SPM Poster Memorabilia

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A recent Simply Precious Music poster of memorable impact - for the online archives - click it to view the fullsize image.

Interview with TJ Johnson about new album

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Miscarriage of Justice may be TJ’s first complete album, but it’s not his first record release.

Pretty Lady (1982), a Chic inspired funky disco number with a driving bass line, received great critical acclaim and rave reviews from some of the top DJs of the time including Greg Edwards.

Firefly (1989) is further proof of TJ’s versatility. This up-tempo dance track, tinged with the funky undercurrent that is present in the majority of TJ’s music was very well received by the clubs of the time.

The Interview

Here’s a bit more background on the main man behind Miscarriage of Justice…

SPM: How and when did you first get involved with music?

TJJ: It all started when I heard my first Beatles song in the Caribbean when I was 11 years old. The song was ‘I Wanna Hold Your Hand’. I just thought that was the best thing I had ever heard, and I have been a massive Beatles fan ever since… Up until that point the only type of music I had ever been exposed to was calypso and reggae. From then on I was hooked on music.

SPM: What made you take up the guitar?

TJJ: Well my first love was really the bass. Paul McCartney in the Beatles was the man as far as I was concerned. I used to wonder to myself, ‘What is he doing?’ ‘How does he know to do that?’ Bass guitars weren’t exactly close to hand in the Caribbean, so I used the next best thing - the acoustic guitar that was always lying around - to try and work out those bass lines! Soon though, I started to learn to play the guitar. As I got older and came over to England I knew that music was all I wanted to do.

SPM: When did you join your first band?

TJJ: I joined my first band in 1969, Funky People. The music policy was as the name suggests - funky! In those days if you were in a band you often got work abroad in Europe and I couldn’t wait to get away. We went to Germany straight away to do a 2 month tour. Funky People became Everyday People (just with a different lead vocalist) and lasted 2 years.

SPM: What happened after that?

TJJ: From then on, I continued to work in numerous bands during the early seventies. Other bands I worked in included the best black progressive rock band in England at the time called Demon Fuzz. Then I joined a great Afro Rock band in England called Assagai. That band folded again due to lack of opportunities for that kind of music. That was quite common - a lot of English black bands did not get the support they needed in this country. You had to do pop.

SPM: So did you go down that road?

TJJ: As it happens, I did! After Assagai, I began touring with a pop star at the time by the name of Bruce Ruffin for a couple of years - he had a couple of top ten hits, so we did top of the Pops a few times and toured around Europe.

I joined Spartacus in 1976. Spartacus R was the bass player from Osibisa. We had great fun but made no headway - same problem that Assagai faced- and after that I joined Jabba a great south London band who played everything like Soul, blues, funk, reggae I learned a lot from them - that you don’t have to pigeon hole yourself into any one musical category. Since then, I’ve never done that. After that I joined Jesse Green, who had a big hit called Flip in the 70s.

Then the 80s came and I found another pop star to work with. I went to Germany to work with Precious Wilson, who was very big over there at the time. Precious Wilson was the lead singer with a band called ‘Eruption’, who was produced by Frank Farian (producer of Boney M). After that came to an end, I went back to my musical roots and joined a soca band called ‘Friends’. We toured all over Great Britain for about four years.

SPM: >You’ve clearly worked with a wide range of artists. When did you start doing your own stuff?

TJJ: Well I’d been writing and recording my own songs since the mid seventies. I started releasing a few singles under my own name, including with “Pretty Lady” in 1982 and “Firefly” (1989). They got a lot of radio plays, but were not big hits. One radio show that they did feature regularly on was called ‘Soul Spectrum’, on London’s Capital Radio. I’ve always been grateful to Greg Edwards for his support.

SPM: Did you continue playing live music?

TJJ: Of course! Performing is my lifeblood. Into the 90s, I really got into playing blues. Blues and Jazz was starting to get more and more popular, and this was helped by things such as the launch of Jazz FM and the release of the Robert Johnson back catalogue. I remember buying this and getting blown away.

In the early nineties I joined a blues band called station House. This band was put together by “Bob” the manager of ‘Bob’s Goodtime Blues’ at the Station Tavern in Latimer Road because he wanted a black blues band to play at his pub. We used to play there every Sunday with different vocalists. The singer Taka Boom, sister of Chaka Khan, used to sing with us regularly and even Chaka herself came and sang with us a few times. The FBI singer, Root Jackson, joined us a couple of years later and we still play at venues and blues festivals across the country.

SPM: So, tell us a bit about the album then…

TJJ: My latest project is Miscarriage of Justice. This is the result of two years of hard work, recording and writing and is a very personal showcase of my music, my influences and my experience. I hope you enjoy it.

The album mainly came about because of Shawn Marcellin, the keyboardist in MOFJ. I’ve known Shawn for many years. I was driving to a gig one day when Shawn called up and asked me if I wanted to do an album at his studio and to cut a long story short I agreed.

SPM: What do you hope to achieve with this album?

TJJ: Well, let’s see… we hope to find a cure for cancer, AIDS, crack world poverty, rid the world of dictatorships, illiteracy, greed, selfishness, hypocrisy, hate, stupidity, backwardness…

Good luck, TJ - Miscarriage of Justice is an album destined to change the world, so why not everything in it?

