3 February 1935, Houston, Texas, USA. Before Watson made a name for
himself in the '70s playing funk R&B, he had a long career going back to the
early '50s. Watson's father played piano, which also became Watson's first
instrument. On seeing Clarence Gatemouth Brown perform, he convinced himself
that he had to play guitar. He inherited a guitar from his grandfather, a
sanctified preacher, on one condition that he did not play the blues on
it-'that was the first thing I played', Watson later said. In the early '50s
his family moved to Los Angeles, which is where he started playing piano in
the Chuck Higgins band and was billed as Young John Watson. Switching to
guitar, he was signed to Federal and recorded Space Guitar, an instrumental
way ahead of its time in the use of reverberation and feedback.
He also
played Motorhead Baby with an enthusiasm that was to become his trademark. He
recorded the same track for Federal with the Amos Milburn band in tow. Watson
became in-demand as a guitarist and in the late '50s toured and recorded with
the Olympics, Don & Dewey and Little Richard. Johnny 'Guitar' Watson was from
the same mould of flamboyance that motivated another of Little Richard's
guitarists: Jimi Hendrix. Watson later stated: 'I used to play the guitar
standing on my hands, I had a 150 foot cord and I could get on top of the
auditorium-those things Jimi Hendrix was doing, I started that shit!'.
Moving to the Modern label in 1955, he immediately hit with a bluesy ballad,
Those Lonely, Lonely Nights, (US R&B Top 10), but failed to follow-up on the
label. In 1957 the novelty tune Gangster Of Love (later adopted by Steve
Miller) gave him a minor hit on the west coast. Watson did not return to the
charts until 1962, when on the King label he hit with Cuttin' In (US R&B
number 6), which was recorded with strings accompaniment. The following year
he recorded I CRIED FOR YOU, a 'cocktail-lounge' album with hip renditions of
Polkadots And Moonbeams and Witchcraft. A partnership with Larry Williams was
particularly successful on Okeh Records out of Chicago and in 1965 they
toured England and recorded an album for Decca. Watson also cut a 45 on his
own label around this time, "Aint Gonna Move" [JoWat], which to this day
ruffles feathers either side of the pond. Watson cut two soulful funk albums
for the Fantasy label (LISTEN and I DON'T WANT TO BE ALONE, STRANGER) with
keyboardist Andre Lewis (later to tour with Frank Zappa). As if to repay his
enthusiasm for Watson's guitar playing, of which Zappa had often said was
amongst his favourite, Watson was recruited for Zappa's ONE SIZE FITS ALL in
1975. In 1976 Watson released AIN'T THAT A BITCH on DJM Records, a brilliant
marriage of '50s rockin' R&B, Hollywood schmaltz and futuristic funk. Watson
produced, played bass, keyboards and drums. It went gold, and a further six
albums appeared on DJM to the same formula. In 1981 he quit the label for A&M
Records, but the production diluted Watson's unique sound and the record was
a failure. One positive side-effect was a characteristic solo on Herb
Alpert's BEYOND. Watson retired to lick his wounds, emerging with the
hilarious STRIKE ON COMPUTERS at the end of the '80s and an appearance at
London's Town & Country Club in 1987. Watson had two minor U.S. RnB hits in
94 and 95 with "Bow Wow" and "Hook Me Up" on the Wilma label. Johnny Guitar
Watson passed away in June 96 [i fink].
"Too Late"
Most Popular Northern Soul Track? both Watson & Williams have solo tracks on
OKeh, but when they combine for this snappy bit of repartee, added to the
strings and insistent beat, it’s magic. "Can ya dig it?" I’m partial to
Williams’ "I’d Rather Fight Than Switch" and Johnny Watson’s efforts on other
labels. "Wait A Minute Baby" on Highland, and "Ain’t Gonna Move" on Jowat are
both excellent.