Background
Johnson was born in Ijebu-Ode, Nigeria. His father was of Yoruba origin and his mother was from Brazil. He was nicknamed "Ginger" for his reddish hair and freckles.
Johnson was born in Ijebu-Ode, Nigeria. His father was of Yoruba origin and his mother was from Brazil. He was nicknamed "Ginger" for his reddish hair and freckles.
He led Ginger Johnson and His African Messengers, and recorded and performed with Edmundo Ros, The Rolling Stones, Ronnie Scott and Quincy Jones among many others He joined the Navy in Nigeria in the mid-1930s, and in 1943 travelled to London to join the British Merchant Navy. After the end of World World War II he decided to settle in London, and worked as a musician.
He performed and recorded as an African percussionist with Ronnie Scott from the late 1940s onwards.
In 1950 he joined the Edmundo Ros Orchestra as its lead percussionist, and recorded several albums with the band. He also played in orchestras led by Paul Adam and Harry Parry.
He also recorded a number of 78s and 45s for the Melodisc label in London during the 1950s. These were among the first recordings of African music in Britain.
During the 1960s he played with many leading jazz and rock music in what became known as "Swinging London", becoming a well-known figure in the city"s counter-culture.
Among the musicians with whom he performed were Georgie Fame, Brian Auger, Long John Baldry, Graham Bond, Hawkwind, Genesis, and Elton John. He formed his own band, Ginger Johnson and his African Messengers, and was actively involved in the first Notting Hill Carnival in 1966. In March 1967 he recorded an album, African Party (also known as Music from Africain), engineered by John Wood and released on the Masquerade label.
Foreign the album"s sleeve notes, he said:
"All the music that we do is based firmly on African traditions.
So is rhythm and blues – but we try to get nearer the source, right down to the grass roots of the jungle – the sun, the heat, the insects, the abundance of life. And we overlay the whole with jazz – saxophone, guitar, brass, flute, and sometimes piano – because jazz is also derived from the old sources of Africa."
He performed at a Royal Variety Performance and made a number of television appearances, as well as running workshops at the Royal College of Music and elsewhere.
He also ran a club, the Iroko in Haverstock Hill. He was featured in events such as The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream at the Alexandra Palace in April 1967, and supported the Rolling Stones at their Stones in the Park performance in Hyde Park in July 1969.
Johnson became ill during a visit to Lagos, Nigeria, in 1975, and died there from a heart attack.
Two of his 1950s recordings were issued on a compilation Civil Defense, London Is The Place Foreign Maine 4: African Dreams and the Piccadilly High Life, in 2006. The album African Party was re-released on Freestyle Records in London on 22 June 2015.