The “Golden Hits Of The 50s” 

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THE JOHNNY OTIS SHOW

“WILLIE AND THE HAND JIVE”

(JOHNNY OTIS)

Capital 396

No. 9    August 4, 1958

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“The Godfather of “Rhythm & Blues”  he has been called.   The label while appropriate is much too

confining to do justice to this wonderful wonder.   Johnny’s been there, everywhere and seemingly long

before anyone considered it.   Johnny Otis (b. John Veliotes, December  28 1921, Vallejo . CA) has

performed as a arrange, publisher, musician (vocalist/drums/vibraphone/piano), writer (“Dance With Me

Henry, “Double Crossing Blues,” “Every Beet of My Heart,” the Beatles’ “Hey, Hey, Hey, Hey” renamed

“Kansas  City”,  the FIESTA’s “So  Fine,” (with claims to co-authorship of “Hound Dog”), disk jockey (L.A.’s

KFOX, KPPC, KPFK..), producer (JOHNNY ACE, Richard Berry, Charlie Brown,  Wee Crayton, Sugarcane

Harris, Louis Jordan, Joe Liggins, Little Richard, Amos Milburne,  Roy Milton, Gatemouth Moore, Joe

Turner, Eddie “Cleanheed” Vinson…), TV variety show host (one of the first TV rock’n’roll programs:  “The

Johnny Otis Show”,  1956-61, initially for L.A.’s KTTV), talent scout (“discovered Hank Ballard & the

Midnighters, Charlie Brown, Etta James, Little Willie John, Little Esther Phillips, Devonie “Lady Dee”

Williams, Jackie Wilson, the Robins, Willie Mae Thorton, Mel Walker…),  record company owner  (Ultra,

Dig, Eldo, Blues Spectrum…), nightclub co-owner (the famed Barrelhouse, in Watts), frontman and

founder of the genres  first “Rock’n’Roll Caravan of Stars.

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He’s been a painter, sculptor, actor (Clint Eastwood’s 1971 film,  Play Mist For Me)  a politician (ran for the

California Assembly, acted as Deputy Chief of Staff for US Congressman Mervyn Dymally, Newspaper

Columnist (for the Los Angeles Sentinel). author (Listen to the Lambs, published by W.W. Norton

Company, 1965 and for more than a decade now, a preacher (pastor of the Landmark Community

Church).

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Otis had his first “hit” in ’46 with “Harlern Nocturne,” a huge seller, that mysteriously never charted

nationally, pop or R&B.   The R&B hits would happen thereafter, but 1950 was definitely Johnny Otis’ year,

ten recordings made Billboard’s R&B listings:  “Double Crossing Blues (#1), “Mistrusting Blues” (#1),

“Misery” (#9), “Cry Baby”  (#6), “Cupids Boogie” (#1), “Deceivn Blues”  (#4), “Dreamin Blues” (#8),

“Wedding Boogie” (#6), “Faraway Blues” (#6) and “Rockin Blues” (#2).

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“I only had one hit, as you say, one pop hit,” explained Johnny in an exclusive interview, “because in

those days when I was operating there was a well-defined black show business and the general pop-white

orientated market.   My stuff was blues and jazz orientated and my audience was black.   The record

companies that I was with had dealing in the Black areas and that was all the promotion I got.   It wasn’t

until the mid ‘50s that the music began crossing over.   So. back in the early days I must  have had 30 Hits,

that I wrote or that one of my singers sang, but they were all called ‘rhythm & blues’ hits.”

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Johnny peaked in popularity before the pop/rock’n’roll audience took note.   He was there just before the

acknowledged birth of rock’n’roll and the momentary mixing of the races and their musics, that is except

for his one-off:  “Willie and the Hand Jive.”

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Johnny was asked when he signed with Capitol Records in 1957 was his sound reshaped by the major

label?  “Yeah, Yeah, ha.   They wanted me to be more tolerable to the White audience.   Some of that stuff I

don’t like because of that.   But.. ah, it’s okay.   It’s alright.   I really have no complaint about ‘Willie.’    It’s

been good to me.    But some of the later stuff they issued was really attempts to sound the way Whites

would like to have it; least that was the theory.    The fact was, by the time the Whites were hearing it, it

wasn’t my sound.”

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Most rock’n’roller fans that are historically astute of pop platter when they hear the “Hand Jive” think

Johnny is a copy on that “Bo Diddley Beat.”  “Na.   Let me tell you,” says Johnny,  “the first time I

encountered that rhythm was just as a kid [in the early ’40’s] playing in “Count” Otis Matthews and the

Oakland House Rockers.    He was a young guy from the Mississippi area who played boogie woogie and

barrel house piano.   We were just kids in the neighborhood when he told me I was gonna be his drummer.

This bit, this beat was the highlight of his show.   He told me to do this–what he called–‘shave and a

haircut six bits beat’ and keep beatin’ it.    Count had some cans filled with rice or pebbles and he’d get

some girls to get up an shake’em.    The lyrics always changed but he’d sing something like ‘Mama bought

a chicken/thought it was a duck/stuck ‘em on the table with his legs stuck-up.’    Sure it was Bo Diddley-

like things, but they’re no more Diddley’s than anyone else’s.

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“I was down south, after I’d had a few hit records and saw a chain gang which is a traumatic experience,

seeing men in chains, under the shotgun, and in the hot sun.   Rather then be defeated they’d sing all Day.

Workin’ on the railroad they’d be called gandy dancers and their long metal hammers would go chung-gy-

chung-gy-chung and they’d sing out the same stuff.    Next time I heard it was on a hit called ‘Hambone’

[Red Saunders & His Orchestra #20, 1952].   All that predates me and Bo.   It’s all there in the stream of

life.   You can only draw from what’s there.

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“One day Bo was at my house.    We both raised chickens and ducks and I was given him some and he said

‘Motherfucker,  what are you doin’  taken my song?’    He said it half serious.   I said to ’em.   ”You ever

heard ‘Hambone’?   And he said, ‘Ssssh!’

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“There’s been some talk that a major television production company might revive my “Johnny Otis Show”

as a weekly thing.    The word is that I am the “Lawrence Welk” of Black Music.”    It was a great thing he

had there [1956-1961].   What we’d do is have our band playing live and backing guests like Wilson Pickett,

Ruth Brown, the Temptations.   All music, pure music.   What predominates now is not musicianship,

whether we find it entertaining or not the kids do.   But, it’s now all exhibitionism and slick tricks, smoke

bombs, flash, and profanity.    Shit, I’ve got nothing against profanity, but it shouldn’t be so public.    And

that rap thing  with it’s strident, angry war-like stance–it all sounds the same.   Enough all ready.   It’s sad,

sad.   We don’t value great singers and instrumentalists.   They’re not to be found on the charts.    The

current stuff has got no soul, no feeling, and it’s successful.   I’ve long said America loves to eat shit, and

probably always has.   It goes down better than the real thing.   Imagine the wealth of artists out there right

now· who’ll never get to realize their talents.   I know there· new Sarah Vaughn’s, new Mahalia Jacksons

out there right now.

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“As in the past, each generation tends to repudiate the music of its elders.  I guess that’s all part of growing

up and finding ones’s self.    But by concentrating on the music of the moment they’re missing out on some

of the greatest stuff that’s ever been created.   That’s a shame.   A shame.   Yeah.”