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Johnny Mathis Wiki Information
Johnny Mathis
(born John Royce Mathis
, September 30, 1935) is an American singer of popular music.
One of the last in a long line of traditional male vocalists who emerged before the 1960s, Mathis concentrated on romantic jazz and pop standards for the adult contemporary audience through to the 1980s. Starting his career with a flurry of singles of standards, Mathis became more popular as an album artist, with a dozen of his albums achieving gold or platinum status, and over 60 making the Billboard charts. [1] According to the Recording Industry Association of America, Mathis has certified sales of over 17 million units in the United States. [2]
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JOHNNY MATHIS TICKETS
EVENT | DATE | AVAILABILITY |
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Johnny Mathis Tickets 1/11 | Jan 11, 2025 Sat, 8:00 PM | | Johnny Mathis Tickets 1/25 | Jan 25, 2025 Sat, 7:00 PM | | Johnny Mathis Tickets 2/8 | Feb 08, 2025 Sat, 8:00 PM | | Johnny Mathis Tickets 2/15 | Feb 15, 2025 Sat, 8:00 PM | | Johnny Mathis Tickets 3/8 | Mar 08, 2025 Sat, 7:00 PM | |
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Early life
Mathis was born on September 30, 1935 in Gilmer, Texas, the fourth of seven children to Clem and Mildred Mathis. The family moved when he was young to San Francisco, California on Post Street, in the famous Fillmore district where he was raised. His father worked for a time in vaudeville, and when he saw the budding talent in his son, the elder Mathis bought an old upright piano for US$25 to encourage his efforts. From his father, Mathis began learning songs and routines–his first song being, "My Blue Heaven." [3] Mathis started out singing and dancing for visitors at home, and later publicly, at school and church events. [4]
At thirteen, Mathis was taken to Connie Cox, a San Francisco Bay Area voice teacher, who accepted him as a student in exchange for work he would do around her house. [5] He studied with Cox for six years, learning vocal scales and exercises, voice production, classical and operatic skills. He remains one of the few popular singers who has received years of professional voice training that included opera.
At George Washington High School, Mathis was well known not only for his singing abilities, but also as a star athlete. On the track and field team, he was a high jumper and hurdler, and on the basketball team, he earned four athletic letters. In 1954, Mathis enrolled at San Francisco State University on a scholarship with the intention of becoming an English and physical education teacher. [
]
Music career
He was spotted at a jam session by Helen Noga, a former head cocktail waitress and co-owner of The Black Hawk Club at 200 Hyde Street in San Francisco and The DownBeat Club, along with her husband John and Guido Caccienti, and she became his manager. The clubs attracted the world's finest jazz musicians including Dave Brubeck, Miles Davis, and Billie Holiday. John Noga and Guido Caccienti had opened the Black Hawk in the fall of 1949 for $10,000. In September 1955, after Noga landed Mathis a job singing weekends at Ann Dee's 440 Club, she ruthlessly pursued jazz producer George Avakian, who she found out was on vacation in the Bay Area. Avakian came to see him sing, and sent the now famous telegram to Columbia Records: Have found phenomenal 19-year old boy who could go all the way. Send blank contracts
.
Mathis now had to decide whether to go to the Olympic tryouts, to which he had been invited, or to keep an appointment in New York to make his first recordings, which were subsequently released in 1956. With his father's advice, Mathis opted for a recording career and the rest is history. He has never completely abandoned his enthusiasm for sports and today is an avid golfer who has achieved six holes-in-one, and has hosted several Johnny Mathis Golf Tournaments in the USA and the United Kingdom. Since 1985 he has been hosting a charity golf tournament in Belfast sponsored by Shell corporation, and the annual Johnny Mathis Invitational Track & Field Meet has continued at San Francisco State College since it started in 1982.
His first album Johnny Mathis: A New Sound In Popular Song
was a slow-selling jazz album, but Mathis stayed in New York to play the clubs. His second album was produced by Columbia records vice-president and producer Mitch Miller, who defined the Mathis sound - he preferred him to sing soft, romantic ballads, initially pairing him with arranger/conductor Ray Conniff, and later, Ray Ellis, Glenn Osser and Robert Mersey. In late 1956, Mathis recorded two of his most popular songs - "Wonderful! Wonderful!" and "It's Not For Me To Say." That year MGM signed Mathis to sing the latter song in the 1957 film Lizzie
, and shortly afterward he made his second film appearance for 20th Century Fox singing the song A Certain Smile
in the film of the same name. He had small acting roles in both movies as a bar singer. This early cinematic visibility in two successful movies gave him mass exposure. Next was his appearance on the very popular Ed Sullivan Show in 1957 and this helped to seal his stardom. Critics called him the velvet voice.
