J.J. Johnson
Trombone · born 22 January 1924 – died 4 February 2001
▸ Click for Richard Cook Bio
Although he was born James Louis Johnson, he answered to 'JJ', a nickname picked up from his habit of initialling his arrangements, and he subsequently made JJ his legal name. He had begun writing charts while with Benny Carter's band in the early 40s, his first important engagement, although he had previously played with Fats Navarro in a touring group led by Snookum Russell. After leaving Carter in 1945, he spent a period with Count Basie and then settled in New York, working at the heart of the new bebop scene. By this time his trombone playing had matured from a fast, full-toned and declamatory manner into a very fast, light-bodied, supremely targeted delivery: nobody got around the horn with the same agility and on-the-nose accuracy as JJ. He mixed with the best of the boppers, turning up on some of Parker's Dial titles and leading his own dates for Savoy, while also touring with Illinois Jacquet's group (where Johnson was surprised to find the leader very interested in the new music and encouraging of the trombonist's adventures). He joined Dizzy Gillespie's big band in 1949 and was a part of the Miles Davis nonet, but music wasn't paying his bills and he stopped playing for a time to work as a blueprint inspector. On his return, in 1954, he cut some outstanding sessions for Blue Note, as well as playing masterful solos on Davis's Walkin' session for Prestige. But what turned his career around was forming a trombone duo with Kai Winding, the band coming to be called Jay and Kai. It lasted for only a couple of years (besides occasional reunions in the 60s), yet records for Prestige, Savoy and Columbia were all warmly received and the music — though rather blandly conceived around the simpatico tones of the two leaders — struck a chord with audiences. After this, Johnson led his own band and recorded for Columbia, wrote some large-scale works (Perceptions was one such, recorded with Dizzy Gillespie as principal soloist in 1961) and taught. After 1970, when he moved to Los Angeles, he became much more involved in film and TV scoring, and largely left jazz performance behind, though he sometimes played for fun. The price Johnson paid for his peerless virtuosity on the trombone was a soupçon of blandness: in his bebop heyday he often sounds as if he is improvising as some sort of academic exercise, and with the rise of a new expressionism on the trombone in recent years, his methods have to some extent gone out of style. Yet his choice of notes and the warmth of his delivery in his late-50s and early-60s music overcomes any worry that he is coasting through it, and there is much to be rediscovered in the records he made in this period. It was a pleasure to find him returning to more active duty as a leader-performer in the late 80s, and though there was a cloud cast over this time with the illness and subsequent death of his wife Vivian in 1992, his final records, including the lovely The Brass Orchestra (1996), find him in suitably magisterial voice. Sadly, depressed by a worsening illness of his own, he took his own life in 2001.
Biography from Richard Cook's Jazz Encyclopedia (2005).
If you'd like more information, check out The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz (2002) or The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz (2007), both of which are still in print.
◆Outside Links
As leader
Jay Jay Johnson – The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Volume One
Jay Jay Johnson – The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Volume Two
J.J. Johnson / Kai Winding / Bennie Green – Trombone By Three
J.J. Johnson – J is for Jazz
J.J. Johnson – First Place
J.J. Johnson / Kai Winding – The Great Kai & J.J.
Plays on
Dizzy Gillespie – Afro
Dizzy Gillespie – Dizzier and Dizzier
Cannonball Adderley – Julian Cannonball Adderley
Miles Davis – Volume One
Miles Davis – Volume Two
Various Artists – Conception
Sonny Stitt – Sonny Stitt with Bud Powell and J.J. Johnson
Kai and Jay / Bennie Green – With Strings
Sonny Stitt – Plays Arrangements from the Pen of Quincy Jones
Kenny Dorham – Afro-Cuban
Sonny Rollins – Sonny Rollins, Volume Two
Miles Davis – Birth of the Cool
Miles Davis All-Stars – Walkin’
Coleman Hawkins – The Hawk Flies High
Benny Golson – The Modern Touch
Elvin Jones – And Then Again
Mentioned in text
Modern Jazz Quartet – Concorde
Clifford Brown – Memorial Album
Elmo Hope Trio – Meditations
Jon Eardley – Jon Eardley Seven
Randy Weston Trio – With These Hands
Ronnie Ball – All About Ronnie
Various Artists – Jazz Men Detroit
Lars Gullin – Baritone Sax
Jimmy Giuffre – The Jimmy Giuffre 3
Charles Mingus – The Clown
Modern Jazz Quartet – Modern Jazz Quartet
Charles Mingus – East Coasting
Paul Chambers Sextet – Whims of Chambers
Hank Mobley – With Donald Byrd and Lee Morgan
Thad Jones – The Magnificent Thad Jones, Volume Three
Hank Mobley Quintet – Hank Mobley Quintet
Sabú – Palo Congo
Curtis Fuller – The Opener
Paul Chambers – Bass On Top
Bud Powell – Bud! The Amazing Bud Powell, Volume Three
Kai Winding – The Trombone Sound
Miles Davis – ‘Round About Midnight
Kai Winding – Trombone Panorama
Miles Davis – Miles Ahead
Sonny Rollins – Way Out West
Horace Silver – Silver’s Blue
Bob Brookmeyer Quintet – Traditionalism Revisited
Sonny Rollins – Saxophone Colossus
Phil Woods / Donald Byrd – The Young Bloods
Prestige All-Stars – All Day Long
Kenny Burrell – Kenny Burrell
Paul Quinichette – On the Sunny Side
Curtis Fuller – New Trombone
Idrees Sulieman / Webster Young / John Coltrane / Bobby Jaspar – Interplay for 2 Trumpets and 2 Tenors
Matthew Gee – Jazz by Gee
Thelonious Monk – Thelonious Himself
Thelonious Monk – Monk’s Music
Thelonious Monk – Mulligan Meets Monk
Cecil Payne – Cecil Payne
Warne Marsh – Warne Marsh
Cliff Jordan – Cliff Jordan
Sonny Clark – Dial “S” For Sonny
Curtis Fuller – Bone & Bari
Sonny Clark – Sonny’s Crib
John Coltrane – Blue Train
Lee Morgan – The Cooker
Sonny Rollins – A Night at the Village Vanguard
Louis Smith – Here Comes Louis Smith
Bennie Green – Back on the Scene
Lou Donaldson – Lou Takes Off
Miles Davis – Milestones
Jimmy Cleveland – Cleveland Style
King Pleasure Sings / Annie Ross Sings
Tommy Flanagan – Overseas
Pepper Adams – 10 to 4 at the 5 Spot
Max Roach – Deeds, Not Words
The 3 Sounds – The 3 Sounds
Bennie Green – Walkin’ and Talkin
Charles Mingus – Mingus Ah Um
Johnny Griffin – The Little Giant
Young Men from Memphis – Down Home Reunion
Curtis Fuller – Sliding Easy
Ornette Coleman – Change of the Century
Freddie Hubbard – Open Sesame
Miles Davis – Sketches of Spain
Eric Dolphy – Outward Bound
Curtis Fuller – Curtis Fuller, Volume Three
Thelonious Monk – With John Coltrane
Bill Evans Trio – Explorations
Jimmy Heath – The Quota
Kai Winding – The Incredible Kai Winding Trombones
Benny Carter and His Orchestra – Further Definitions
Curtis Fuller – Soul Trombone
Gary McFarland – Point of Departure
Miles Davis – And the Modern Jazz Giants
Jimmy Heath – Picture of Heath
