Johnson, J.J.
J.J. Johnson
Trombonist, composer, bandleader
Considered by many as the finest jazz trombonist of all time, J.J. Johnson was a visionary force on his instrument. His developments for the bebop and improvised style on trombone placed him on a par with Charlie Parker on alto saxophone and Jimi Hendrix on the electric guitar. “J.J. elevated the trombone to a higher status,” said trombonist Curtis Fuller, according to Down Beat magazine writer John Murph. “As a jazz soloist, you had your Trummy Youngs and your Dicky Wells, but in the vernacular of bebop, he was the trombonist for that language. J.J. was a genius; he was no fly-by-night sensation. He was the man for all seasons, and I was drawn to that.” After battling cancer and a muscular-skeletal disorder, Johnson took his own life on February 4, 2001. He left behind a legacy of groundbreaking work, with his own groups and recordings with Kai Winding, as well as on the recordings of Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Illinois Jacquet, Sonny Rollins, Ellla Fitzgerald, and others.
Born James Louis Johnson on January 22, 1924, in Indianapolis, Indiana, the future trombonist began his musical studies on the piano, taking lessons at a local church. During his early teens, concurrent with his discovery of jazz, Johnson switched his focus to the saxophone. In high school, however, Johnson was only able to obtain a baritone saxophone, and because he could not make the instrument resemble the caressing tones of his childhood idol, saxophonist Lester Young, the young musician switched to the trombone.
Early Professional Start
Johnson graduated in 1941, but instead of continuing on to college, he opted to turn professional right out of high school. Leaving Indianapolis, the trombonist found work immediately in Midwestern bands led by Clarence Love and Snookum Russell, touring with them during 1941 and 1942. While traveling and performing with Russell’s group, he met trumpeter Fats Navarro, whose improvisational style made a lasting impression on Johnson.
In fact, Johnson claimed that trumpeters, as well as saxophonists such as Young, Gillespie, Parker, and Roy Eldridge, influenced him to a greater extent than did trombonists. Consequently, when he applied the bebop technique to the trombone, Johnson played in clear tones and short notes, and some listeners wrongly assumed that he was playing the valve trombone, which lends itself more easily to articulation, instead of the slide trombone. “Making that adaptation to the trombone was very demanding,” explained Los Angeles Times jazz writer Don Heckman. “It took a decade before other trombonists on the whole began to master what Johnson was doing.”
However, Johnson acknowledged to writer Ira Gitler in The Masters of Bebop: A Listener’s Guide that his
For the Record…
Born James Louis Johnson on January 22, 1924, in Indianapolis, IN; died on February 4, 2001, in Indianapolis, IN; first wife, Vivian, died in 1991; second wife, Carolyn; children: two sons (from first marriage), Kevin and William; stepdaughter, Mikita Sanders.
Toured with bands led by Clarence Love and Snookum Russell, 1941-42; played with Benny Carter’s big band, 1942-45; member of Count Basie’s Orchestra, 1945-46; formed two-trombone quintet with Kai Winding, 1954; composed “Poem for Brass,” “Perceptions,” and “Lament,” mid 1950s through the early 1960s; wrote scores for film and television, 1970s and 1980s; saw rebirth of career in jazz with the release of albums such as Brass Orchestra, 1996, and Heroes, 1998.
reinventing of the traditional trombone sound was not entirely original. Another trombone player, Fred Beckett, who played with Harlan Leonard and Lionel Hampton during the 1930s and 1940s, inspired Johnson to take the trombone—previously thought of as a melodic, light-sounding instrument during the era of swing bands—and apply it to the bebop style with rapid phrasing, complex harmonies, and offbeat rhythms. Beckett, said Johnson, as quoted by Ben Ratliff in the New York Times, “was the first trombonist I ever heard play in a manner other than the usual sliding, slurring, lip-trilling or gutbucket style.”
“Definitive Trendsetter”
Although still a teenager, Johnson, with his unique style, was already gaining a reputation as one of the finest trombonists around among bandleaders, composers, and critics. As the late jazz critic Leonard Feather once wrote, as quoted by Los Angeles Times contributor Jon Thurber, “J.J. Johnson was to the trombone what [Dizzy] Gillespie was to the trumpet— the definitive trendsetter who established beyond a doubt that bebop was not beyond the technical possibilities of the instrument.”
