Gerard Johnson is a British keyboard player. He is best known for his work with Saint Etienne and The Syn.
Born in 1963 in Newport, Monmouthshire, Wales, he was educated at Presentation College, Reading, Berkshire. He was a member of the Progress Theatre Student Group (1976–1981). Studied as a Tonmeister at the University of Surrey, Guildford.
Johnson originally trained and worked as a recording engineer at London's Music Works studio (1985–87) and then as Chief Engineer at Orinoco Studios (now called Miloco Studios)(1987–91). During this time he recorded and mixed records by Enya, Ian McCulloch (of Echo & the Bunnymen),[1] The Sugarcubes[2] and the Pet Shop Boys.
In 1991 he became a freelance engineer/producer, working with Timo Blunk (of Palais Schaumburg, Freaky Realistic,[3] TV Smith (of The Adverts) and Denim. Through Denim he met Bob Stanley, Pete Wiggs and Sarah Cracknell of Saint Etienne. Since Saint Etienne re-united in the mid 1990s, Johnson has worked with the band at various times as engineer, arranger, producer[4] and live keyboard player.[5]
In the 1990s, Johnson also worked with guitarist Peter Banks, with Johnson appearing on Banks' albums and Banks guesting on Johnson's project with Mark Bown, Funky Monkey. In 2004, Johnson joined Banks in The Syn, appearing on recordings later released on Original Syn. Johnson stayed with the band after Banks left and original bass player Chris Squire of Yes rejoined. He co-produced the band's 2005 album Syndestructible with Lemon Trees guitarist Paul Stacey. He has also toured with The Syn in a line-up including guitarist Shane Theriot and drummer Alan White (of Yes), but left the band in 2006.
He then worked on two projects with Chris Squire: Chris Squire's Swiss Choir, an album of Christmas music on which he was producer and choral arranger,[6] and as co-writer of songs for a planned Squire solo album. This project was not completed, but material from it went on to form part of the as yet unreleased "Squackett" album by Squire and former Genesis guitarist, Steve Hackett.[7] One song from these sessions co-written/performed by Johnson was used on Yes's 2011 album Fly from Here.
Johnson returned to Saint Etienne as orchestral arranger and conductor of their June 2007 live film soundtrack performance This is Tomorrow,[8] part of the celebrations which marked the re-opening of London's Royal Festival Hall after its closure for extensive refurbishment.[9] He toured extensively with Saint Etienne during 2009.
He has recently formed The Electric Opera[10] with long-term collaborator Mark Bown, and composed and musical directed numerous shows at the South London Theatre.[11]