Budd Johnson


Albert J. "Budd" Johnson III was an American jazz saxophonist and clarinetist who worked extensively with, among others, Ben Webster, Benny Goodman, Big Joe Turner, Coleman Hawkins, Dizzy Gillespie, Duke Ellington, Quincy Jones, Count Basie, Billie Holiday and, especially, Earl Hines.

Life and career

Johnson initially played drums and piano before switching to tenor saxophone. In the 1920s, he performed in Texas and parts of the Midwest, working with Jesse Stone among others. Johnson had his recording debut while working with Louis Armstrong's band in 1932 to 1933, but he is more known for his work, over many years, with Earl Hines. It is contended that he and Billy Eckstine, Hines' long-term collaborator, led Hines to hire "modernists" in the birth of bebop, which came largely out of the Hines band. Johnson was also an early figure in the bebop era, doing sessions with Coleman Hawkins in 1944. Johnson was a key figure in the first bebop group on 52nd Street in NYC, which played at the Onyx Club and featured Johnson, Dizzy Gillespie, George Wallington, Oscar Pettiford and Max Roach. Johnson urged Gillespie to write out his melodic ideas for 2 horns to play in unison, a sound which became the signature style of small-group bebop. In the 1950s he led his own group, and did session work for Atlantic Records – he is the featured tenor saxophone soloist on Ruth Brown's hit "Teardrops from My Eyes". In the mid-1960s, he began working and recording again with Hines. His association with Hines is his longest lasting and most significant. In 1975, he began working with the New York Jazz Repertory Orchestra. He was inducted into the Big Band and Jazz Hall of Fame in 1993. His grandson, Albert Johnson, was a member of the hip-hop duo Mobb Deep.
He died of a heart attack in Kansas City at the age of 73.

Discography

As leader/coleader

As sideman

With Cannonball Adderley
With Count Basie
With Ruth Brown
With Benny Carter
With Roy Eldridge
With Duke Ellington and Count Basie
With Gil Evans
With Dizzy Gillespie
With Coleman Hawkins
With Earl Hines
With Claude HopkinsSwing Time! with Vic Dickenson
With Etta Jones
With Quincy Jones
With Jimmy McGriff
With Carmen McRae
With Bud Powell
With Carrie Smith
  • Carrie Smith
With Jimmy Smith
With Sonny Stitt
With Clark Terry
With Ben Webster
With Randy Weston

As arranger

With Jimmy WitherspoonGoin' to Kansas City Blues with Jay McShann