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  1. Johnson recorded often in the 1940s and spent much of 1947-1949 based in Los Angeles. He moved to Buffalo in 1950 and, other than an appearance at the 1958 Newport Jazz Festival, he was in obscurity for much of the decade. A stroke later in 1958 left him partly paralyzed. Johnson made one final appearance at John Hammond’s January 1967 ...

  2. "Rocket Boogie "88" (Part 1 and Part 2)" was recorded in Los Angeles in around April 1949 by Pete Johnson (piano), Jewel Grant (alto saxophonej, Maxwell Davis (tenor saxophone), Herman Mitchell (guitar), Ralph Hamilton (bass) and Jesse Sailes (drums).

  3. Pete Johnson was made a Reading Champion by the Book Trust in recognition of all his work in promoting reading in schools and libraries. He lives near St Albans . As part of celebrations marking twenty years of The Stockton Children's Book Award in March 2018, Pete Johnson has been invited to return – he is the first author to win this award and the only writer to win it twice.

  4. Not long after the release of Rocket Boogie “88” Pete Johnson left music behind for the most part, not just that he stopped recording but he moved to Buffalo of all places where he worked “regular” jobs amidst a series of health issues. He still played on the side in clubs but if you thought he wasn’t in the spotlight before when ...

  5. 1949 májusában fellépett a Paris Festival International 1949 de Jazz koncerten. 1950-ben Johnson Buffaloba költözött. Egészségügyi problémái ellenére folytatta fellépéseit, többek között Jimmy Rushing és Big Joe Turner mellett. 1958-ban agyvérzést kapott, és nagyjából megbénult. Egy német dzsesszrajongó – H. Maurer ...

  6. Fidelity 3000 - Life Is A Card Game / When The Rooster Crows - 1951. Big Joe Turner (born Joseph Vernon Turner on the 18-May-1911 in Kansas City, Missouri --- died 24-November-1985 in Inglewood, California --- cause: heart attack) Colony 108 - Little Bitty Baby / Midnight Rocking - 1952. Joe Turner & Pete Johnson.

  7. Rhino. Joseph Vernon " Big Joe " Turner Jr. (May 18, 1911 – November 24, 1985) was an American blues shouter from Kansas City, Missouri. [3] According to songwriter Doc Pomus, " Rock and roll would have never happened without him". Turner's greatest fame was due to his rock and roll recordings in the 1950s, particularly "Shake, Rattle and ...