Bandleader and producer Johnny Otis, who launched and then nurtured
the careers of many of R&B's greatest singers, died Tuesday at his
home near Los Angeles. He was 90.
Otis
started out in the 1940s, leading a big band that scored a hit with its
1945 jazz recording "Harlem Nocturne." That group, like many big bands,
soon broke up for financial reasons. After that, Otis organized a
smaller unit, which played a hybrid of swing and blues that became known
as Rhythm & Blues. Otis' Rhythm & Blues Caravan became the
first R&B touring road show. Through his nightclub, his talent shows
and his road show, Otis discovered singers such as Etta James, Little
Esther, Jackie Wilson, Big Mama Thornton and Hank Ballard.
Otis
was also an accomplished musician who sang several hits, including
"Willie and the Hand Jive," which made it to the Top 10 rock 'n' roll
chart in 1958. But he spent more time helping singers establish their
own voices and develop their own hits.
In a 1989 Fresh Air
interview, Otis talked with Terry Gross about touring as a musician
with some of the biggest black acts of the 1940s and '50s, including
Louis Jordan and Bill Kenny and The Ink Spots.
"Both
of these people were so popular at the time that there was the same
feeling that you feel when the curtain opens — that great anticipation,"
he said. "We were lucky enough to be the band."
Many audiences assumed Otis, who was a white Greek-American, was
actually a light-skinned black man. While touring in the South, he said
he never disabused anyone of that notion.
"In
those days, many of the places we played — had they suspected I was
white, we would have been arrested," he says. "Your life was on the
line. When our bus would cross the Mason-Dixon line, a pall would fall
over the entire show. Because we knew we were down there where we had
problems."
Otis recalled one incident, when he was traveling with the singer
Little Esther, now known as Esther Phillips. Phillips, who was only 13,
stopped to use a restroom at a gas station.
"I
looked up, and there's a guy with a gun in my belly, and he's shaking
and he's all excited because the little black girl went to the white
woman's bathroom," he said. "And I thought to myself, 'Any death but
this.' But she came out and we went on down the road. But those things
happened to us all the time."