A History of Rock Music in 500 Songs - Episode 23: “Pledging My Love” by Johnny Ace
Episode Date: March 11, 2019Welcome to episode twenty-three of A History of Rock Music in Five Hundred Songs. Today we’re looking at “Pledging My Love” by Johnny Ace Click the full post to read liner notes, li...nks to more information, and a transcript of the episode. Also, remember I’m three-quarters of the way through the Kickstarter for the first book based on this series. (more…)
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A History of Rock Music in 500 songs
By Andreake
Episode 23
Pledging My Love by Johnny Ace
A content warning
This episode contains a description
of a death by gunshot
I am not using any of the more explicit descriptions of this death
though I do describe some aspects of it,
but talking about that subject at all can be upsetting.
So if you're likely to be disturbed by that,
please turn off now.
If you're unsure whether you'll be upset,
remember that there are blog posts at 500Songs.com
5.0-0-the-numbers.com,
containing the full text of every episode.
and you can read the text there before listening if you wish.
Johnny Ace was born John Alexander Jr.
He used a stage name because his mother didn't approve of secular music.
And he was part of a group of musicians called the Beale Streeter's.
To understand the importance of this group of people,
you have to understand Memphis and one.
it was important.
American regional musical culture could be incredibly specific, and different cities had different
specialities. That's changed somewhat now, as transport and communications have got so much
better. But certainly, in the first half of the 20th century, you'd find that cities,
a hundred or so miles apart had taken a lot of the same musical influence.
but put them together in radically different ways.
And Memphis, in particular, was an unusual city for the southern US.
It was still an intensely racist city by any normal standards, and it was segregated,
and thus still home to countless horrors and crimes against humanity.
But for the southern US, black people led comparatively comfortable lives,
simply because Memphis was very close to 50% black
in the early decades of the 20th century
and was actually majority black in the late 19th.
In 1878 there was a plague.
Yellow fever swept the city
and it took an immense toll.
Before the 1878 plague,
there were 55,000 people living in Memphis.
Afterward, there were 14,000, and 12,000 of those were black.
The plague killed 75% of the white people living in Memphis, but only 7% of the black people.
Even though white people moved back into the city, and eventually became the majority again,
and even though they had all the institutional power of a racist state on their side,
there was still less of a power imbalance in Memphis,
and the white ruling classes simply couldn't keep black people down
as thoroughly as in other southern cities.
Memphis's regional speciality is the Blues,
and its first great musical hero was W.C. Handy.
Even though Handy only lived in Memphis for a few years,
having been born in Alabama and later moving to New York,
New York. He is indelibly associated with Memphis, and with Beale Street in particular.
Handy claimed to have invented the blues, though his blues wasn't much like what we'd call
the blues these days, and often had an element of the tango about it. And he was certainly the first
person to have any kind of hit with blues songwriting, back in a time when hits in music were measured
by sheet music sales, before recorded music had become more than an interesting novelty.
So Memphis was, as far as the wider world was concerned, and certainly as far as anyone in Memphis
itself was concerned, the birthplace of the Blues. And Beale Street, more than any other
part of Memphis, was the Blues area. Everyone knew it.
Beale Street was the centre of black culture, not just for Memphis, but for the whole of Tennessee,
in the late 40s and early 50s. It wasn't actually called Beale Street on the maps until 1955,
but everyone referred to it as Beale Street anyway. By 1950, people were already complaining
about the fact that the old Beale Street had gone.
Beale Street was where Lanskies was, the place where the coolest people bought their clothes.
There was Schwab's Dry Good Store, where you could buy everything you wanted.
And there was the Beale Street Blues Boys, or the Beal Streeters.
Accounts vary as to what they actually called themselves.
They weren't a band in a traditional sense, but there were a few of them who got together a lot,
and when they would make records, they would often play on each other's tracks.
There was the harmonica player, Junior Parker,
who would go on to record for every Memphis-based label,
often recording in the Sun Studios,
and who would write songs like Mystery Train.
There was the piano player Roscoe Gordon,
who had a unique, off-beat way of playing
that would later go on to be a massive influence on ska and reggae music.
There was the singer Bobby Borg.
