Tom Johnston (musician)
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Tom Johnston | |
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Born | 15 August 1948 |
Genre(s) | Rock |
Instrument(s) | Guitar |
Years active | 1970 - present |
Associated acts | The Doobie Brothers |
Website | http://www.doobiebrothers.net/ |
Notable instrument(s) | |
Gibson Firebird Gibson SG Paul Reed Smith |
Tom Johnston (born 15 August 1948, Visalia, California) is a U.S. musician. He is a guitarist and vocalist and co-founded The Doobie Brothers with drummer John Hartman, guitarist Patrick Simmons and bassist Dave Shogren.
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[edit] Career
Johnston's favorite music as he grew up included Little Richard, Bo Diddley, Elvis Presley, James Brown, and other rhythm and blues artists featured on the radio in the 1950s. At the age of twelve, Tom took up guitar. He had formed his first band by age fourteen. In his early career he played in a variety of bands, including a Mexican wedding band that played half soul and half Latin music. His interest in rhythm and blues led to his singing in a soul group from a neighboring town and, eventually, his own blues band.
Johnston moved to San Jose to finish college and started playing in bands around town. It was here that he met the legendary Skip Spence, former drummer with Jefferson Airplane and founding member of a group that had a major influence on the Doobie Brothers - Moby Grape. Skip introduced Tom to John Hartman. Johnston and Hartman soon formed their own band, "Pud", featuring Greg Murphy on bass. "Pud" played many clubs in and around the greater San Jose market including the "Golden Horn Lounge" in Cupertino, California which no longer exists. Murph was soon replaced by Shogren, Simmons was recruited, and "Pud" gave way to the Doobie Brothers.
Johnston wrote and sang many of the Doobie Brothers' early hits, including "Listen to the Music," "Rockin' Down the Highway," "China Grove," and "Long Train Runnin'." He also sang the hit song "Take Me in Your Arms" (written by Holland-Dozier-Holland). Johnston's gritty voice and distinctive guitar style, combining rhythmic strumming and towering solos, constituted the band's original trademark sound. Though not a virtuoso, he pioneered a rhythmic guitar figure still known amongst musicians as the 'Tom Johnston shuffle' - described as a 'laid-back staccato' and best heard on the intros to 'Long Train Running' and 'Listen to the Music'. He also possessed dynamic energy and stage presence, serving as the focal point of the group's live performances.
Following years of road touring lifestyle and health challenges, Johnston became severely ill and was hospitalized on the eve of a major tour in 1975 to promote Stampede. Johnston's illness led to the emergency hiring of Michael McDonald, who almost immediately took over the band that Johnston had co-founded. After a few years of restored health but diminished influence in the group, Johnston finally left in 1977 to pursue a solo career that netted two albums: Everything You've Heard Is True and Still Feels Good (reissued on compact disc by Wounded Bird Records). Johnston toured in the late '70s and early '80s with the Tom Johnston Band, which featured fellow Doobie alum John Hartman on drums.
In 1985, Johnston toured U.S. clubs with a group called Border Patrol that also included former Doobies Michael Hossack and Patrick Simmons, (briefly). This group toured but never recorded. In 1987, he contributed a tune to the multi-platinum Dirty Dancing soundtrack entitled "Where are You Tonight?"
Johnston joined the Doobie Brothers when they reunited en masse for a brief tour in 1987 to benefit Vietnam veterans. This event led to the permanent reformation of the band, with Johnston again taking the helm alongside co-founder Simmons. Johnston co-wrote, sang and contributed a signature guitar solo to the group's last major chart hit, "The Doctor" (from 1989's Cycles).
[edit] Family
Johnston now lives in Marin County, California with his wife and two children. His daughter Lara is currently a competitor on MTV's Rock the Cradle. The band has performed benefit concerts for their private school.
[edit] Discography
[edit] With the Doobie Brothers
- The Doobie Brothers (1971)
- Toulouse Street (1972) (U.S. #21)
- The Captain and Me (1973) (U.S. #7)
- What Were Once Vices Are Now Habits (1974) (U.S. #4)
- Stampede (1975) (U.S. #4)
- Takin' It to the Streets (1976) (U.S. #8) (does not actually appear on much of album)
- Livin' on the Fault Line (1977) (U.S. #10) (listed in credits but may not actually appear on album)
- Farewell Tour [Live] (1983) (U.S. #79) (guest appearance on two songs)
- Cycles (1989) (U.S. #17)
- Brotherhood (1991) (U.S. #82)
- Rockin' Down the Highway: The Wildlife Concert [Live] (1996)
- Best of the Doobie Brothers Live [Live] (1999) (single CD of Wildlife Concert tunes)
- Sibling Rivalry (2000)
- On Our Way Up (2001)
- Divided Highway (2003) (consisting of tunes from Cycles and Brotherhood)
- Live at Wolf Trap [Live] (2004)
[edit] Solo
- Everything You've Heard Is True
- Still Feels Good
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