(Text written by RoseMary Diaz.) Wayne Wesley Johnson is a name synonymous with creative innovation and artistic
excellence.
For more than four decades Johnson has dedicated his personal vision to
music, starting out as a jazz-style flat picker, exploring various styles and
genres, and eventually developing his own unique signature sound. Drawing from
musical principles refined by the celebrated blues and jazz legends of past and
present, as well as from the time-honored melodies and spirited rhythms of classical
Old World flamenco, Johnson has inspired the fusion of these very different forms of
sonic expression to create a high-energy hybrid of sound and tempo that has come to
be known as Jazzamenco, also referred to as nuevo flamenco or rumba flamenca.
Johnson’s affinity with music was evident early in his life. In 1959, at the age of
nine, he began studying guitar with renowned jazz artist Sandy DeVito, and remained
under his instruction for almost a decade. Shortly after the commencement of these
studies, Johnson founded The Yellow Jackets, a three-member band inspired by the
music of Les Paul, Duane Eddy and The Ventures. Performing their own original songs,
as well as top 40 and standard tunes, the group enjoyed notable success playing
local venues throughout New England and the Mid-Atlantic states, and stayed together
until 1968. The following year Johnson formed a new group, Sons and Lovers, which
featured a five-piece brass section and female vocals, and of course the diverse
range of acoustics and percussion that came to characterize the band’s personality.
Covering the college and fraternity circuits throughout Johnson’s home state of New
Jersey, the band thrived for several years, eventually growing to include 11
members. With a musical repertoire that included covers of Sly and the Family Stone,
Three Dog Night, Blood Sweat and Tears, Chicago and Santana, Sons and Lovers
appealed not only to the groove-seeking casual listener, but to the socially
conscious audience of the era as well. During this time Johnson also played guitar
and drums in New Jersey’s Fairleigh Dickinson University-Madison Campus’ jazz and
concert bands, and studied with celebrated guitar greats Gary Keller, Eddie Berg and
Vic Cenicola, whose innovative musical styles were influential in Johnson’s early
artistic development.
Shortly after college graduation, Johnson took a temporary though extended detour
from his musical career to pursue the less artistic though equally demanding
profession of the industrial scale business. He joined his family’s New Jersey-based
business and worked his way up through the ranks of floor sweeper, mechanic, truck
driver, salesman and marketing VP, and eventually to CEO. He later sold his interest
in the business to his brother and went on to become the CEO of a
scale-manufacturing firm located in Lancaster, PA., where he served for 15 years.
The firm was eventually sold to a foreign company and, as is typical in corporate
restructuring, Johnson soon found himself out of a job. But time spent away from the
melodic hums of the guitar and the precise punctuation of percussion did not dampen
the artist’s passion for making music, and his dream of returning to the genre on a
more regular basis remained intact.
After almost two decades of high-pressure, production-oriented bottom lines, Johnson
decided to make his dream a reality. Trading the urban metropolis for the less
hectic foothills of the Sangre de Cristo’s, Johnson has in recent years become an
integral part of Santa Fe’s music scene. Working both as a solo artist as well as
with famed classical/flamenco guitarist Ruben Romero, with whom he has collaborated
extensively for several years, Johnson has mastered the complex intricacies of
Spanish guitar and refined his own unique style. Together, the duo produced the
exceptionally well-received collection, Hypnotic Safari, running just over 56
minutes. An emotion-filled musical journey of 11 tracks, ranging from the
one-and-a-half minute Short Stories to the nearly nineteen minute extended version
of the title song, the CD is a showcase of pure melodic delight and artistic
perfection. The arrangements, utilizing over a dozen individual guitars including
Johnson’s own custom designed “Fla-quinto” tm (a unique double necked flamenco
guitar and requinto to add distinctive new sounds to their recordings), not only
reveal the individual styles of both artists, but also demonstrate how well their
different approaches to the genre come together to create an entirely new sound:
infused with innovative translations of a classical art form, the collaborations of
Johnson and Romero are both inspired and inspiring, and express both personal vision
and mastery of the universal language of music.
Johnson’s 2003 solo release, Canciones de Alma (Songs from the Soul), is an
impressive compilation of fourteen titles performed with several guest artists
including Nokie Edwards, Tom Doyle and Gao Hong. Rich in the familiar rhythms of
rumba and classic, tradition-steeped flamenco, arrangements include the impassioned
title track, and the equally so, Fire of the Gypsy, both running just over
two-and-a-half minutes. Lively renditions of Walk Don’t Run and Pipeline (The
Ventures), featuring both electric and nylon string flamenco guitar, offer a splash
of summer and surf, while Rumba Oriental incorporates the rare sound of the Chinese
pipa, accompanied by Bolivian pan flute. Combining traditional thumb-, finger- and
flat-picking styles with a variety of genres, including jazz, world beat and new
age, the CD is a feast for the ears.
The artist’s long and varied musical career has produced some of the most innovative
world-class guitar compositions ever set on disk. Having shared the stage with some
of the biggest talents in the business, among them BB King, Lou Pallo, Jon Paris,
Chet Atkins, Thom Bresh, Scotty Moore, Tommy Emmanuel, Nokie Edwards, Antonio
Mendoza, George Benson, Howard Roberts, Larry Carlton, Al Caiola, Edgar Cruz, and
the legendary Les Paul, who recruited Johnson’s refined if little-known drumming
talents for his 1979-80 tour, Johnson’s history of keeping excellent company is
reflective of his uncompromised skill at arranging notes and tempos into expressions
of the heart and soul.
Johnson’s contributions to his genre have earned him a number of honors and awards,
including the Guitars for Life Award in 2001, the Soave Guitar Festival plaque
(Italy), also in 2001, in recognition of his promotion of American music, and, most
recently, honorary membership in the Association of Fingerstyle Guitarists (AFG). In
1999, he placed as runner-up in the dance category of the John Lennon Songwriters
Contest, winning kudos for his beautiful Baile de la Paloma (Dance of the Dove), a
four-and-a-half minute celebration of jazzamenco’s finest hour and Johnson’s musical
genius.
With vast and varied and seemingly endless creative resource, Johnson has performed
throughout the United States, most recently at the AFG convention in Anaheim, CA.
and at the Chet Atkins Appreciation Society’s annual celebration in Nashville and
the Nokie Festival in Eugene, Oregon, as well as in China, Israel, Scandinavia,
South America, Europe, Canada and Mexico. With CD sales-of music produced on his own
label (Wannadu Productions) numbering over 70,000 in just a few years, Johnson is
undoubtedly one of today’s premiere guitar artists. Playing some of Santa Fe’s and
northern New Mexico’s most popular nightlife stages, galleries, restaurants and
hotels, Johnson also avails himself to a variety of other venues, including private
parties, weddings and trade shows.
Residing just outside of Santa Fe with his fiancé, business partner and muse, Freda
Ruiz, for whom he wrote Un poco de Elfida (A Bit of Freda, Hypnotic Safari), Johnson
is one of the City Different’s most important musical talents whose unique sound has
become woven into the fabric of its rich musical tapestry.