- George W. Johnson
George Washington Johnson (October 1846 – most likely
January 23 ,1914 ) was asinger and pioneersound recording artist, the firstAfrican-American star of thephonograph . [possibly George Johnson; 67 years;January 23 ,1914 ; certificate #3164; Manhattan. This would have him born in 1847. The ]Johnson was born in
slavery on aplantation inVirginia and around 1885 he married Annie. About 1889 Johnson was whistling on theStaten Island Ferry inNew York City when he was heard by someone connected with the infantrecording industry (one story says that it wasThomas A. Edison himself). Johnson was invited to record his loud raggy whistling on waxphonograph cylinder s for a fee of twenty cents per 2 minute performance. The recording went well, and in 1890 Johnson began recording regularly for various companies in the New York andNew Jersey area.Johnson sang as well as whistled, and also was able to give a boisterous laugh in musical pitch. From this he developed the two performances that made him famous, "The Whistling
Coon " and "The Laughing Coon". While on occasion he recorded other material, including whistling the song "Listen to the Mockingbird" and some shortminstrel show performances done with other performers, it was these two songs that Johnson would perform and record over and over for years.In the earliest days of the recording industry, every record was a "master". A strong voiced singer could make a maximum of 5 records at once, as 5 machines with their recording horns pointed towards the singer's mouth were started at the same time. By 1894, Johnson was reported to have sold over 25,000 records recorded this way. He would sometimes sing the same song over and over again in the
recording studio fifty or more times a day.Johnson also made appearances on
Vaudeville . His repertory on stage was pretty much limited to his two famous songs, but this was sufficient to get him bookings on bills.Johnson was hired as a
valet byLen Spencer , a Vaudeville star of the era. Spencer and Johnson made a few recordings together.Johnson made his first disc records in 1895 for
Berliner Gramophone . In addition to Berliner,Edison Records , and Columbia, and somewhat later theVictor Talking Machine Company , Johnson recorded for numerous other small cylinder and disc companies through the 1890s and up to about 1910.Rumors have alleged that the first Black recording star died either in a
racism motivatedlynching , or alternatively that he was hanged after he committedmurder . Neither story is true. George W. Johnson died apparently of natural causes, while in the employ of Len Spencer as doorman for the Lyceum Theater inManhattan .References
External links
* [http://home.earthlink.net/~ephemeralist/geowjohnson.html George W. Johnson on the Ragtime Ephemerist] 2 page article with illustrations and RealAudio file of one of Johnson's records
* [http://cylinders.library.ucsb.edu/search.php?query=george+w+johnson&queryType=%40attr+1%3D1 George W. Johnson cylinder recordings] , from theCylinder Preservation and Digitization Project at theUniversity of California, Santa Barbara Library.
* [http://www.archive.org/details/GeorgeWJohnson Archive.org Collection of George W. Johnson's music] four different (1898-1902) recordings of The Laughing Song and one each of The Laughing Coon and The Whistling Song
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