Johnson, James P(rice) (New Brunswick, NJ, 1 Feb 1894 - New York, 17 Nov 1955)
Pianist and composer
He first learned music from his mother, singing songs at the
piano. In 1908 the family settled in
In the 1920s Johnson's career flourished. He recorded a
series of inspired solo performances of his own compositions, beginning in 1921
with The Harlem Strut, Carolina Shout (his best-known work for piano), and Keep
off the Grass, and culminating in 1930 with Jingles and You've Got to be
Modernistic. It was virtuoso pieces of this sort that he played in competitive
cutting contests with his contemporaries, and he soon came to be regarded as
the best of the
During the Depression Johnson turned his attention increasingly to the composition of large-scale works. He wrote his Harlem Symphony in 1932, followed by a piano concerto, Jassamine, in 1934 and Symphony in Brown in 1935; De Organizer, a one-act "blues opera" with a libretto by Langston Hughes, received one performance at Carnegie Hall in 1940. A true assessment of this music is hampered by the loss of many of the scores, but some commentators have questioned the success of Johnson's orchestral compositions.
With the revival of traditional jazz in the late 1930s and 1940s, Johnson began again to appear frequently in clubs and concerts, and to take part in recording sessions. He led a recording band for the Blue Note label, and in 1947 performed in the radio series "This is Jazz." Details of his final years are sketchy. He suffered several minor strokes in the 1940s, and a major one in 1951 which left him incapacitated until his death.
Despite his great versatility, Johnson's main contribution
was as a jazz pianist. He perfected the style known as stride piano, which infused
the midwestern ragtime of Scott Joplin and his
contemporaries with elements of jazz, blues, and popular song, as well as
greatly increasing the demands on the pianist. Johnson's stride pieces share
with ragtime a more or less composed, multistrain format
and an oom-pah bass figure. However, he often makes
use of broken 10ths and other deviations in the left hand,
while his right-hand patterns depart from the stereotyped syncopations and
broken chord melodies of ragtime (both of these features are evident in
Carolina Shout). Furthermore, he never repeats strains without varying them.
Perhaps most importantly, the rhythmic feel of his style is more relaxed and
closer to the swing of jazz than to the even eighth-notes of ragtime. At the
same time he generates more rhythmic intensity by using shifts of register,
riffs, and blues-like clusters in the treble to imitate the call-and-response
patterns of black church music. It is this rhythmicization
of his musical ideas that, by allowing for variation and improvisation, lies at
the heart of the new freedom of his style. Thus, like his
Willa Rouder
The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, © Macmillan Reference Ltd 1988