Freedy Johnston

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Freedy Johnston
Freedy-johnston.jpg
Freedy Johnston in Wichita, 1998
Background information
Origin Kinsley, Kansas, United States
Genres Power pop, rock
Occupation(s) Musician, songwriter
Instruments Vocals, Guitar
Years active 1989–present
Labels Bar/None (1990–1993, 2010–present), Elektra (1994–2001)
Website Freedy Johnston.com

Freedy Johnston (born Fred Fatzer[1] in 1961) is a New York City-based singer-songwriter originally from Kinsley, Kansas. He has scored several minor hits since the early 1990s. Johnston's songs are often about troubled loners, and cover topics like heartbreak, alienation and disappointment. Known for the craftsmanship of his songs, he has been described as a "songwriter's songwriter."[2]

Biography

Johnston was raised in the small town of Kinsley, KS, pop. 1,658 (2009).[3] His interest in music was hampered by the fact that there were no record shops or music stores in his hometown. When he was sixteen, he bought his first guitar from a mail order catalog, and at 17, had a friend drive him the 35 miles to the closest record store to buy an Elvis Costello album he had read about.[4] When he graduated high school, and left to attend the University of Kansas, in Lawrence, Kansas, he immersed himself in the new wave music scene.

By 1985, with some songs he'd recorded on a four-track recorder he moved to New York City. He decided to change his name to Freedy Johnston; "Freedy" was a nickname that his mother had given him, and Johnston was his mother's maiden name.[1] After a few years there, he signed with Bar None Records, and debuted just two tracks called Time for a Change, in 1989. His first album, The Trouble Tree, was released in 1990. While the reviews were generally good, the album was not commercially successful.

Johnston sold some of his family's farmland to finance the recording of his second album, Can You Fly (an event he wrote about in a song on that album, "Trying to Tell You I Don't Know").[4] Johnston followed up with his 1994 major label debut, This Perfect World, which received rave reviews and led to Rolling Stone naming him "songwriter of the year". Other publications, including The New York Times, Spin, and Musician Magazine gave the album high marks as well. It featured the single "Bad Reputation", which reached 54 on the Billboard Hot 100 and is one of his best-known songs. The success he enjoyed convinced Elektra to sign him and he released his next three albums under that label; Never Home, Blue Days Black Nights, and Right Between the Promises and while they didn't reach the same level of praise as This Perfect World, they still earned both respectful reviews and some degree of commercial success.[4]

He has contributed songs to the soundtracks for movies including Kingpin, Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead, and Kicking and Screaming. Johnston and fellow musicians Jay Moran, James "Pie" Cowan, Duke Erikson, and Butch Vig perform occasional shows as a covers band called "The Know-it-All Boyfriends". Vig put the ensemble together for his brother's Christmas party, and it proved to be so much fun that they decided to keep going.[5]

In early 2008 Johnston released a covers album entitled My Favorite Waste of Time. It includes selections from Marshall Crenshaw, Tom Petty, Paul McCartney, Matthew Sweet and The Hollies. His next CD, called Rain on the City, was recorded in Nashville (as was My Favorite Waste of Time) and was released in January 2010.

In 2012, Susan Cowsill, Johnston, and Jon Dee Graham, working together as The Hobart Brothers and Lil' Sis Hobart, released a collaborative album on Freedom Records entitled At Least We Have Each Other.

Style

Johnston's music was described by a critic from CD Universe, after the release of This Perfect World, as "marr[ying] perfectly realized power-pop sensibility to skilled, literary writing chops."[6]

Discography

With other artists

References

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  2. [1] Archived September 28, 2007 at the Wayback Machine
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  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. [2] Archived May 24, 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links