Johnny Pate
Wikimp3 information about the music of Johnny Pate. On our website we have 5 albums and 29 collections of artist Johnny Pate. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that Johnny Pate represents Theatre/Soundtrack genres.
Biography
[Edit]Arranger/producer Johnny Pate is an important figure in Chicago soul as well as pop/R&B music. Pate's name appears in the credits of classic hits by Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions and acts on OKeh Records. He also arranged for numerous Chicago R&B labels of the '60s, including Nike Records (the Daylighters' "Cool Breeze," the Dolphins), Erman, as well as for New York-based Roulette Records (the Gifts' "It's Uncle Willie," "Treat Her Right," "Girl I Love You").
Born in Chicago Heights, IL, in 1923, Pate learned to play piano and tuba as a child. Later while serving in the Army, he picked up the bass and learned arranging. He had stints with Coleridge Davis and Stuff Smith in the '40s. During the '50s, he was the resident arranger for the in-house band of Club Delisa. Recording for Federal as the Johnny Pate Quintet, the bandleader/arranger/bassist had a hit with "Swinging Shepherd Blues," which hit number 17 R&B on Billboard's charts in spring 1958. In the early '60s, OKeh Records producer/A&R director Carl Davis (Walter Jackson, Major Lance, Ted Taylor, the Opals) wanted a unique sound and enlisted Pate to write arrangements for the label.
Pate and Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions first teamed in January 1963 recording the ethereal ballad "Sad Sad Girl and Boy," which mid-charted in Cashbox magazine's charts. The next single, the rousing "It's All Right," parked at number one R&B for two weeks and hit number four pop in fall 1963; it was followed by "Talking About My Baby," "I'm So Proud," "Keep on Pushing." The Keep on Pushing LP peaked at number eight pop in fall 1964. Pate produced and recorded most of their hits at Murray Allen's legendary Universal Recording Studios in Chicago.
The success of the Impressions led ABC-Paramount, the label that the group was signed with, to open a Chicago office on 14th and Michigan and appoint Pate as A&R director in 1964. One of the acts he signed, the Marvelows, had hits with "I Do" (number seven R&B) and "In the Morning." "I Do" was written by group members Melvin Mason, Johnny Paden, Frank Paden, Willie Stephenson, and Jesse Smith. The song was a number 24 pop hit for the J. Geils Band in fall 1982. Other acts signed to ABC-Paramount through the Chicago branch were the Trends, the Kittens, and former VeeJay Records star Betty Everett ("Nothing I Wouldn't Do").
The Impressions' hits continued: "You Must Believe," the double-sided "Amen" — spotlighted in the 1965 Sidney Poitier movie Lillies of the Field — b/w "Long Long Winter," the double-sided hit "People Get Ready" (number three R&B) b/w "I've Been Trying," "Women's Got Soul" (number nine R&B), "Meeting Over Yonder," the double-sided hit "I Need You" b/w "Never Could You Be," "You Been Cheatin'," the Motown-ish "Can't Satisfy," "You Always Hurt Me," "You Got Me Runnin'," "I Can't Stay Away From You," "We're a Winner" (number one R&B) — the group's manager Eddie Thomas' wife Audrey Thomas can be heard saying "all right now, sock it to me baby" — "We're Rollin' on (Part 1)," and the splendid "I Love and I Lost" (number nine R&B).
In 1968, Pate began doing arrangements for Curtis Mayfield's Curtom label (the label's slogan was "Were a Winner"), whose roster included Curtis Mayfield and the Impressions and the Five Stairsteps. Pate left the label in 1972 and worked on numerous recordings including the classic 1978 quiet storm forerunner LP Words and Music by TV/movie/stage actress Lonette McKee (Malcolm X, Which Way Is Up, Sparkle) on Warner Bros.
Johnny Pate's talents are displayed on releases by Curtis Mayfield, B.B. King, Phyllis Hyman, Peabo Bryson, Wes Montgomery, Walter Jackson, Stan Getz, Gene Chandler, Gil Scott-Heron, Joe Williams, Sam Cooke, the Staple Singers, Jimmy Smith, Jerry Butler, Shirley Horn, Phil Wood, the Bee Gees, Bill Doggett, James Moody, Kenny Burrell, Earl Bostic, Muddy Waters, and the compilations Mission Accomplished, Too: More Themes and The Best of Shaft.
Title: Brother On The Run (Original Soundtrack)
Artist: Johnny Pate, Adam Wade
Genre: Soul, Jazz, Theatre/Soundtrack, Funk, Classical
Collections
Title: The Most Influential Jazz Bassists
Genre: Jazz
Title: Super Funky Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Title: Mixtape; Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Title: Godfathers of Soul Jazz
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul
Title: Jazz For Beginners
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Most Influential Jazz Guitarists
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Most Influential Jazz Bassists
Genre: Jazz
Title: The Most Amazing Jazz Performances
Genre: Jazz
Title: Greatest Broadway Instrumental Hits
Genre: New Age
Title: The Ultimate Funk Collection
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Pop
Title: Old King Gold Volume 6 (Original King Recordings)
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues
Title: Old King Gold Volume 5 (Original King Recording)
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Blues
Title: Times of Rock n' Roll
Genre: Rock
Title: Dusty Fingers, Volume 17
Genre: Electronica, Soul, Jazz, Pop, Funk, Psychedelic
Title: Classic Funk (CD3)
Title: Soho Continental
Genre: Electronica, Tech House, Hip Hop/R&B, Jazz, Death Metal
Title: Mighty Instrumentals R&B Style 1957 (CD1)
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Blues
Title: Mr. K Digital Edits Vol. 9
Featuring albums
Title: Verve Jazz Masters 14: Wes Montgomery
Artist: Wes Montgomery
Genre: Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Crossover Jazz
Title: Compact Jazz: Wes Montgomery Plays the Blues
Artist: Wes Montgomery
Genre: Jazz, Crossover Jazz