Found the following lurking on my computer. It's a recent scan (2004) so can only assume it was done for Dean Alger. From Jazz Journal, January 1972 (p. 22 & 39, less photo). No idea who the pseudonymous sounding writer is.
I remember Lonnie
By Verum Clapp
One friend that I miss most grievously at Christmas is the lovable old Lonnie Johnson, the jazz guitarist and blues singer, who died in Toronto in June 1970. In retrospect I find it hard to associate him with the blues. He was always laughing. The last time I saw him, a few days before the end, he was kneeling on the floor of his apartment playing with two kittens and laughing so hard he could hardly talk to me. One of the first things you noticed about Lonnie was his eyes which had the mischievous look of a boy who has been caught raiding the cookie jar. When he laughed his whole face crinkled up and you thought of Mrs. Fezziwigg who was 'one substantial smile.'
The obits said he was 'virtually broke' when he died. He had made and lost a respectable fortune during his life. But he was rich in many ways. He had the love and respect of friends all over the world. One time he turned to me and said, 'I've got six beautiful daughters and the Lord has spared me.'
Christmas was a lonely time for him. His home was in Philadelphia but he preferred to spend his Yuletides in Toronto. In '69 he had no choice as he was bed-ridden in hospital all year. He was hit by a car in March and many times during the year his life hung by a thread. He was released from the hospital on April 1st, 1970, and walked out under his own steam. His voice was strong as ever but it was clear that he would not be able to play his beloved 'gittar' again. Lonnie, of course, never gave up. He was having therapy for his fingers and had actually contracted to appear at a Blues Festival in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in August.
Lonnie had very little schooling, probably only a few months. He pronounced ghosts as 'goses', difference as 'different.' But he had a poet's feeling for words. Some of his early blues were poetry: e.g., 'cold ground is my bed, cross ties for my pillow blue skies for a blanket, and the moonlight is my spread, 'cause she's mine, all mine.' His former loves were 'used to be's'. Women were 'chicks' or 'babies' according to their age. When he inquired about my wife, who is in her sixties, he would say 'How's your baby?' In the summer of '69 I called on Lonnie one day and he was reading about Louis Armstrong who was seriously ill in New York. 'Poor Louis,' he said, shaking his head sadly, 'they say he's so thin you can read a newspaper through his butt!'
He had an educated heart. One night at a local club a man requested Lonnie to play his favourite ballad. A few minutes later Lonnie played it but the man talked right through it. At the next break the man accosted him and chided him for not playing his request. So Lonnie played it again, and a friend said, 'Lonnie, how can you be so patient with such lunks?' He said, 'Oh, I wouldn't be rude like the customers.' Among the letters he received in hospital was one from a woman in Paris to thank him for saving her life when she was nearly run over by a speeding automobile. Lonnie had forgotten .the incident. He never refused to sing for patients in hospitals or for any good cause. People often came into clubs just as Lonnie was singing his last number. Dead tired as he was he would sing an extra fifteen minutes for them. A friend found several Mother's Day cards among his effects. He bought the most beautiful and expensive cards he could find. Of course they weren't mailed as his mother died long since.
Lonnie suffered greatly from the hands of well meaning but insensitive writers. Their mouldy fig approach to the blues infuriated him. They often romanticized the blues singer by picturing him as old, blind, toothless, ignorant, mule skinner or cotton-picker Lonnie was sophisticated, at home in any city in the world, and young in everything but years. One writer described him as a 'tall, thin, dark man, clumsy, often broody and unhappy.' Actually, he was of medium height and weighed 165 pounds. He loved to walk and often did five miles in an afternoon. He ate and drank sparingly. Toronto jazz writers were more discerning but he winced when they called him 'old Lonnie Johnson' or 'the eighty-year-old Johnson.'
Cripes! he'd say. 'Who's going to hire an old man of eighty?' Only a few writers such as Helen McNamara and Martin Williams noticed the pathos in his music. Everything he did, even his ballads, were saturated with the feeling of the tears in things.
He was without guile and sometimes was discriminated against and didn't know it. One time he had to look for new digs and walked the streets for days knocking on doors. 'It's funny,' he said to me, 'They all want women for roomers?no men.' I knew the opposite was true but didn't have the heart to tell him. One day I called on him to get his picture autographed. There was no response when I knocked on his door but I heard sounds inside so I opened the door. He was kneeling on the floor with his head in a pail and his arms encased in long rubber gloves which seemed to be streaked with red. 'Great Scott! ' I thought. 'He's been in a fight and is washing the blood off his head! ' I apologized for coming in and said I'd call at a more opportune time but he mumbled in the pail for me to wait. In a few minutes he raised his head, dried himself, and said that he was just dying his hair. I handed him a pen and he autographed my picture 'To a good little bad boy?from Lonnie Johnson.'
He was a Roman Catholic but he never went to church except, of course, for his funeral. When he was in hospital he named Roberta Simpson as his next of kin. This amused her as she is Jewish. The matter of who should conduct the funeral arose: a rabbi or priest? He said it made no 'different' to him. 'The kingdom of heaven,' wrote Robert Louis Stevenson, 'is of the child like, of those who are easy to please, who love and give pleasure.'