Simply Precious World Music Press Release

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Now there’s something new, creative and productive for world music, world musicians and world music cultures: www.simplypreciousmusic.com

Simply Precious Music is dedicated to bringing you simply the best World music World artists and World bands on the Planet!

Simply Precious Music features:

  • World Music artists

  • Jazz, Blues, Hip Hop, R&B, Funk, Reggae, Smap, Afro Fusion, Zouk & more

    • Filmed for a world wide TV Audiences and Web broadcasted for global internet users

SPM at the St Moritz Club Soho

You can see, hear and meet Simply Precious Music World Music artists

Every Other Wednesday

at

The St Moritz Club *
*
159 Wardour Street

Soho
London W1

Tel: 0207 437 0525

Every Wednesday 9.00 pm - 3.00 am

Entrance *Free *before 11pm, £5.00 after 11.00 pm

These Wednesday St Moritz gigs are Simply the best way to spend your Precious time
Where you get some Simply Precious Live World Music
not to mention some Simply Precious Swiss wine

These special Wednesday nights at the St Moritz Club in Soho will showcase Simply Precious World Music artists playing live genre Jazz, Reggae, Blues, Hip Hop, R&B, Funk, Smap, Afro Fusion, Zouk & more

Its a great opportunity to hear simply the best live world music in the cool ambiance of the St Moritz Club, where you can spoil yourself first with some fondue and other amazing Swiss food in the famous St Moritz Restaurant upstairs


About SPM

Simply Precious Music [SPM] is a new-era music management & development enterprise dedicated to optimising the creativity and career curves of our artists, offering stellar horizons on available resources for music lovers & bringing our sponsors & associates the unique advantages of connecting with our young & rapidly expanding fan/audience base.

The SPM site as a whole will serve as an online community access point for artists, music lovers, fans and commercial/ music industry service providers. It will additionally act as a platform for linking and explaining diverse cultural heritages, committed to encouraging multi-discipline excellence and aiding community cohesion.

Although our primary target market is Afro & World Music we will also be featuring other genres including Hip Hop, R&B, Jazz, Blues and other hot and cool music styles.

We aim to provide the best online experience for all our artists and users and it will be our primary objective to encourage them to post their artistic work - mp3 tracks and videos - for digital distribution on our web-site

How we plan to do it:

  • Live web broadcasting of performances & studio sessions

  • Artists’ Appearance/Events Diary

  • Digital distribution of artists’ musical & creative material

  • Online Press Pack Creation facility

  • Online Artists’ Booking Facility

  • Creative Management & Development of our Artists’ careers

  • Collection & Provision of most relevant Music Industry information & trends

  • Global special membership discounts (insurance, musical equipment purchases etc)

And the outcome:?

  1. Increased exposure to local and global audiences for artists, greater knowledge of what’s available for music lovers, accessibility of our members to our sponsors and partners.

  2. To promote an understanding of Simply Precious Music services, to evangelise and get sign-ups for our Loyalty Programme within the music industry.

  3. To take the music industry to the next level, especially for the huge pool of new and creative music talent & resources in Africa, by increasing their control over their creativity and aiding their personal and financial development.

  4. To work with companies on an individual basis to create closely-tailored packages which bring the best, most wanted results from what in the end is a join-venture partnership with people who share the same vision and know which way the wind’s blowing.

Contact

For any information at all, whether from artists, potential partners or just people who want to be part of something positive, please contact:

Omer Kokou-Tchri (Project Director)

Tel: + 44 (0) 7883356359

omer@simplypreciousmusic.com


*Never forget: Music is a far more valuable commodity than oil or gold or uranium - it’s time to make the most of it. *

The Simply Precious Music Video TV site is now live.

Check it out at here

There’s just a smattering of vids from Renya and Modeste, with some shot against great settings in Togo and Madagascar.

The music is naturally totally in the zone. Renya’s Gake song is just awesomely beautiful.

Someone said: from tiny acorns great oaks grow. Well, that’s how its going to be with SPMTV.

You can also reach SPMTV via top navigation on the world-famous SPM Home Page

BTW, all the videos can be played full screen - for those who don’t know, just click the button like a skew-whiff CND badge (an arrow pointing north north east) on the player controls.

We’ll let you know as new vids are added, of which there are many on the way, Omer says.

Okay, its all very raw and there are so many things to add and tune, but at the end of the day this quiet launch of the SPM News Blog a first small step in a giant leap of faith - the Simply Precious World Music Blog Network is coming! And this is like its first green little shoot.

The greatest ever online conversation about all that’s going on in the amazing World Music world of today is starting here shortly - you won’t want to miss it, so keep on watching

Meanwhile, hallo and welcome to the SPM News blog - there’s gonna be plenty here to keep you interested until our big brother bursts on to the scene.

The real thing is - let us know what you want, what you want to hear, what you want to watch, where you want to go listen to all the best world music going down in London/UK/Africa/everywhere and anywhere.

Use the comments to start talking to us about all the things you’d like to do and see, all the great sounds you’ve discovered, whatever…you need to get authenticated to post a comment, just so we know who you are -  its dead easy, don’t worry about it, its nothing, just do it

Let’s begin the World Music conversation now, now that we all at last have the chance, the place to do it, and the time being right.