As an adult, he had one release,
Somewhere to Lay My Head, issued
on Chicago's
Vee Jay Records label. In the 1950s, he
was a member of the gospel group
Highway QCs, which
included a young
Sam Cooke. Johnnie Taylor's singing
then was strikingly close to that of Sam Cooke, and he was hired to take
Cooke's place in the gospel group, the
Soul Stirrers,
in 1957 when
Cooke left. A few years later, after Cooke
had established his independent
SAR Records, Taylor
signed on as one of the label's first acts and recorded
Rome Wasn't
Built In A Day in 1962. However,
SAR Records
closed down after
Sam Cooke's death in 1964.
Johnnie Taylor had three singles issued on
SAR.
He then moved onto the
Derby record label in Los
Angeles.
Dance What You Wanna was his first single of three
issued on the label.
In 1969
Dave Godin issued an LP on his UK
Soul
City record label
The Roots Of Johnnie Taylor,
which included his early singles from
SAR and
Derby records.
In 1966,
Johnnie Taylor moved to
Stax Records
in Memphis, Tennessee. His first recording
I Had A Dream
hit the R&B chart. It was backed by the dance track
Changes,
which went on to become a Northern soul favorite
. In all he had
eight 45's released on Blue Stax's. Including
Ain't That Lovin You
(For More Reasons Than One) in 1967
. The same year his
first LP
Wanted One Soul Singer was issued. Twelve
tracks from his singles with Stax, apart from one
Blues In The Night.
A midtempo popular blues song from around 1940 used in a film of the
same name.
Atlantic issued an EP of four tracks, only
in France titled
Blues In The Night. Tracks were, Blues
In The Night,
Outside Love, Toe Hold and I Had A Dream.
In 1968
Stax Records had a new owner a new logo and a
new yellow label.
Johnnie Taylor was to have his first
major hit with
Who's Making Love in September
1968
reaching No 1 in the R&B Chart. He also had No1's with
Jody's Got
Your Girl and Gone 1970 I Believe in You (You
Believe in Me) 1973, sold in excess of one
million copies, and was awarded gold disc status by the R.I.A.A. in
October 1973
. He recorded several albums he was dubbed
The Philosopher of Soul. He had many other minor
hits and continued to record (over 30 singles) until 1975 when the label
closed.
Johnnie Taylor moved to
Columbia Records,
where he recorded his biggest success with the producer
Don
Davis,
Disco Lady, in 1976. It spent four weeks at No
1 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart. Johnnie
Tylor recorded several more successful albums and R&B single hits with
Davis at
Columbia Records until 1982.
Johnnie Taylor had a short stay at a small independent
label,
Beverly Glen Records in Los Angeles.
What
About My Love was his first single released in 1982, five more
records were to follow.
His final record label was
Malaco Records in Jackson,
Mississippi. In 1984
Tommy Couch invited
Taylor
to become
Malaco’s new flagship artist. He went on to
record ten albums for the label in the next 16 years. In 1996,
Johnnie Taylor's eighth album for
Malaco,
Good Love!, reached number one on the
Billboard
Top Blues Albums chart.
Johnnie Taylor was given a
Pioneer
Award by the Rhythm and Blues Foundation in 1999.
Taylor
was also a three-time
Grammy Award nominee.
Johnnie Harrison Taylor died of a heart attack at
Charlton Methodist Hospital in Dallas, Texas, on May 31, 2000, he was 66
years old.
CD's

Wanted One Soul Singer Atlantic 7567-82253-2 USA |

Chronicle: The 20 Greatest Hits Stax CDSXE 084 USA |

Johnnie Taylor Good Love Malaco CDMAL7480 USA |