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Pete Johnson

Jazz Piano Masters Vol. 10

Pete Johnson

20 SONGS • 56 MINUTEN • JUL 18 2005

  • SONGS
    SONGS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
SONGS
DETAILS
1
Kaycee Feeling
02:49
2
Lights Out Mood
03:02
3
Dive Bomber
02:57
4
Answer To The Boogie
02:23
5
Mr. Freddy Blues
02:55
6
Zero Hours
03:10
7
Bottomland Boogie
03:06
8
Rock It Boogie
03:04
9
Backroom Blues
02:47
10
1946 Stomp (1280 Stomp)
02:51
11
Pete's Lonesome Blues
02:42
12
Mr. Drums Meets Mr. Piano
02:43
13
Mutiny In The Doghouse
02:27
14
Pete Kay Boogie
03:00
15
Central Avenue Drag
02:46
16
66 Stomp
02:45
17
Minuet Boogie
02:37
18
Yancy Street Boogie
02:40
19
Hollywood Boogie
02:46
20
Wiley's Boogie
02:51
℗© Membran Music Ltd.

Künstler:innen-Biografie

Pete Johnson was one of the three great boogie-woogie pianists (along with Albert Ammons and Meade Lux Lewis) whose sudden prominence in the late '30s helped make the style very popular. Originally a drummer, Johnson switched to piano in 1922. He was part of the Kansas City scene in the 1920s and '30s, often accompanying singer Big Joe Turner. Producer John Hammond discovered him in 1936 and got him to play at the Famous Door in New York. After taking part in Hammond's 1938 Spirituals to Swing Carnegie Hall concert in 1938, Johnson started recording regularly and appeared on an occasional basis with Ammons and Lewis as the Boogie Woogie Trio. He also backed Turner on some classic records. Johnson recorded often in the 1940s and spent much of 1947-1949 based in Los Angeles. He moved to Buffalo in 1950 and, other than an appearance at the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival, he was in obscurity for much of the decade. A stroke later in 1958 left him partly paralyzed. Johnson made one final appearance at John Hammond's January 1967 Spirituals to Swing concert, playing the right hand on a version of "Roll 'Em Pete" two months before his death. ~ Scott Yanow

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