From 1942 until 1945, Johnson played with Benny Carter’s big band, making his recording debut with the group playing a solo on Carter’s “Love for Sale” in 1943. The following year, Johnson performed at the first Jazz at the Philharmonic concert at the Los Angeles Philharmonic Hall. Led by the now-legendary impresario Norman Grantz, the event—billed as the city’s premiere full-scale jazz concert—proved a huge success, fostering nationwide tours and a popular series of albums. During 1945 and 1946, Johnson performed with Count Basie’s Orchestra. Here, too, Johnson was awarded plenty of solo space. Also in 1946, Johnson recorded his first session as a bandleader for the Savoy label.
Thereafter, Johnson balanced his solo career with work as a much-sought-after sideman. Throughout the remainder of the decade, he performed with leading bebop musicians, including Charlie Parker, with whom he recorded in 1947 to become the only person to guest with the original Charlie Parker Quintet. Other affiliations included playing and/or recording with Dizzy Gillespie’s big band, Illinois Jacquet, from 1947 until 1949, and Miles Davis, with whom he played on the trumpeter’s landmark Birth of the Cool recording of 1949. On his own records as a bandleader, Johnson likewise enlisted top players, among them Bud Powell and a young Sonny Rollins.
In the early 1950s, Johnson played with Oscar Petti-ford and again with Davis in 1952. But despite staying active, he found that music was not enough to support his family. Thus, from 1952 until 1954, Johnson, who had always held a curiosity about electronic equipment, worked as a blueprint inspector for the Sperry Gyroscope Company. Fortunately, Johnson’s fortunes brightened when, in August of 1954, he formed a two-trombone quintet with Kai Winding. Known as Jay and Kai, the format proved a commercial success, and in turn allowed Johnson to quit his day job. The group enjoyed a great amount of popularity through 1956. Afterward, Johnson and Winding disbanded in order to pursue other interests, though they would reunite occasionally over the years.
Made Priority of Own Work
Johnson next formed another quintet, which often featured Bobby Jasper. His primary focus, however, began to lean increasingly toward creating his own music. Beginning in the mid 1950s, Johnson undertook the writing of ambitious compositions, including his first large-scale work, “Poem for Brass.” The four-part piece was featured on the 1956 Columbia Records album Music for Brass, conducted by noted composer, educator, and jazz historian Gunther Schuller. In 1959, the Monterey Jazz Festival commissioned Johnson to compose two pieces: “El Camino Real” and “Sketch for Trombone and Orchestra.” Subsequently, the emerging composer penned his most challenging work for Gillespie, who was so impressed upon hearing “Poem for Brass” that he commissioned Johnson to compose an entire album’s worth of material. The result, “Perceptions,” recorded in 1961, was a 35-minute long suite that featured six trumpets, four French horns, and two harps.
During the 1950s, Johnson also toured and recorded frequently with his quintet. Then, in the fall of 1960, he decided to break up the band. His reason for ending the group, he remarked years later, was that “it suddenly occurred to me that I needed a change,” as quoted by the Washington Posts Adam Bernstein, “and I even began to wonder, was it possible that a musician or artist could be much too dedicated—so much so that he lived in a very narrow world.” Although he continued to perform, Johnson’s appearances grew more selective. During a period in 1961 and 1962, Johnson returned to work with Davis and continued to perform on occasion with saxophonists Rollins, Jimmy Heath, and Sonny Stitt. From time to time, he formed other small groups of his own, but devoted himself almost entirely to composing.
In 1967, through the support of film composer Elmer Bernstein, Johnson secured a position as staff composer and conductor for M.B.A. Music in New York, a company providing music for television commercials. In 1970, he moved to Los Angeles to embark on a career in film and television. Throughout the decade, he scored music for television series such as Starsky and Hutch, Mayberry, R.F.D., and That Girl. In the 1970s and 1980s, he also wrote and orchestrated music for films like Barefoot in the Park, Scarface, Trouble Man, Sea of Love, and the “blacksploitation” movies Cleopatra Jones and Shaft.
