Riverwalk Jazz: James P. Johnson: The Supreme Tickler

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falty411
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Riverwalk Jazz: James P. Johnson: The Supreme Tickler

#1 Post by falty411 » Tue Feb 24, 2009 11:35 am

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I think you all will enjoy this show, it is worth the hassle to deal with Real Player.
Pianist James P. Johnson is a little-known genius of American music. His style of piano playing became known as ‘stride’ and was a bridge between ragtime and jazz. He’s been called the 'steadiest and most refined of the Harlem stride' players. And popular songs he composed 90 years ago such as "The Charleston," "Old Fashioned Love" and "If I Could Be With You" remain jazz standards.

Johnson's ambitions weren’t fulfilled until he composed 'serious' music for the concert halls of New York. A new arrangement of a rarely heard art-music piece by James P. Johnson, "Jazz a Mine Concerto," is featured on this Riverwalk Jazz tribute as piano virtuoso Shelly Berg joins The Jim Cullum Jazz Band. Noted actor/singer Vernel Bagneris performs Johnson's love songs, and brings James P. to life in stories based on his first-person account of his life.

By 1913, when James P. was a teenager, Harlem was the scene of all-night parties that got underway at midnight. Party-goers were said to squeeze into a five-room flat until the walls bulged. Card games and dice kept the action in the back rooms hot. But the center of attention was the piano in the front parlor where a 'tickler' sat on a stool—hands poised above the keyboard—like a king on his throne.

New York piano 'ticklers' were famous for their sharp looks and stylish attitudes as well as their piano playing. Abba Labba was a ladies’ man, 'the working girls’ Jelly Roll as James P. put it. And it was said that when Willie ‘The Lion’ walked into a place, 'his every move was a picture.'

Johnson recalled,

"Each tickler kept these attitudes even when he was socializing at parties, or just visiting. It was designed to show a personality that women would admire. With the music he played, the tickler’s manner would put the question in the lady’s mind: 'Can he do it—like he can play it?'"

In addition to his output of pop songs, recording sessions and Broadway show scores, James P. Johnson was a prolific composer of symphonic works—an amazing feat for a largely self-taught jazz pianist, who'd spent the first half of his life playing in basement cabarets in Hell’s Kitchen. Johnson’s 'serious' works include "Yamekraw, A Negro Rhapsody" and the blues opera De-Organizer with lyrics by Langston Hughes.

You get the feeling that there were no wasted moments in James P. Johnson’s life. He was always watching—always listening—and always learning something new.
-mikey faltesek

"Dancing is the union of the body with the rhythm and the sound of the music." Al Minns in 1984

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AlekseyKosygin
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#2 Post by AlekseyKosygin » Wed Feb 25, 2009 7:46 am

Sick. Jimmy was born 15 minutes from my house...

Now, when will I hear a show about Donald Lambert?

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falty411
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#3 Post by falty411 » Wed Feb 25, 2009 2:55 pm

AlekseyKosygin wrote:Sick. Jimmy was born 15 minutes from my house...

Now, when will I hear a show about Donald Lambert?
well, if anyone would make one, it would probably be Riverwalk Jazz.

im looking forward to their episode on 3/12

Week of 3/12/09
Empress of the Blues: The Life & Music of Bessie Smith
-mikey faltesek

"Dancing is the union of the body with the rhythm and the sound of the music." Al Minns in 1984

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#4 Post by Eyeball » Fri Feb 27, 2009 5:49 am

Announcer says that OLD FASHIONED LOVE is a "James P. Johnson original from 1944", but it's really from the 1920s.

There's a JPJ recording from 1944, but it is a piano solo with a rhythm section.

http://www.redhotjazz.com/JPJohnson.html

A big time show like that shouldn't be making an error like that.

Good music, though, but I won't absorb their questionable history.

Thx for the link.

There are some good JPJ LPs - likely CDs by now - of his original rolls as cut by him in the 1920s. On the Biograph label at one time.
Will big bands ever come back?

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