Charles L. Johnson

From Wind Repertory Project
Charles L. Johnson

Biography

Charles Leslie Johnson (3 December 1876, Kansas City, Kan. - December 28, 1950, Kansas City, Mo.) was an American composer of ragtime and popular music.

Clearly a prodigy, Johnson was playing a neighbor’s piano by age six and began studying classical piano, harmony, and music theory a few years later. Although he had classical training, he always preferred popular music of the day. His musical ability led him to proficiency on other instruments as well: guitar, violin, banjo, and mandolin. As a young man Johnson became involved in the music scene of Kansas City by participating in several local groups. In this environment he wrote his first compositions.

Johnson’s career was stable and prolific. He began work in the late 1890s for the J.W. Jenkins and Sons Music Company in Kansas City, Missouri plugging songs and playing piano. Eventually Johnson would compose for many other publishers. By 1907, Johnson had also formed his own publishing company, putting out his own music and those of other local composers. In addition, Johnson began vanity publishing for others, often writing music for the lyrics of others or simply arranging others’ compositions.

At some point in his career Johnson began writing under pseudonyms. He used Raymond Birch the most, penning several of his well-known rags under that name. Under any name, however, Johnson was a significant contributor to the Ragtime Era and to rag music in general. By far the biggest hit of 1906 was Charles’ most successful rag Dill Pickle Rag. The first rag to sell a million copies was Scott Joplin’s Maple Leaf Rag; the second was Dill Pickles. It has been suggested that by 1906 ragtime was already beginning to wane. After the publication of Dill Pickles there was a revival of interest in ragtime that extended its life by nearly ten more years. This piece of music made use of the “three over four” syncopation that was subsequently copied and used in dozens of rags by other composers. Joplin himself had difficulty getting away from its conventions.

Johnson had a remarkable ability to reflect the needs and trends of the time. A clear example of this was in his war pieces. During his musical career Charles wrote pieces for the Spanish American War, World War I, and World War II. Certainly most of these pieces (numbering almost 20) responded to the patriotism of U.S. soldiers in World War I. Among these pieces were GoodBye Susanna, Be a Pilgrim (And Not a Ram), We Will Follow the Red, White, and Blue, and We Are All in the Same Boat Now.

Johnson published over 300 songs in his life, nearly 40 of them ragtime compositions such as Doc Brown’s Cakewalk, Dill Pickle Rag, Apple Jack (Some Rag), and Snookums Rag. His best selling piece, a sentimental ballad called Sweet and Low, sold over a million copies. Experts believe that had Johnson lived and worked in New York, he would be included alongside Scott Joplin, James Scott, and Joseph Lamb as one of the greatest ragtime composers. He wrote more than the other three combined and exemplified a greater range of talent, composing waltzes, tangos, cakewalks, marches, novelty pieces, and other types of music popular at that time.


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