Artist

Budd Johnson

Genre: Jazz ,Swing ,Mainstream Jazz ,Bop ,Early R&B
Origin: U.S.A
Active: 1929 - 1979
Listen on Coda
For several decades Budd Johnson served jazz as both an instrumentalist and composer, lending his skills behind the scenes to elevate countless sessions spanning the 1930s to the 1980s. His career opened in Kansas City during the late 1920s with groups directed by Terrence Holder, Jesse Stone, and George E. Lee. The first recordings he made occurred during his time in Louis Armstrong’s big band of 1932–1933. Attention came his way for tenor saxophone solos and arrangements across three separate periods with the Earl Hines Orchestra between 1932 and 1942. Although he ranked among the earliest tenor players shaped by Lester Young, Johnson had forged a personal sound by the 1940s. Between his engagements with Hines he spent brief intervals with Gus Arnheim in 1937 and with the orchestras of Fletcher and Horace Henderson in 1938. Arrangements flowed from him to the ensembles of Woody Herman, Buddy Rich, Boyd Raeburn, and Billy Eckstine, and he helped persuade Hines to bring in younger modernists during 1942–1943. In 1944 he joined Coleman Hawkins for the initial bebop recording session. Further work followed with Dizzy Gillespie and Sy Oliver in 1947. During the 1950s he led his own combos and toured with Snub Mosley in 1952 and Benny Goodman in 1957. Big-band affiliations continued with Quincy Jones in 1960 and Count Basie from 1961 to 1962. From 1964 he resumed intermittent association with Earl Hines. Between 1969 and 1975 he organized the JPJ Quartet for occasional appearances, acquitted himself strongly at the 1971 Newport in New York jam sessions, and later taught as a jazz educator. Eight months before his death he recorded a distinguished album with Phil Woods. His own dates under leadership remained little noticed from 1947 through 1956, yet notable releases appeared on Felsted in 1958 along with Riverside, Swingville, Argo, Black & Blue, Master Jazz, Dragon, and Uptown.