Stayed Focused on Music
Despite his success in Hollywood, Johnson remained focused on jazz and his trombone. He practiced every day to keep his skills sharp—as evident on Quintergy and Standards, albums recorded live at the Village Vanguard in 1988. Even while not recording much at all, he kept winning Down Beat polls year after year. In the 1990s, under contract with the Verve label, Johnson recorded some of his most ambitious work, including 1994’s Tangence, a collaboration with film composer Robert Farnon; 1996’s Brass Orchestra, featuring work in the bebop style and selections from “Perceptions” ; and 1998’s Heroes, his final album, a straight-ahead jazz set. Heroes, wrote a Down Beat reviewer, as quoted by Bernstein, “leaves a general impression of solid craftsmanship, if not breathtaking artistic significance. The main news is that J.J. Johnson can always assemble a sturdy ensemble, and he’s still a hero to trombonists everywhere.”
In 1987, Johnson returned to his hometown of Indianapolis with his first wife, Vivian. Following her death in 1991, he recorded an album in her name in 1992. In 1997, Johnson decided to retire from performing in public because of ill health. He had survived a battle with prostate cancer and spent the years prior to his death in 2001 in his home studio learning new technology available for composing and recording.
Johnson’s profound influence was made apparent by the wealth of family, friends, and members of the jazz community who attended his funeral. Nine trombonists filled the alter, among them Slide Hampton, Steve Turre, and Robin Eubanks, to perform Johnson’s standard piece “Lament.” Also making an appearance to pay tribute to Johnson was the legendary Max Roach. “He was a genius, always a great instrumentalist,” Roach said at the funeral, as quoted by Down Beats Matthew Socey. “Even at a young age, he was a rare person to have…. [H]e left us so much.”
Selected discography
Mad Bebop, Savoy, 1946.
Modern Jazz Trombone Series, Vol. 1, Prestige, 1949.
Trombone By Three, Prestige, 1949.
Modern Jazz Trombone Series, Vol. 2, Prestige, 1949.
The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Vol. 1, Blue Note, 1953.
Jay Jay Johnson All Star, Blue Note, 1953.
The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Vol. 2, Blue Note, 1954.
Nuf Said, Bethlehem, 1955.
Kai + J.J., Columbia, 1956.
Jay and Kai Octet, Columbia, 1956.
Blue Trombone, Columbia, 1957.
At the Opera House, Verve, 1957.
The Great Kai & J.J., Impulse!, 1960.
Proof Positive, GRP/lmpulse!, 1964.
Stonebone, A&M, 1969.
Concepts in Blue, Pablo, 1980.
We’ll Be Together Again, Pablo, 1983.
Things Are Getting Better All the Time, Pablo, 1983.
Quintergy, Antilles, 1988.
Standards, Antilles, 1988.
Vivian, Concord Jazz, 1992.
Tangence, Gitanes, 1994.
Brass Orchestra, Verve, 1996.
Heroes, Verve, 1998.
Sources
Books
Gitler, Ira, The Masters of Bebop: A Listener’s Guide, Perseus Books Group, 2001.
Periodicals
Billboard, February 17, 2001.
Down Beat, June 2001.
Los Angeles Times, February 6, 2001.
New York Times, February 6, 2001.
Washington Post, February 7, 2001; March 31, 2001.
Online
All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (May 2, 2001).
J.J. Johnson Homepage, http://www.jjjohnson.org (June 22, 2001).
NPR Jazz Online, http://www.nprjazz.org (March 7, 2001).
—Laura Hightower
Johnson, J.J. 1924–2001
J.J. Johnson 1924–2001
Musician
Established Reputation as a Composer
Each jazz instrument has its hero: Louis Armstrong revolutionized the trumpet in the 1920s while Charlie Parker transformed the saxophone in the 1940s. J.J. Johnson combined Armstrong’s swinging rhythms with Parker’s frenzied be–bop in the 1950s to modernize the most unlikely of jazz instruments, the slide trombone. Robin Eubanks told Tony Sarabia of National Public Radio, “He’s the one that took the trombone out of its second–class citizenship that it had in the jazz ranks.... and made it possible to negotiate and navigate through the harmonic challenges and melodic challenges of bebop.” Johnson’s career would span six decades, beginning in 1942 with Benny Carter and ending with his retirement in 1997. His technical brilliance on the trombone was matched by his ability to write original pieces like Poem for Brass. “He has also made his mark as an arranger and composer, one who has embodied influences from Baise to Bartók, funky blues to Britten, hard bop to Hindemith, swing to Stravinsky, disco to Schoenberg,” noted Joshua Berrett and Louis Bourgois in The Musical World of J.J. Johnson.
