Author Topic: Jimmy "Flim" Johnson  (Read 76475 times)

David Houck

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1875 on: March 01, 2025, 09:03:50 AM »
Just checked Baked Potato's calendar, and it is this year.

https://www.thebakedpotato.com/events-calendar/

JimmyJ

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1876 on: March 01, 2025, 11:28:31 AM »
Yep, that's an upcoming gig which should be a ton of fun.  Well spotted.

Chad, Steve and I played there at the end of January and it was supposed to be Mike Miller on guitar.  But to our dismay he passed away about week before the gig.  An out-of-the-blue departure and a big shock to us all.  Big loss.  Alex Machacek was kind enough to step in and learn Chad's tunes for that show and now they've invited us back.

Hunt actually lives in Boston (teaches at Berklee College of Music) but he's making the trip west to play with us again.  He must have a lot of airline miles saved up. :)  The three of us spent a lot of time together in Holdsworth's van - back in the day. 

Cheers,
Jimmy J

rv_bass

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1877 on: March 01, 2025, 04:13:40 PM »
Wow, a lot of good music goes down at the Baked Potato! 😊🎶🎶

hieronymous

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1878 on: March 01, 2025, 05:31:08 PM »
Love the way the players are listed:

JIMMY JOHNSON – SUPER BASS
ALEX MACHACEK – HEADLESS GUITAR
STEVE HUNT – MANY KEYS
CHAD WACKERMAN – ALL THE DRUMS

JimmyJ

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1879 on: March 01, 2025, 09:48:27 PM »
Yes, the Baked Potato is a rare place in the world.  Stop me if I've told the story before...  The club was built - and is still owned - by Don Randi who was one of the keyboard players in the group of studio musicians known as "the Wrecking Crew".  They were the goto cats in the 60's and 70's and played on about 8-billion albums.  An historic and talented bunch of musicians. 

Don wanted a place that he and his fellow studio cats could go play jazz - for fun - after doing sessions all day.  So he built this "restaurant" which serves Baked Potatoes (very good by the way) and of course got a liquor license.  Since it's technically a restaurant you don't need to be 18 years old to get in.  It's a tiny room with a legal capacity of something like 65 people.  The stage is only about a foot high - but he used a studio builder's trick and filled that 1-ft riser with sand so it does not resonate.

I visited the club in the mid-70's, years before I moved to LA.  And I will never forget hearing Lee Ritenour, Ernie Watts, Abe Laboriel and Alex Acuna right there a couple feet away from me.  And then being able to chat with those monsters on the break.  Pretty thrilling!

So from its start this club has been a place for musicians of all types to just come and play whatever they want.  It can be anything from hard blues to free jazz or anything in between.  People come to listen and the entire cover charge goes to the band.  Playing a busy weekend there with a small band can yield quite a bit of $$.

It's now run by Don's son Justin who keeps the tradition going by greatly respecting and supporting the local musicians.  He also writes the funny web page entries.

A rare place I tell you.

Jimmy J

rv_bass

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1880 on: March 02, 2025, 03:01:14 AM »
Thanks, Jimmy, a show at the Baked Potato is now on my bucket list! 😊

Great history too!

Hope you, Steve Hunt and company, or another of your collaborations have a chance to play Boston again (I saw you with Steve Gadd at Schullers a few years ago and it was great!).


David Houck

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1881 on: March 02, 2025, 07:09:31 AM »
Great story, Jimmy; thanks for sharing!  Anytime you want to share some stories of your musical experiences like this one, us amateur musicologists will be appreciative.

edwardofhuncote

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Re: Jimmy \
« Reply #1882 on: March 02, 2025, 08:08:52 AM »
Also enjoy your stories Jimmy. I was going to reply to the thread yesterday on your post about Mike Miller but just couldn't decide what tack was right. It's somehow reassuring to see how guys in your world orbit have to deal with loss of a fellow musician. Our band lost a member very suddenly last Fall too. The last show we'd played, purely by coincidence at load-out, I had commented that the core of us had played together for so long that I knew what everyone around me was going to play before they played it, and how that made the job of supporting them with a bass part, basically effortless. And a week later... one of those elements was gone. It's strange adapting, and moving on without them... but we do.