Blue Bland, one of the most important blues singers of all time, and there was guitarist Riley
King, who would later be known as the Blues Boy, before shortening that and becoming just
BB King, and there was Johnny Ace, another piano player and singer. But the Beale Street
Blues Boys slowly drifted apart. Riley King went off and started cutting his own records for RPM,
one of the myriad tiny labels that had sprung up to promote R&B music,
and Bobby Bland got drafted,
but before he had to go off to be in the armed forces,
he went into Sam Phillips's studio and cut a few sides,
which were released on Duke Records, backed by the Beale Streeters.
Love her for myself
I've had that woman
That has BB King on guitar
and Johnny Ace on piano
Along with George Joyner on bass
Earl Forrest on drums
And Adolf Billy Duncan on the saxophone
Shortly after this
Ace's first single came out almost by accident
He was playing piano at a session
for Bobby Bland and Bland couldn't get the lyrics to his song right.
In the session downtime, Ace started singing Ruth Brown's hit So Long.
Dave Mattis, Duke Records owner, thought that what Ace was doing
sounded rather better than the song they were meant to be recording, and so they changed it up
just enough for it to count as an original,
with Ace coming up with the new melody
and Mattis writing new lyrics.
And my song by Johnny Ace was created.
This would be how all Ace's records would be
how all Ace's records would be created from that point on.
They would take a pop standard or another song that Ace knew.
Someone would write new lyrics,
and then Ace would come up with a new melody
while keeping the chord progression and general feel the same.
It was a formula that would lead to a string of hits for Ace.
My song might not sound very rock and roll,
but the B-side was a jump-boogie straight out of it.
the big Joe Turner style, follow the rules.
and was the first of eight hits in a row.
Aces singles would typically have a ballad on the A side
and a boogie number on the B side.
This was a typical formula for the time.
You might remember that Cecil Gant had a similar pattern
of putting a ballad on one side and a boogie on the other.
The idea was to maximise the number of buyers for each single
by appealing to two different audiences.
And it seemed to work.
Ace became very, very popular.
In fact, he became too popular.
Duke Records couldn't keep up with the demand for his records,
and Don Robey, the owner of Peacock Records, stepped in,
buying them out.
Don Roby had a reputation for violence.
He was also, though, one of the few black men.
businessmen in a white-dominated industry, and it might be argued that you can only get to that
kind of status with a certain amount of unethical practices. Roby's business manager and unacknowledged
partner, Evelyn Johnson, was by all accounts a far nicer person than Roby. She did the day-to-day
running of the businesses, drew up the business plans, and basically did everything that an owner
would normally be expected to, while Roby took the money.
Johnson did everything for Roby.
When he'd decided to put out records,
mostly to promote the blues singer Clarence Gatemouth Brown,
who he managed.
Johnson asked him how they were going to go about this,
and Roby said,
Hell, I don't know, that's for you to find out.
So Johnson figured out what to do.
You called the Library of Congress.
They had all the forms necessary for copyright registration, and whenever they didn't have something, they would give her the details of the organisation that did.
She got every copyright and record-related form from the Library of Congress, BMI, and other organisations, and looked over them all.
Everything that looked relevant, she filled out.
Everything that didn't, she kept in case it was useful later, in a file labelled it could be in here.
here. Johnson ran the record label, she ran the publishing company, and she ran and owned the
booking agency. The booking agency started the model that companies like Motown would later use,
cleaning the act up, giving them lessons in performance, buying them clothes and cars, giving them
spending money. She lost money on all the artists that were recording for Roby's labels,
where the performances turned into a lost leader for the record labels,
but she made the money back on artists like B.B. King,
or E.kentina Turner, who just turned up and did their job,
and didn't have to be groomed by the Johnson Robey operation.
She never got the credit, because she was a black woman,
while Don Robey was a man,
but Evelyn Johnson pretty much single-handedly built up the careers
of every black artist in Texas, Tennessee, Mississippi or California,
during the early part of the 1950s.
From this point on, Duke became part of the Don Roby Empire,
run by Evelyn Johnson.
For a while, Dave Mattis was a silent partner,
but when he noticed he was getting neither money nor a say,
he went to see Roby to complain.