Learned the Slide Trombone
James Louis Johnson was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, on January 22, 1924. His mother and father, Nina Gieger and James Horace Johnson, were temperamental opposites: his father was a strict disciplinarian who believed in physical punishment, while his mother was more attentive and kind. Johnson’s parents also attended separate churches and required their children to attend both Baptist Sunday school with their father and Methodist services with their mother. Although Nina Johnson knew little about music, she hired a p>piano teacher for the children, and J.J. Johnson began lessons when he was 11 years old. At school, he played the baritone saxophone for a short time, but switched to the trombone when he was 14, and formed a band with some of his friends. “We’d get together and just kind of jam,” he told National Public Radio. “And they needed a trombone player, and so I tried the trombone out, got to fill the gap.” He listened to other trombonists, including Fred Beckett and Dickie Wells. Johnson also played trombone in the Crispus Attucks High School band and with the YMCA marching band.
In September of 1941 Johnson attended his first formal engagement at the Sunset Terrace Club with the Clarence Love Orchestra. In March of the following year, he joined the Snookum Russell Orchestra for
At a Glance…
Born James Louis Johnson on January 22, 1924, in Indianapolis, IN; died on February 4, 2001; son of Nina Gieger and James Horace Johnson; married Vivian Elora Freeman, 1947 (divorced, 1991); married Carolyn Reid, September 11, 1992.
Career: Toured with Snookum Russell, 1941–42; joined Benny Carter, 1942–45; performed in Jazz at the Philharmonic (JATP), 1944; joined Count Basie, 1945–46, and Illinois Jacquet, 1947–49; traveled to Korea with Metronome All–Stars, 1951; withdrew from jazz to work as blueprint inspector, 1952–54; joined trombonist Kai Winding for a series of nine albums in mid–1950s; composed Perceptions, 1961; toured with Miles Davis, 1961–62; attended World Jazz Festival, July 1964; scored film and television music in Hollywood, 1970–87; returned to Indianapolis, IN, 1987; recorded a series of albums for Verve including Let’s Hang Out (1992), Tangence (1994), and Brass Orchestra (1996); retired from active performing, 1997.
Awards: Down Beat Hall of Fame, 1995; fellowship, National Endowment for the Arts, 1996.
eight months. The band broke up in October and Johnson returned home, but when Benny Carter visited Indianapolis a few days later, he was short a trombone player and Johnson was recommended. Johnson remained with the Benny Carter Orchestra for the next two–and–a–half years. In 1944 Johnson performed in the Jazz at the Philharmonic (JATP) concert in Los Angeles, an event organized by fundraiser Norman Granz, and featuring a number of top jazz players. Johnson played with Count Basie in 1945–46, with Illinois Jacquet in 1947–49, and performed with both Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker in the late 1940s. Between 1949–50 he recorded with Miles Davis on the historic Birth of the Cool sessions. “Johnson’s participation in the ’Birth of Cool’ sessions was as significant in widening his socio–professional network as it was in expanding his stylistic horizons,” wrote Berrett and Bourgois.
In the fall of 1951 Johnson traveled to Japan and Korea on a United Service Organizations (USO) tour with an all–star sextet. Tensions within the group, however, led to the dismissal of leader Oscar Pettiford and an early return of the Metronome All–Stars. Back in the United States, Johnson found it difficult to secure steady work and he, like many other jazz musicians at the time, began using drugs. “There are many, many people who don’t know that at one time J.J. Johnson was involved in drugs,” he told Berrett and Bourgois. “Be that as it may, it did happen and I’m not trying to hide it.” In 1952 he left the jazz clubs behind for a job as a blueprint inspector for Sperry Gyroscope. While he never completely withdrew from the world of jazz, he would remain at his defense industry job for two years.
