Johnny Otis has modeled an amazing number of contrasting musical hats over a career spanning more than half a century. Bandleader, record producer, talent scout, label owner, nightclub impresario, disc jockey, TV variety show host, author,
R&B pioneer,
rock & roll star --
Otis has answered to all those descriptions and quite a few more. Not bad for a Greek-American who loved
jazz and
R&B so fervently that he adopted the African-American culture as his own.
California-born
John Veliotes changed his name to the blacker-sounding
Otis when he was in his teens. Drums were his first passion -- he spent time behind the traps with the Oakland-based orchestra of Count Otis Matthews and kept time for various Midwestern
swing outfits before settling in Los Angeles during the mid-'40s and joining Harlan Leonard's Rockets, then resident at the Club Alabam.
(
read more)
Johnny Otis has modeled an amazing number of contrasting musical hats over a career spanning more than half a century. Bandleader, record producer, talent scout, label owner, nightclub impresario, disc jockey, TV variety show host, author,
R&B pioneer,
rock & roll star --
Otis has answered to all those descriptions and quite a few more. Not bad for a Greek-American who loved
jazz and
R&B so fervently that he adopted the African-American culture as his own.
California-born
John Veliotes changed his name to the blacker-sounding
Otis when he was in his teens.
Don't have the
FREE
BlueBeat Player yet?
Download it now to listen to great programs at 320kbps!
Drums were his first passion -- he spent time behind the traps with the Oakland-based orchestra of Count Otis Matthews and kept time for various Midwestern
swing outfits before settling in Los Angeles during the mid-'40s and joining Harlan Leonard's Rockets, then resident at the Club Alabam.
It wasn't long before the Alabam's owner entreated
Otis to assemble his own orchestra for house-band duties. The group's 1945 debut sides for Excelsior were solidly in the big-band
jazz vein and included an arrangement of the moody "Harlem Nocturne" that sold well. Shouter Jimmy Rushing fronted the band for two tracks at the same date.
Otis's rep as a drummer was growing; he backed both
Wynonie Harris and
Charles Brown (with Johnny Moore's Three Blazers) that same year.
The
Otis outfit continued to record for Excelsior through 1947 (one date featured Big Jay McNeely on sax), but his influence on L.A.'s
R&B scene soared exponentially when he and partner Bardu Ali opened the Barrelhouse Club in Watts.
R&B replaced
jazz in
Otis' heart; he pared the big band down and discovered young talent such as
the Robins, vocalists Mel Walker and
Little Esther Phillips, and guitarist
Pete Lewis that would serve him well in years to come.
Otis signed with Newark, NJ-based Savoy Records in 1949, and the
R&B hits came in droves: "Double Crossing Blues," "Mistrustin' Blues," and "Cupid's Boogie" all hit number one that year (in all,
Otis scored ten Top Ten smashes that year alone!); "Gee Baby," "Mambo Boogie," and "All Nite Long" lit the lamp in 1951, and "Sunset to Dawn" capped his amazing run in 1952 (vocals were shared by
Esther, Walker, and other members of the group). By then,
Otis had branched out to play vibes on many waxings.
In late 1951,
Otis moved to Mercury, but apart from a Walker-led version of
Floyd Dixon's "Call Operator 210," nothing found pronounced success with the public. A 1953-1955 contract with Don Robey's Peacock logo produced some nice
jump blues sides but no hits (though the
Otis orchestra backed one of his many discoveries,
Big Mama Thornton, on her chart-topping "Hound Dog," as well as a young
Little Richard while at Peacock).
Otis was a masterful talent scout; among his platinum-edged discoveries were
Jackie Wilson,
Little Willie John,
Hank Ballard, and
Etta James (he produced her debut smash "Roll With Me Henry").
In 1955,
Otis took studio matters into his own hands, starting up his own label, Dig Records, to showcase his own work as well as his latest discoveries (including Arthur Lee Maye & the Crowns, Tony Allen, and Mel Williams).
Rock & roll was at its zenith in 1957, when the multi-instrumentalist signed on with Capitol Records; billed as
the Johnny Otis Show, he set the
R&B and pop charts ablaze in 1958 with his shave-and-a-haircut beat, "Willie and the Hand Jive," taking the vocal himself (other singers then with
the Otis Show included Mel Williams and the gargantuan
Marie Adams & the Three Tons of Joy). During the late '50s,
Otis hosted his own variety program on L.A. television, starring his entire troupe (and on one episode,
Lionel Hampton), and did a guest shot in a 1958 movie, Juke Box Rhythm.
After cutting some great
rock & roll for Capitol from 1957 to 1959 with only one hit to show for it,
Otis dropped anchor at King Records in 1961-1962 (in addition to his own output,
Otis's band also backed Johnny "Guitar" Watson on several sides). Later in the decade,
Otis recorded some ribald material for Kent and watched as his young son
Shuggie built an enviable reputation as a
blues guitarist while recording for Columbia. Father and son cut an album together for Alligator in 1982, accurately entitled The New Johnny Otis Show.
In recent years, the multi-talented
Otis added operating a California health-food emporium to his endless list of wide-ranging accomplishments. If
blues boasts a renaissance man among its ranks,
Otis surely fills that bill. ~ Bill Dahl, All Music Guide
(
collapse)