Phillip Johnston Explained
Phillip Johnston |
Landscape: | yes |
Background: | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
Birth Date: | 22 January 1955 |
Birth Place: | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Genre: | Avant-garde jazz, classical, film |
Occupation: | Musician, composer, educator, author |
Instrument: | Soprano, alto & tenor saxophone |
Years Active: | 1973-present |
Associated Acts: | Microscopic Septet, Fast 'n' Bulbous, Big Trouble, Transparent Quartet |
Phillip Johnston (born January 22, 1955) is an American saxophonist, composer, and author.[1] He came to prominence in the 1980s as co-founder of The Microscopic Septet and went on to write extensively for films, particularly new scores for classic silent films from the early 20th Century.
Biography
Johnston was born in Chicago, Illinois, on January 22, 1955, and raised in the New York City area.[2]
During the 1970s he met and formed relationships with some of his earliest musical associates (John Zorn, Joel Forrester, David Hofstra, Eugene Chadbourne), and moved often between San Francisco and New York City. In 1980 he settled in New York, and soon formed his first ongoing music groups, The Public Servants (with vocalist Shelley Hirsch) and The Microscopic Septet (with pianist Joel Forrester).[3]
Throughout the 80s and 90s and early 2000s, he worked as a leader (The Microscopic Septet, Big Trouble, Transparent Quartet), co-leader and sideperson (Mikel Rouse, Kitty Brazelton, Bobby Radcliff, Rachelle Garniez, Guy Klucevsek, Walter Thompson, Keely Garfield, & Nora York), and began a parallel career in composition for film, theatre, dance and the concert hall. He has a particular interest in contemporary scores for silent film.[4]
In 2005, he moved with his wife, Australian playwright Hilary Bell, and their two children to Sydney, Australia. From that time, he has continued to live and perform in Sydney, but travels regularly to New York and Europe to perform, collaborate and record. His collaborators in Australia have included Lloyd Swanton, Chris Abrahams, Alister Spence, Sandy Evans, Paul Cutlan, Peter Dasent, Matt McMahon, Jex Saarelaht, James Greening, Tim Rollinson and many others. He led or co-led the groups The Greasy Chicken Orchestra, Phillip Johnston & The Coolerators, SNAP, & Tight Corners, and performed at festivals and venues nationally.
Major works
Collaborations
- Young Goodman Brown (opera with libretto by R. Foreman, based on the Nathaniel Hawthorne short story), premiered in 1995 at LaMaMa ETC by Target Margin Theater, directed by David Herskovitz.[5]
- Venus (play, music for songs by Suzan-Lori Parks) premiered in 1996, by Yale Rep & Public Theater, directed by Richard Foreman.[6]
- Drawn To Death: A Three Panel Opera (opera/musical theatre with book and lyrics by Art Spiegelman), concert version premiered in 2000 at St Ann's Warehouse, workshops at Dartmouth and New York Theater Workshop. Remains unproduced in its final form.
- Wordless! (live multimedia performance work, with Art Spiegelman), commissioned and premiered at Sydney Opera House in 2013, and subsequently toured internationally.
- Do Good And You Will Be Happy (musical with book and lyrics by Hilary Bell)
Discography
As leader
- Jungle Hotel b/w A Mistake (as The Public Servants) (45RPM) (Jedible, 1981)
- Normalology (Eighth Day, 1996) (re-released on Koch Jazz, 1999)
- Music for Films (Tzadik, 1998)
- Rub Me the Wrong Way (Innova, 2004)
- Diggin' Bones (Asynchronous, 2018)[7]
- The Adventures of Prince Achmed (Asynchronous, 2018)
- Big Trouble
- The Transparent Quartet
- Page of Madness (Asynchronous, 2009)[9]
As co-leader
The Microscopic Septet (with Joel Forrester)
- Take the Z Train (Press, 1983)
- Let's Flip! (Osmosis, 1984)
- Off Beat Glory (Osmosis, 1986)
- Beauty Based on Science (Stash, 1988)
- Seven Men in Neckties: The History of the Micros, Vol. 1 (Cuneiform, 2006)
- Surrealistic Swing: The History of the Micros, Vol. 2 (Cuneiform, 2006)
- Lobster Leaps In (Cuneiform, 2008)
- Friday the 13th: The Micros Play Monk (Cuneiform, 2010)
- Manhattan Moonrise (Cuneiform, 2014)
- Been Up So Long It Looks Like Down To Me: The Micros Play The Blues (Cuneiform, 2017)
- Fast 'N' Bulbous (with Gary Lucas)
- The Spokes (with Andy Biskin & Curtis Hasselbring)
- Not So Fast (Strudelmedia, 2011)
- SNAP (with Sandy Evans, Paul Cutlan and Nick Bowd)
- Boggy Creek Bop (Rufus, 2010)
- Joel Forrester/Phillip Johnston
- Live at the Hillside (Asynchronous, 2011)
- Guy Klucevsek/Phillip Johnston
As a composer or arranger only
Filmography
Silent filmography
Books and other publications
- Book: Johnston . Phillip . Silent Films/Loud Music: New ways of listening to and thinking about silent film music . 2021 . Bloomsbury Academic . 978-1-5013-6643-7. 0.
- Book: Johnston . Phillip . Tarche . Guillaume . Steve Lacy: (Unfinished) . 2021 . Lenka Lente . Nantes, France . 979-10-94601-40-2 . 133–146 . fr, en . The Revolutionary Conservatism of Steve Lacy's Prospectus. Book chapter.
- Cinema Changes: Incorporations of Jazz in the Film Soundtrack (Chapter: "Jazzin’ The Silents: Jazz and Improvised Music in Contemporary Scores for Silent Film", (edited by Emile Wennekes and Emilio Audissino, Turnhout, Brepols, Speculum Musicae, 34, 2019)
Further reading
Notes and References
- Web site: Ankeny. Jason. Phillip Johnston Biography & History. AllMusic. 25 November 2016.
- Web site: Phillip Johnston on Apple Music. iTunes.
- Web site: Phillip Johnston: Page of Madness album review @ All About Jazz. 10 May 2009 .
- Web site: Johnston, Phillip.
- News: THEATER REVIEW; Strolling With Satan Into a Moral Forest . The New York Times . 18 February 1995 . Brantley . Ben .
- Web site: Venus (1996) . 2023-01-29 . issuu . 16 December 2016 . en.
- Web site: Winter Jazz: Phillip Johnston & the Coolerators, Diggin' Bones Album Launch : The Sound Lounge : 4.Aug.18 : Event : Australian Music Centre.
- Web site: The Merry Frolics of Satan by Phillip Johnston & the Transparent Quartet - jazzreview.com - Where People Talk About Jazz Since 1997 . www.jazzreview.com . 6 June 2022 . https://archive.today/20130411050919/http://www.jazzreview.com/index.php/reviews/latest-cd-reviews/item/16690- . 11 April 2013 . dead.
- Web site: Page of Madness by Phillip Johnston - jazzreview.com - Where People Talk About Jazz Since 1997 . www.jazzreview.com . 6 June 2022 . https://archive.today/20130411050335/http://www.jazzreview.com/index.php/reviews/latest-cd-reviews/item/26533- . 11 April 2013 . dead.