I remember Lonnie
By Verum Clapp
One friend that I miss most grievously at Christmas is the lovable old Lonnie Johnson, the jazz guitarist and blues singer, who died in Toronto in June 1970. In retrospect I find it hard to associate him with the blues. He was always laughing. The last time I saw him, a few days before the end, he was kneeling on the floor of his apartment playing with two kittens and laughing so hard he could hardly talk to me. One of the first things you noticed about Lonnie was his eyes which had the mischievous look of a boy who has been caught raiding the cookie jar. When he laughed his whole face crinkled up and you thought of Mrs. Fezziwigg who was 'one substantial smile.'
The obits said he was 'virtually broke' when he died. He had made and lost a respectable fortune during his life. But he was rich in many ways. He had the love and respect of friends all over the world. One time he turned to me and said, 'I've got six beautiful daughters and the Lord has spared me.'
Christmas was a lonely time for him. His home was in Philadelphia but he preferred to spend his Yuletides in Toronto. In '69 he had no choice as he was bed-ridden in hospital all year. He was hit by a car in March and many times during the year his life hung by a thread. He was released from the hospital on April 1st, 1970, and walked out under his own steam. His voice was strong as ever but it was clear that he would not be able to play his beloved 'gittar' again. Lonnie, of course, never gave up. He was having therapy for his fingers and had actually contracted to appear at a Blues Festival in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in August.
Lonnie had very little schooling, probably only a few months. He pronounced ghosts as 'goses', difference as 'different.' But he had a poet's feeling for words. Some of his early blues were poetry: e.g., 'cold ground is my bed, cross ties for my pillow blue skies for a blanket, and the moonlight is my spread, 'cause she's mine, all mine.' His former loves were 'used to be's'. Women were 'chicks' or 'babies' according to their age. When he inquired about my wife, who is in her sixties, he would say 'How's your baby?' In the summer of '69 I called on Lonnie one day and he was reading about Louis Armstrong who was seriously ill in New York. 'Poor Louis,' he said, shaking his head sadly, 'they say he's so thin you can read a newspaper through his butt!'
He had an educated heart. One night at a local club a man requested Lonnie to play his favourite ballad. A few minutes later Lonnie played it but the man talked right through it. At the next break the man accosted him and chided him for not playing his request. So Lonnie played it again, and a friend said, 'Lonnie, how can you be so patient with such lunks?' He said, 'Oh, I wouldn't be rude like the customers.' Among the letters he received in hospital was one from a woman in Paris to thank him for saving her life when she was nearly run over by a speeding automobile. Lonnie had forgotten .the incident. He never refused to sing for patients in hospitals or for any good cause. People often came into clubs just as Lonnie was singing his last number. Dead tired as he was he would sing an extra fifteen minutes for them. A friend found several Mother's Day cards among his effects. He bought the most beautiful and expensive cards he could find. Of course they weren't mailed as his mother died long since.
Lonnie suffered greatly from the hands of well meaning but insensitive writers. Their mouldy fig approach to the blues infuriated him. They often romanticized the blues singer by picturing him as old, blind, toothless, ignorant, mule skinner or cotton-picker Lonnie was sophisticated, at home in any city in the world, and young in everything but years. One writer described him as a 'tall, thin, dark man, clumsy, often broody and unhappy.' Actually, he was of medium height and weighed 165 pounds. He loved to walk and often did five miles in an afternoon. He ate and drank sparingly. Toronto jazz writers were more discerning but he winced when they called him 'old Lonnie Johnson' or 'the eighty-year-old Johnson.'
Cripes! he'd say. 'Who's going to hire an old man of eighty?' Only a few writers such as Helen McNamara and Martin Williams noticed the pathos in his music. Everything he did, even his ballads, were saturated with the feeling of the tears in things.
He was without guile and sometimes was discriminated against and didn't know it. One time he had to look for new digs and walked the streets for days knocking on doors. 'It's funny,' he said to me, 'They all want women for roomers?no men.' I knew the opposite was true but didn't have the heart to tell him. One day I called on him to get his picture autographed. There was no response when I knocked on his door but I heard sounds inside so I opened the door. He was kneeling on the floor with his head in a pail and his arms encased in long rubber gloves which seemed to be streaked with red. 'Great Scott! ' I thought. 'He's been in a fight and is washing the blood off his head! ' I apologized for coming in and said I'd call at a more opportune time but he mumbled in the pail for me to wait. In a few minutes he raised his head, dried himself, and said that he was just dying his hair. I handed him a pen and he autographed my picture 'To a good little bad boy?from Lonnie Johnson.'
He was a Roman Catholic but he never went to church except, of course, for his funeral. When he was in hospital he named Roberta Simpson as his next of kin. This amused her as she is Jewish. The matter of who should conduct the funeral arose: a rabbi or priest? He said it made no 'different' to him. 'The kingdom of heaven,' wrote Robert Louis Stevenson, 'is of the child like, of those who are easy to please, who love and give pleasure.'