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Little Johnny Taylor

Greatest Hits

Little Johnny Taylor

17 SONGS • 48 MINUTES • FEB 20 1991

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
5
Double Or Nothing
03:23
6
Big Blue Diamonds
02:46
7
Somebody's Got To Pay
03:06
8
Darling, Believe In Me
02:05
9
If You Love Me (Like You Say)
02:35
10
I Know You Hear Me Calling
02:58
11
Sometimey Woman
02:14
12
You Win, I Lose
02:36
13
My Heart Is Filled With Pain
02:30
14
First Class Love
03:45
15
Since I Found A New Love
03:56
16
Somewhere Down The Line
02:16
17
One More Chance
02:42
℗ This Compilation 1991 Fantasy Records © 1991 Fantasy Records, Distributed by Concord.

Artist bios

Some folks still get them mixed up, so to get it straight from the outset, Little Johnny Taylor was best known for his scorching slow blues smashes "Part Time Love" (for Bay Area-based Galaxy Records in 1963) and 1971's "Everybody Knows About My Good Thing" for Ronn Records in Shreveport, LA. This Johnny Taylor was definitely not the suave Sam Cooke protégé who blitzed the charts with "Who's Making Love" for Stax in 1968; that's Johnnie Taylor, who added to the confusion by covering "Part Time Love" for Stax. Another similarity between the two Taylors: both hailed from strong gospel backgrounds.

Little Johnny came to Los Angeles in 1950 and did a stint with the Mighty Clouds of Joy before going secular. Influenced by Little Willie John, he debuted as an R&B artist with a pair of 45s for Hunter Hancock's Swingin' logo, but his career didn't soar until he inked a pact with Fantasy's Galaxy subsidiary in 1963 (where he benefited from crisp production by Cliff Goldsmith and Ray Shanklin's arrangements).

The gliding mid-tempo blues "You'll Need Another Favor," firmly in a Bobby Bland mode, was Taylor's first chart item. He followed it up with the tortured R&B chart-topper "Part Time Love," which found him testifying in gospel-fired style over Arthur Wright's biting guitar and a grinding, horn-leavened downbeat groove. The singer also did fairly well with "Since I Found a New Love" in 1964 and "Zig Zag Lightning" in 1966.

Taylor's tenure at Stan Lewis' Ronn imprint elicited the slow blues smash "Everybody Knows About My Good Thing" in 1971, and a similarly witty hit follow-up, "Open House at My House," the next year (both were covered later by Z.Z. Hill for Malaco). While at Ronn, Little Johnny cut some duets with yet another Taylor, this one named Ted (no, they weren't related either). Though he recorded only sparingly during the 1980s and 1990s, he remained an active performer until his death in 2002. ~ Bill Dahl

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Language of performance
English
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