Roby pulled a gun on Mattis,
and bought out Mattis for a tiny fraction of what his share of the record company was actually worth.
Once Robey had bought Duke, Ace started working with Johnny Otis,
as many of the other Duke and Peacock artists did,
and his records from then on were recorded in Houston,
usually with the Johnny Otis band, and with Otis producing,
though sometimes Ace's own touring band would play on the records instead.
ACE's formula owed a lot to Charles Brown's sophisticated West Coast blues.
For those who haven't heard the Patreon-only bonus Christmas episode of this podcast,
Brown was the missing link between the styles of Nat King Cole and Ray Charles,
and his smooth lounge blues was an important precursor to a lot of the more laid-back kinds of soul music.
Here's a clip of Merry Christmas Baby by Johnny Moore's Three Blaze.
with brown-on-lead vocals so you can see what I mean about the resemblance.
Merry Christmas, baby!
You should you treat me now.
Merry Christmas, baby.
You should it treat me night.
Gave me a diamond ring for Christmas.
Now I'm living in paradise.
There is a very important point to be made here.
and that is that Johnny Ace's music was extremely popular with a black audience.
He didn't get a white audience until after his death,
and that audience was largely only interested in one record,
pledging my love.
It's important to point this out,
because for much of the time after his death,
his music was dismissed by white music critics,
precisely because it didn't fit their ideas of what black music was,
and they assumed he was trying to appeal to a white audience.
In fact, there's a derogatory term for the smooth-sounding blues singers,
which I won't repeat here,
but which implies that they were white on the inside.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
As Johnny Otis said,
Ace was too smooth for the white critics and white writers,
a long time. He pointed out that this was white arrogance, suggesting that black people are not the
best judge of what was the best art to come out of the community, but the white writers are.
Otis's point, which I agree with, was that, in his words, you have to take your cue from the
people of the community. They know better than you what they like and what is black artistry.
His music, yearning ballads about unrequited love, sung in a smooth, mellow voice,
didn't fit with white preconceptions about the proper music that black men should be making,
and so for decades his work was more or less airbrushed out of history.
It was inconvenient for the white myth-makers to have a black man playing sophisticated music.
But that music was hugely popular among black audiences.
The clock, for example, went to number one on the R&B chart and stayed on the chart from June through October 1953.
His follow-ups to the clock weren't as big, and there was a sign he was entering diminishing.
returns, but his records stayed on the charts for longer than most, and as a result, his
releases were also less frequent. Don Roby stockpiled his recordings, putting out just one single
every six months, waiting for the previous single to fall off the chart before releasing
the next one. This stockpiling would prove very lucrative for him, because while Ace was a sophisticated
performer, he lived a less sophisticated life. One of his hobbies was to drive at top speed
while drunk and shoot the zeros out of road signs. With a lifestyle like that, it is probably not
all that surprising that Ace didn't live to a ripe old age, but the story of his death is still one that
might be shocking or upsetting, and one that is still sad, even though it was probably inevitable.
The last song Johnny Ace played live was Yes Baby, a duet with Big Mama Thornton, who had been
his regular touring partner for quite a while. The two would tour together, and Thornton would be
backed by Ace's band, with another pianist. Ace would take over from the pianist for his own set,
and then the two of them would duet together.
As you can hear, that wasn't one of his mellow ballads.
Ace's live shows were a big draw.
Evelyn Johnson said, on several occasions,
that Ace was so popular that she used his popularity to make deals on less popular act.
If you wanted to book Johnny Ace, you had to book BB King or Bobby Blue Bland as well,
and those acts built their own followings through playing those gigs,
often on the same bill as Ace and Big Mama Thornton.
By all accounts, the show in Houston on Christmas Day was a massively enjoyable one,
right up until the point that it very suddenly wasn't.
The rumour that went round in the days after his death was that,
that he was killed playing Russian roulette.
That's still what most people who talk about him think happened.
This would have been a tragic way to go,
but at least he would have known the possible consequences,
and you have to think that no one is going to play Russian roulette
unless they have some sort of death wish.
And there were other rumours that went around.
One that persists to this day,
and that I inadvertently repeated in episode 10,
is that that Lester was present.
