Search - Artist/Band: Michael Johnson

Artist Info

  • Name: Michael Johnson
  • Birthday: 08/08/1944
  • Birth Place: Alamosa, CO
  • Decades Active: 1970,1980,1990
  • Genre: Rock
  • Styles: Soft Rock, Adult Contemporary, Contemporary Pop/Rock, Singer/Songwriter, Contemporary Country, Progressive Country
  • Moods: Laid-Back/Mellow, Soothing, Calm/Peaceful, Sentimental, Earnest, Intimate, Reflective, Wistful

Albums

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  • Ain't Dis Da Life/For All You Mad Musicians W
  • 08/31/2004
  • Classic Masters W
  • 01/29/2002
  • Back to Back
  • 07/27/1999
  • Dialogue/Album W
  • 05/15/1999
  • You Can Call Me Blue/Home Free W
  • 05/15/1999
  • The Very Best of Michael Johnson: Bluer Than Blue W
  • 03/09/1999
  • The Early Albums
  • 1999
  • Then & Now
  • 08/26/1997
  • Departure W
  • 1995
  • Michael Johnson
  • 1991
  • The Best of Michael Johnson W
  • 1990
  • That's That WA
  • 1988
  • Wings WA
  • 1986
  • Lifetime Guarantee WA
  • 1983
  • Home Free
  • 1981
  • There Is a Breeze WA
  • 1973

    Individual Bio

    Stylistically, singer/songwriter Michael Johnson has been all over the map, ranging from folk to pop and soft rock to country. But no matter what kind of music he recorded, he maintained a mellow, pleasant tone that served as his hallmark. Johnson was born in Alamosa, CO, in 1944 and started playing the guitar as a teenager, studying both rock & roll and jazz. At 21, he traveled to Barcelona and studied classical guitar with Graciano Tarrago for a year, then returned to the U.S. and joined the later version of the folk group the Chad Mitchell Trio (when John Denver was a member). Initially signing to Atco, Johnson released his first album, There Is a Breeze, in 1973 and displayed a gentle, folk-influenced sound. He recorded three more albums for smaller labels in the mid-'70s, gradually transforming into more of a soft rock artist, and signed with EMI in 1978 in that capacity. He scored a number one hit on the adult contemporary charts that year with "Bluer Than Blue," which almost made the pop Top Ten, and also made the adult contemporary Top Five with 1978's "Almost Like Being in Love" and 1979's "This Night Won't Last Forever." Johnson recorded five albums in all for EMI and in 1985 moved over to RCA, where he adopted a contemporary country style that stayed compatible with his soft, mellow leanings. He was surprisingly successful, scoring a total of five Top Ten country hits from 1986-1989, including the chart-toppers "Give Me Wings" and "The Moon Is Still Over Her Shoulder." After three country albums on RCA, Johnson moved over to Atlantic in 1991, which effectively halted his commercial momentum. He recorded very sporadically in the '90s for smaller labels. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide