)

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Edwin "Eddie" Johnson (born December 11, 1920 in Napoleonville , Louisiana ; † April 7, 2010 ) was a tenor saxophonist in the field of jazz , rhythm and blues and blues , who was mainly active in the music scene of Chicago .

Live and act

Eddie Johnson is considered a legend of Chicago's Southside. Under the influence of Lester Young , he began as a jazz musician in the swing era; after graduation from Englewood High School, he attended Wilson Junior College to then study at Kentucky State College, where he played in a student band. He had his first engagements in Chicago's Swingland in 1939/40 with the Johnny Long Orchestra, in which Budd Johnson , Preston Jackson and Kansas Fields also played. He then accompanied the singer Joe Williams in the Johnny Long Sextet and briefly played in the Octet of Coleman Hawkins . In 1942/43 he was a member of the Milt Larkin Orchestra, which performed in the Rhumboogie Café .

In 1944 he played in the Carroll Dickerson Band; In 1946 he became known in the orchestra of Cootie Williams and participated in its recordings for Capitol and Majestic Records . He then went to Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five ("Barnyard Boogie") and worked a. a. as accompanist for Ella Fitzgerald . In the 1950s he also took part in the recordings of Leo Parker , Eddie South and the Duke Ellington Orchestra in Chicago . In October 1951 he released the single "Walk Softly" on Chess Records , followed by "Twin Rock" (1952). Recordings with Johnny Pate were made in 1957 . To support his family, he left the music business in the late 1950s to work as an engineer for the city of Chicago; in the 1970s he was in charge of the city's computer system. After he retired, he returned to regular jazz clubs in the city like Andy’s in the 1980s . In 1981 ( Indian Summer ) and 1999 ( Love You Madly ) two albums were released under his own name for the label Nessa and Delmark Records . He was also involved in the recordings of Philippe LeJeune , Kurt Elling and Jodie Christian in the 1990s .

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c discography ( memento of July 24, 2010 in the Internet Archive )
  2. a b Jazzology
  3. ^ Obituary in the Examiner 2010