She wasn't as far as I can tell.
And the darkest rumours, repeated by people who like to sensationalise things,
claim that it was a hit from Don Robey,
that Ace was planning on changing record labels.
But that's not what actually happened.
What happened is much more upsetting, and even more pointlessly tragic.
Johnny Ace was backstage in Houston with a bunch of people,
Big Mama Thornton
and the band's bass player
Curtis Tillman were there
as were Ace's girlfriend
and some other people
It was Christmas Day
They were killing time between sets
And they'd been drinking
Ace was waving a gun around
And making people nervous
He was in a bad mood
Because he had a toothache
And he was feeling tired and annoyed
Accounts very slightly
As to what happened next
but Big Mama Thorntons was given as a legal deposition
only a couple of hours after his death
before exaggeration set in.
Johnny was pointing this pistol at Mary Carter and Joe Hamilton.
He was kind of waving it around.
I asked Johnny to let me see the gun.
He gave it to me
and when I turned the chamber
a 22 cow bullet fell out in my hand.
Johnny told me to put it back in
where it wouldn't fall out.
I put it back and gave it to him.
I told him not to snap it to nobody.
After he got the pistol back,
Johnny pointed the pistol at Mary Carter and pulled the trigger.
It snapped.
Olivia was still sitting on his lap.
I told Johnny again, not to snap the pistol at anybody.
Johnny then put the pistol to Olivia's head and pulled the trigger.
It snapped.
Johnny said, I'll show you that it won't shoot.
He held the pistol up and looked at it first and then put it to his head.
I started towards the door and heard the pistol go off.
I turned around and saw Johnny falling to the floor.
I saw that he was shot and I run on stage and told the people in the band about it.
According to Evelyn Johnson,
Ace's hair stood on end from the shock
and he died with a smoky little grin on his face
and his expression was,
What did I say?
He was only 25,
and he'd been the most successful rhythm and blues singer of the previous year.
When Cashbox, the trade paper,
pulled disc jockeys in December 1954
to find out who the most played artist of 1954 had been,
Ace was the clear favourite.
Shortly after his death, Duke Records
announced that he had had three records,
top one and three quarter million sales the previous year.
That is, to put it bluntly, a ludicrous amount.
Almost nothing sold that much,
and one is tempted to believe that Duke was slightly manipulating the figures.
But that it's at all plausible,
says a lot about how popular Johnny Ace was at the time.
After Ace's death,
pledging my love instantly became his biggest hit.
To keep love and to hold
Making you happy is my desire to
Keeping you is my goal
I'll forever love you
The rest of my day
I'll never part from you
And you're loving
Pledging my love is credited to Fats Washington
The lyricist behind many of B.B. King's song
from this period, and Don Roby as songwriters.
But it's safe to say that Ace himself wrote the music, with Roby taking the credit.
Roby apparently never wrote a song in his life, but you wouldn't believe it from the songwriting
credits of any record that was put out by Duke or Peacock Records.
There, Don Roby, or his pseudonym Diedrich Malone, would appear to be one of the most prolific
songwriters of all time.
writing in a whole variety of different styles.
Everything from Love of Jesus to Baby Watch Your Pants Doing Wet.
In total, he's credited as writer for 1,200 different songs.
Pledging My Love was released only days before Ace's death,
and the initial expectation was that it would follow the diminishing returns
that had set in since the clock, becoming a modest but not overwhelming hit.
Instead, it became a massive smash hit and his biggest record ever, and it gained him a whole new fan base.
White teenagers, who had previously not been buying his records in any large numbers.
Black people in the 50s mostly still bought 78s, because they tended to be poorer, and so not buying new high-fi equipment when they could still use their old ones.
45s in the R&B market were mostly for Duke boxes.
But for the first time ever, the pressing plant that dealt with Duke's records
couldn't keep up with the demand for 45s.
So much so that the record was held back on the Duke Box charts
because the label couldn't service the demand.
The records were being bought by young white teenagers
instead of his previous older black audiences,
although that other audience still bought the record.
Ace's death came at a crucial transition point
for the acceptance of rhythm and blues among white record buyers,
and pledging my love acted as a catalyst.