In summer of 1958, Mathis left San Francisco with the Nogas, who sold their interest in the Black Hawk club that year to Max Weiss, secretary-treasurer of San Francisco's avant-garde Fantasy Records, and moved to Beverly Hills where the Nogas purchased a home in which Mathis lived with them, their daughter Beverly, and their granddaughter at 806 North Elm Drive at the corner of Elm and Sunset Boulevard built in 1931 by the Max Factor family and later owned by Mabel C. Birdwell and Lillian and Ben Young, for about $99,500 which the Nogas later sold to singer Dionne Warwick in the summer of 1973 for around $359,500. Helen Noga, looking to expand her operations into production, financing, and publishing, also founded and funded Philles Records in 1961 with Phil Spector, with Lester Sills handling the business side of sales and promotion, which launched the Crystals in September 1961. Using money from Liberty Records, Noga was bought out by Spector in 1962 for around $60,000. In 1964, there was a severe downturn in sales for many artists due to The Beatles and the British invasion of the early 1960s. However, Mathis still turned out two of his biggest solo hits in the years 1962 and 1963, with "Gina" (#6) and "What Will Mary Say" (#9) charting in each year, respectively. In October 1964, Mathis sued Noga to void the management arrangement, which Noga fought with a counterclaim in December 1964. Mathis purchased a mansion in the Hollywood Hills, that was originally built by billionaire Howard Hughes in 1946, and later owned by hotel owner Hyatt R. Von Dehn and Oilman Robert Calhoun, and where he still maintains a residence.
After splitting from Noga, Mathis established Jon Mat Records, Inc., incorporated in California May 11, 1967 to produce his recordings, and Rojon Productions, Inc., incorporated in California September 30, 1964 to handle all of his concert, theater, showroom and television appearances, and all promotional and charitable activities. His new manager and business partner was Ray Haughn, who helped guide his career until his death in September 1984. Since that time, Mathis has taken sole responsibility for his career, operating from office suites at 1612 W Olive Avenue in Burbank. With the exception of a three-year break with Mercury Records in the mid-1960s, he has been with Columbia Records throughout his recording career.
Pieces of music from numerous Mathis albums continue to be used throughout motion pictures and television with great effect to impart nostalgia or mood themes, for example Chances Are memorably used during an alien visit in the 1977 film Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and various numbers currently in the hit TV series Mad Men.
Although he is frequently described as a romantic singer, his vast discography includes jazz, traditional pop, Brazilian and Spanish music, Soul, R&B, soft rock, Broadway, Tin Pan Alley standards, some blues and country songs, and even a few disco tunes for his album Mathis Magic
(1979). In 1980/81 Mathis recorded an album with Chic's Bernard Edwards and Nile Rodgers, I Love My Lady
, which remains unreleased. Mathis also remains highly associated with holiday music, having recorded nine Christmas albums. Mathis has the distinction of having the longest stay of any recording artist on the Columbia Record label, having been with the label from 1956 to 1963 and from 1968 to the present.
In 1958, Johnny’s Greatest Hits
was released and was the first ever Greatest Hits album in the music industry. It began the Greatest Hits tradition copied by every record company. Johnny's Greatest Hits
spent an unprecedented 490 consecutive weeks (nine and a half years) on the Billboard
album chart, a feat earning him a place in the Guinness Book of World Records
and not broken until the 1980s by Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon
. He has had five of his albums on the Billboard charts simultaneously, an achievement equaled by only two other singers, Frank Sinatra and Barry Manilow. He released 200 singles and had 71 songs charted around the world.
He has received three Grammy awards. In 1979, his hit duet "The Last Time I Felt Like This" from the film Same Time, Next Year
was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song. Mathis and Jane Olivor sang the song at the Oscar ceremony. This was his second performance at the Academy Awards. He has taped twelve of his own television specials and made over 300 television guest appearances with 33 of them being on The Tonight Show. Through the years his songs (or parts of them) have been heard in 100 plus television shows and films around the globe. His appearance on the Live by Request
broadcast in May 1998 on the A&E Network had the largest television viewing audience of the series. Also in 1989, Johnny sang the opening theme for the ABC daytime soap opera Loving
.
