The
Johnnie Be Eighty sessions |
From
his time with Chuck Berry through his work with Keith Richards,
Bob Weir and Eric Clapton to his own records and gigs, Johnnie
Johnson was a natural collaborator. On Johnnie Be Eighty, and
Still Bad, his final recording issued just a week after his
death, the veteran pianist teamed up with a relative newcomer,
songwriter/producer and indie record entrepreneur Jeff Alexander.
A
transplanted New Yorker, Alexander had been a fan since seeing
Johnson perform back East during the early Nineties. After moving
to St. Louis in 1997, he approached the pianist at a birthday
celebration for Henry Townsend. "He was very interested
in the fact that I had songs, and I gave him a manila folder
of lyrics," said Alexander. "He gave me his phone
number, and we spoke on the phone a bunch of times."
Those
conversations led to a Johnson cameo on School for Fools, a
2002 collection of Alexander’s songs featuring a diverse
cast of musicians and singers including Larry Thurston, former
vocalist with the Blues Brothers, Matt Murphy and the Soulard
Blues Band. Alexander and Johnson kept in touch after those
sessions, and as their friendship grew, Alexander started writing
- with Johnnie in mind. -
When
they decided to record together last year, Thurston was a natural
choice as singer. Bassist Gus Thornton was another easy decision,
having worked alongside Johnson on many gigs over last 25 years.
Alexander recruited local standout Rich McDonough to play guitar,
and McDonough brought along drummer
Joe Pastor.
Alexander
custom-crafted a half-dozen songs for the sessions, including
“Beach Weather," which evokes the pianist's easy
going attitude, and "Lucky Four," inspired by Johnson's
relationship with his wife. "I've never seen two people
who loved each other the way Johnnie and Frances did,"
said Alexander. During rehearsals, : "Johnnie called up
Frances and made the band play the song over the phone for her,
like a little kid showing off. He really was supposed to sing
that song, but (because of his health) it just didn't happen.
Frances did get to hear him sing it at home."
Tracking
was done in two days last fall at Sonic Temple Studios in Union,
and Johnson, though ailing, was highly focused. "We had
stopped at White Castle on the way there, and Johnnie had some
burgers and a cup of coffee," Alexander remembered. "He
walked right to the piano, sat down, had his coffee and a burger,
and didn't get up but two or three times for the rest of the
day. He didn't say a word, but every time his fingers hit the
piano, he took charge."
While
he waits to see how critics and the marketplace will receive
Johnnie Be Eighty, Alexander treasures his memories of Johnson
and this final project. "Everybody who met Johnnie loved
him, and people who got to be his friends really got something
special."
-
Dean C. Minderman of the
RFT
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