Established Reputation as a Composer
In 1954 Johnson joined forces with trombonist Kai Winding, and together they formed a small ensemble. “The J.J. Johnson–Kai Winding quintet became one of the more unlikely successes of the mid–’50s,” wrote Scott Yanow in All Music Guide, “recording nine albums during their two years of steady collaborations.” In the mid–1950s, Johnson also established himself as a composer, combining elements of jazz and classical for pieces like Poem for Brass. In 1959 Johnson reorganized his band to include the young Freddie Hubbard, and in 1960 the band recorded J.J. Inc., an album featuring seven of the trombonist’s compositions. In September he disbanded the group to concentrate on writing.
For the next six months Johnson focused on an ambitious composition for orchestra titled Perceptions, which had been commissioned by Dizzy Gillespie. “Running to about thirty–five minutes, Perceptions remains Johnson’s most ambitious and extended composition,” wrote Berett and Bourgois. The work was recorded under Gunther Schuller’s direction on May 22, 1961, and had its premiere performance on September 24, 1961, at the Monterey Jazz Festival. According to Berrett and Bourgo, “Perceptions, with its allusive, pictorial qualities, exemplifies a crossover work with resonances of classical music, jazz, and movie score writing.” In 1961–62 Johnson joined Miles Davis on the road and in July of 1964 he traveled with Sonny Stitt and Clark Terry to Tokyo to take part in the World Jazz Festival.
Johnson’s skills as a composer also led to a productive career writing scores for film and television. In 1970 he moved to Hollywood where he remained until 1987, completing music for Barefoot in the Park, Mayberry R.F.D., and Shaft. Even though he was no longer active on the jazz scene, he was so popular that he continued to win Down Beat polls during the 1970s. He returned to Indianapolis in 1987 and released two live sets, Quintergy and Standards, both recorded at the Village Vanguard in New York. In the 1990s Johnson collaborated with film composer Robert Far–non on the ambitious Tangence.
Johnson was elected to the Down Beat Hall of Fame in 1995 and retired from performing in 1997. “I’m just weary of just being a slave to that trombone,” he told Ed Enright of Down Beat. “It makes great demands on me to meet the expectations of the guy who paid $18 to hear me perform. When I get up there on the stage, I need to give him his $18 worth.” Johnson nevertheless continued to compose and arrange in his studio at home. In the spring of 1999, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer and on February 4, 2001, he took his own life. “His playing was demanding,” Curtis Fowlkes told National Public Radio, adding, “It just demanded a dedication that trombonists after him had to understand. You know, they understood it from listening to J.J. and realizing, ’Wow, this is going to take ... some incredible work.’”
Selected discography
Jazz Quintet, Savoy, 1946.
Modern Jazz Trombone Series, Vol. 1, Prestige, 1949.
The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Blue Note, 1953.
Jay and Kai, Prestige, 1954.
Blue Trombone, Columbia, 1957.
The Great Kai and J.J., Impulse!, 1960.
Proof Positive, Impulse!, 1964.
Stonebone, A & M, 1969.
Things Are Getting Better All the Time, Pablo, 1983.
Standards: Live at the Village, Antilles, 1988.
Tangence, Verve, 1994.
Heroes, Verve, 1999.
The Eminent J.J. Johnson, Vol. 2, Blue Note, 2001. Chain Reaction: Yokohama Concert, Vol. 2, Pablo, 2002.
Sources
Books
Berrett, Joshua, and Louis G. Bourgois III, The Musical World of J.J. Johnson, Scarecrow Press, 2002, pp. xxi, 65, 78, 141, and 150.
Periodicals
Down Beat, December 1995, p. 28; June 1997, p. 30; July 1999, p. 23; April 2001, p. 21.
New York Times, February 6, 2001, p. C 18.
On–line
All Music Guide, http://www.allmusic.com (September 1, 2002).
Biography Resource Center, Gale, 2002, http://www.galenet.com/servlet/BioRC.
Other
Additional information for this profile was obtained from an interview with National Public Radio, on February 6, 2001.
—Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.