Mathis continues to perform but from 2000 onwards has limited his concert engagements to fifty to sixty appearances per year. In 2006, his schedule included a UK tour that included his annual Scottish Golf vacation and attendance at the 2006 Ryder Cup, two stints at his favourite Hilton Hotel in Las Vegas. He still records and his 2005 album Isn't It Romantic: The Standards Album
has been enthusiastically received by critics and music buyers. Tonight Show host Johnny Carson, who heard over 2000 singers on his show, said: "Johnny Mathis is the best ballad singer in the world." He appeared on the NBC Tonight Show with Jay Leno [6] as a guest on March 29, 2007 performing the classic "Shadow of Your Smile" with saxophonist Dave Koz. Mathis returned to the UK Top 20 album chart in 2007 with the Sony BMG release "The Very Best of Johnny Mathis" and again in 2008 with the Columbia CD "A Night to Remember".
Personal life
In a 1982 Us Magazine
article, the writer attributed a quote Mathis as having said, "Homosexuality is a way of life that I've grown accustomed to." Us Magazine
magazine retracted the statement later. [7] After more than twenty years of silence on the subject, in 2006, Mathis revealed in an interview that his silence was due to death threats he received as a result of that 1982 article. [8] [9] On April 13, 2006, Mathis granted a podcast interview with The Strip
in which he talked about the subject once again, and how some of his reticence to speak of the subject was partially generational. [10]
In 1982 he published a cookbook, Cooking for You Alone
.
Mathis had surgery for prostate cancer in 2005. He has also undergone rehab for both alcohol and prescription drug addictions.[
]
He has supported many organizations through the years, including the American Cancer Society, the March of Dimes, the YWCA and YMCA, the Muscular Dystrophy Association, and the NAACP.
Grammy history
Mathis received the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2003, by the Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences. This Special Merit Award is presented by vote of the Recording Academy's National Trustees to performers who, during their lifetimes, have made creative contributions of outstanding artist significance to the field of recording. [11]
Grammy Hall of Fame
Johnny Mathis was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, which is a special Grammy award established in 1973 to honor recordings that are at least twenty-five years old, and that have "qualitative or historical significance." [12] [13]
Grammy Hall of Fame Awards
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Year Recorded
| Title
| Genre
| Label
| Year Inducted
|
1957
| It's Not for Me to Say
| Traditional Pop (Single)
| Columbia
| 2008
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1959
| Misty
| Traditional Pop (Single)
| Columbia
| 2002
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1957
| Chances Are
| Traditional Pop (Single)
| Columbia
| 1998
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Discography
Selected hit singles
The following songs reached either the top 50 on the US Billboard Hot 100 or the top 10 on the easy listening (changed to adult contemporary in 1979) singles chart. Billboard began publishing easy listening singles charts in 1961.
- "Wonderful! Wonderful!", (1957) #14 Pop (GOLD)
- "It's Not for Me to Say" (1957) #5 Pop (GOLD)
- "Chances Are" (1957) #1 Pop (GOLD)
- "The Twelfth of Never" (1957) #9 Pop
- "Wild Is the Wind" (1957) #22 Pop
- "No Love (But Your Love)" (1958) #21 Pop
- "Come to Me" (1958) #22 Pop
- "All the Time" (1958) #21 Pop
- "Teacher, Teacher" (1958) #21 Pop, #27 Pop (UK)
- "A Certain Smile" (1958) #14 Pop, #4 Pop (UK)
- "Call Me" (1958) #21 Pop
- "Winter Wonderland" (1958) #17 Pop (UK)
- "Let's Love" (1959) #44 Pop
- "Someone" (1959) #35 Pop, #6 Pop (UK)
- "Small World" (1959) #20 Pop
- "Misty" (1959) #12 Pop (GOLD),#12 Pop (UK)
- "Starbright" (1960) #25 Pop
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- "My Love for You" (1960) #47 Pop, #9 Pop (UK)
- "Gina" (1962) #6 Pop, #2 AC
- "What Will Mary Say" (1963) #9 Pop, #3 AC, #49 Pop (UK)
- "Every Step of the Way" (1963) #30 Pop, #10 AC
- "On a Clear Day You Can See Forever" (1965) #98 Pop, #6 AC
- "Love Theme From Romeo & Juliet (A Time for Us)" (1969) #96 Pop, #8 AC
- "Pieces of Dreams" (1970) #9 AC
- "I'm Coming Home" (1973) #75 Pop, #1 AC
- "Life Is a Song Worth Singing" (1974) #54 Pop, #8 AC
- "Stardust" (1975) #4 AC
- "I'm Stone In Love With You" (1975) #10 Pop (UK)
- "When a Child Is Born" (1976) #1 Pop (UK)
- "Too Much, Too Little, Too Late" with
Deniece Williams (1978) #1 Pop, #1 AC (GOLD), #3 Pop (UK)
- "You're All I Need to Get By" with
Deniece Williams (1978) #47 Pop, #16 AC, #45 Pop (UK)
- "Gone, Gone Gone" (1979) #15 Pop (UK)
- "When A Child Is Born" with Gladys Knight (1981) #74 Pop (UK)
- "Friends In Love" with Dionne Warwick (1982) #38 Pop, #6 AC
- "Simple" (1984) #81 Pop, #6 AC
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Each of the above were issued on the Columbia Records label with the exception of the duet with Dionne Warwick, "Friends In Love," which was released on Warwick's label, Arista Records.