Until a couple of years earlier,
songs owned by ASCAP,
the Performing Rights Society that dealt only with
respectable composers for the Tin Parali publishing houses,
made up about eight times as many hits as songs owned by BMI,
who dealt with the blues and hillbilly musicians.
But in early 1955,
eight of the ten biggest hits were BMI songs.
Pledging My Love came at precisely the right moment
to pick up on that new wave.
There were white cover versions of the record,
but people wanted the original,
and Johnny Ace's version made the pop top 20.
What none of this did was give Ace's family any money.
Don Roby told them, after Ace's death, that Ace owed him money rather than the other way around.
And Ace and his family didn't receive even the songwriting royalties Ace was owed for the few songs he was credited with.
While Roby was registered with BMI and registered the songs with them,
he had a policy of keeping his artists as ignorant as possible of this.
business side of things, and so he didn't let Ace know that Ace would also have to register
with BMI to receive any money. Because of this, his widow didn't even know that BMI existed until
James Salem, Ace's biographer, told her in the mid-90s, and it was only then that she started
to get some of the songwriting royalties she and her children had been entitled to for 40-plus years'
worth of sales and radio play.
Roby wasn't the only one making money from Ace.
Cash in tribute records were released,
including two separate ones by Johnny Moore's Blazers,
and records by Johnny Fuller,
Veneta Dilard, The Five Wings and the Rovers.
All of these records were incredibly tasteless,
usually combining a bunch of quotes from Ace's lyrics
to provide his last letter,
or a letter from heaven or similar,
and backing them with backing tracks
that were as close as possible
to the one's ace used.
This is a typical example.
Why Johnny Y by Linda Hayes
with Johnny Moore's Blazers.
And after Don Robey
had completely scraped the barrel
of unreleased ACE recordings,
he tried to sign
Johnny Ace's brother,
St. Clair Alexander.
to a record deal, but eventually decided that Alexander wasn't quite good enough,
though Alexander would spend the next few decades performing a tribute show to his brother,
which many people thought was quite decent.
Instead, Roeby persuaded a blues singer named Jimmy Lee Land
to perform as Buddy Ace, in the hope of milking it some more,
and put out press releases claiming that Buddy was Johnny Ace's brother.
Buddy Ace's first record was released simultaneously
with the last tracks from Johnny that were in the vault,
putting out adverts talking about
the last record on the immortal Johnny Ace
to complete your collection
and the first record on the versatile Buddy Ace
to start your collection.
Buddy Ace actually made some very strong records
but he didn't really sound much like Johnny.
Buddy in this well I do.
Now tell me what can I do
to make you love you true?
What can I do to prove that I love you?
Because I'm going to make you love you for that thing is well I do.
Buddy Ace did not duplicate Johnny's success,
though he continued as a moderately successful performer until the day he died.
which was, rather eerily, while performing in Texas 40 years to the day after Johnny A. stayed.
But Roby wanted to milk the catalogue and tried in 1957 to resuscitate the career of his dead star
by getting the Jordanaires, famous for backing Elvis Presley, to overdub new backing vocals on Ace's hits.
This musical
I'll forever love you
The rest of my day
This musical grave robbing
was not successful
And all it did was sour Johnny Otis
on Roby
As Roby had agreed
that Otis's productions
Would remain untouched
Even 40 years afterwards
And 20 years after Roby's death
He would still infuriate Otis
But probably the most well known
of all the posthumous releases to do with Johnny Ace came in 1983,
when Paul Simon wrote and recorded the late great Johnny Ace,
a song which linked Ace with two other Johns who died of gunshot wounds.
Lennon and Kennedy.
Well, I really wasn't such a Johnny Ace fan,
but I felt bad all the same.
So I stepped away for his photograph,
and I waited till it came.
came all away from Texas with a sad and simple fade and they signed it on the bottom from the late great johnny ace
that's from simon's hearts and bones an album that was steeped in nostalgia for the music of the period when rhythm and blues was just starting to turn into rock and roll the period defined by the late great johnny ace
A history of rock music and 500 songs is written produced and performed by Andrew Hickey.
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and links to other materials, including a mixed cloud stream of all songs excerpted in this episode.
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