Thanks as always for your contributions here, and please keep the stories coming. Some of us like to live vicariously through your musical adventures.  :)

jazzyvee

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1883 on: March 16, 2025, 12:39:57 PM »
Hi Jimmy, do you remember this?
The sound of Alembic is medicine for the soul!
http://www.alembic.com/info/fc_ktwins.html

JimmyJ

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1884 on: March 17, 2025, 02:52:27 PM »
A cool story from a lovely chap.  I'm a Haslip fan.

I believe I only got to play with Clare Fisher once or twice and I can't remember any details.  He was a grammy-winning composer, arranger and keyboard player with a wild career.  He passed away in 2012. 

Haslip's story of our meeting must have happened in the early-80's and I can't even remember what venue that would have been.  But it's amazing that he heard the low-string and then lit the fire under Yamaha to get their act together.  Ha!  Very cool.

Thanks for the vid!
Jimmy J

bigredbass

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1885 on: March 19, 2025, 06:16:32 AM »
Years after their heyday, I collected all three iterations of the BB5000:  the OG, the second version 5000A (same bass with active EQ), then a totally different axe with the 5000A2 (that crazy wide fingerboard Yamaha adopted across their range, no doubt from guys moaning about slapping on those skinny necks), made in their then-new (and now gone) Taiwan facility, much bigger axe with TRB pickups and electronics minus the piezo bridge.

They were originally the BB3000 subdivided for five instead of four strings (TIGHT spacing like a Ric down at the nut), with an added fifth key on a bigger head, and the first real 3+2 Precision style pickup and a five-string bridge.

The 80's BB's (along with the SG2000 solid body guitar and SA2000 semi-hollow) were actually designed in America by Yamaha staffers and John Carruthers.  They are Alembic-influenced into a Fender-Shaped-Object format.  The oval fret markers, the multi-ply neckthrough, the Japanese were hugely influenced by Alembic in those days. Yamaha always used Macassar ebony fingerboards which they did not dye spy-plane-black, so they always had these delicious 'chocolate' grain stripes running down the fingerboard.  24 frets and cut away up to HERE.

For several years, I owned all three plus the Spoiler Five and the Elan Five, and while the BB's were a long time fave, it was simply not a fair comparison to the Alembics.

They were really nice basses for what they were, but like most things Yamaha in those days, unless you were a Jimmy Haslip or Nate East, for mere mortals, they were perpetually back-ordered, which modern day Yamaha seems to have finally outgrown.

For several years, I owned all three plus the Spoiler Five and the Elan Five, and while I really liked the BB's, it was not a fair comparison to the Alembics, as off-the-rack axes rarely approach an Alembic.
« Last Edit: March 19, 2025, 06:21:23 AM by bigredbass »

gearhed289

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1886 on: April 18, 2025, 10:57:27 AM »
I hope it's appropriate to post this here. A local Chicago bass player posted this great take on the Dodgy Boat solo on Facebook the other day. Tim Seisser from the band District 97. No Alembic, but he builds his own (very nice) basses. Check it out!

https://www.facebook.com/share/r/14yy6r3FAX/

JimmyJ

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1887 on: April 19, 2025, 12:35:17 PM »
Well I'm flattered that Tim spent the time to figure out that solo.  A good ear training exercise I guess.  Funny that despite having a 6th string he still did my false harmonics bit.  :D  Nice one.

And District 97 is certainly a rockin' band.  Strong work all around.

Cheers,
Jimmy J

gearhed289

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1888 on: April 22, 2025, 06:14:46 AM »
Thanks for listening Jimmy!

jazzyvee

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Re: Jimmy
« Reply #1889 on: May 06, 2025, 12:06:56 PM »
Hey Jimmy, someone on facebook caught you on your gig last night with JT. Looks like it was cool gig.
« Last Edit: May 06, 2025, 12:08:37 PM by jazzyvee »
The sound of Alembic is medicine for the soul!
http://www.alembic.com/info/fc_ktwins.html