Other noteworthy hit songs
- "Heavenly" (Platinum)
- "Maria" (1960) #78, (1962) #88
- "When Sunny Gets Blue"
- "Fly Me To The Moon"
- "My Funny Valentine"
- "Moon River"
- "The Impossible Dream"
- "Somewhere My Love"
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- "Feelings" (Platinum)
- "What I Did For Love"
- "The Last Time I Felt Like This" with
Jane Olivor (1979) #15 AC
- "Begin the Beguine"
- "It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas" (1986)
- "Sleigh Ride"
- "That's All"
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Mathis has had much more success as an album artist. Some of his celebrated albums include:
- Johnny Mathis
Columbia CL-887
- Wonderful, Wonderful
Columbia CL-1028 (GOLD)
- Heavenly
Columbia CS-8152 Multi (Platinum)
- Faithfully
(Gold)
- Open Fire, Two Guitars
Columbia CL-1270/CS-8056 (Gold)
- Warm
Columbia CL-1078/CS-8039 (Gold)
- Swing Softly
Columbia CL-1165/CS-8023 (Gold), #10 UK Pop Albums 1959
- Johnny's Mood
- Johnny's Greatest Hits
Columbia CL-1133 (Multi-Platinum)
- More Johnny's Greatest Hits
Columbia CL-1344/CS-8150 (Gold)
- "Love is Blue" Columbia CS-9637
- I'll Buy You a Star
#18 UK Pop Albums 1961
- Merry Christmas
Columbia CL-1195/CS-8021 (Multi-Platinum)
- " Rhythms and Ballads of Broadway" Fontana SET 101, #6 UK Pop Albums 1960
- Those Were The Days
- Theme From Romeo And Juliet
- Close To You
- Raindrops Keep Falling on My Head
#23 UK Pop Albums 1970
- Love Story
#27 UK Pop Albums 1971
- Sings The Music Of Bacharach & Kaempfert
- The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
#40 UK Pop Albums 1972
- '' Make It Easy On Yourself" #49 UK Pop Albums 1972
- Song Sung Blue
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- I'm Coming Home
#18 UK Pop Albums 1975
- Me And Mrs. Jones
- When Will I See You Again
#13 UK Pop Albums 1975
- Killing Me Softly
- Feelings
(Platinum)
- The Heart Of A Woman
#39 UK Pop Albums 1975
- I Only Have Eyes For You
#14 UK Pop Albums 1976
- ''The Johnny Mathis Collection" #1 UK Pop Albums 1977
- You Light Up My Life
(Platinum), #3 UK Pop Albums 1978
- That's What Friends Are For
#16 UK Pop Albums 1978
- The Best Days Of My Life
#38 UK Pop Albums 1979
- Mathis Magic
#59 UK Pop Albums 1979
- Tears and Laughter
#1 UK Pop Albums 1980
- All For You
#20 UK Pop Albums 1980
- Celebration
#9 UK Pop Albums 1981
- Friends In Love
#34 UK Pop Albums 1982
- Unforgettable
#5 UK Pop Albums 1983
- A Special Part Of Me
#45 UK Pop Albums 1984
- The Hollywood Musicals
#46 UK Pop Albums 1986
- The Very Best Of Johnny Mathis
#6 UK Pop Albums 2006
- A Night To Remember
#29 UK Pop Albums 2008
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Bibliography
References
- Johnny Mathis: Biography
- Gold and Platinum
- The Incomparable Mr. Johnny Mathis
- Johnny Mathis
- Johnny Mathis: A born crooner
- NBC Tonight Show with Jay Leno
- Inc.
- Report on interview with ''the Daily Express''
- Johnny Mathis In Death Threats
- Johnny Mathis
- Lifetime Achievement Award
- Grammy Hall of Fame Database
- 2008 Grammy Hall of Fame List
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