Artist's albums
Thank You for Everything
1998 · album
Priceless Jazz 4: Johnny Hartman
1997 · album
Unforgettable
1995 · album
The Perfection Yers
1972 · album
This One's for Tedi
1989 · album
The Voice of Love
2021 · album
ライヴ アット サムタイム
2020 · album
Songs from the Heart (Remastered 2013)
2014 · album
Hartman For Lovers
2004 · album
Just You, Just Me…
1956 · album
And I Thought About You
1959 · album
I Just Dropped By To Say Hello
1963 · album
John Coltrane And Johnny Hartman
1963 · album
The Voice That Is!
1965 · album
Unforgettable Songs
1966 · album
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Biography
Johnny Hartman rose above others to become the most commanding, smooth balladeer of the 1950s and '60s, a Black crooner closely following Billy Eckstine and building on the form with his notable jazz collaborations, including the 1963 masterpiece John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman. Born in Chicago, he began singing early on and performed while in Special Services in the Army. Hartman studied music while at college and made his professional debut in the mid-'40s, performing with Earl Hines and recording his first sides for Regent/Savoy. After Hines' band broke up later in 1947, Hartman moved to the Dizzy Gillespie Big Band and stayed for two years, recording a few additional sides for Mercury as well. Johnny Hartman's first proper LP came in 1956 with Songs from the Heart, recorded for Bethlehem and featuring a quartet led by trumpeter Howard McGhee. He recorded a second (All of Me) later that year, but was virtually off-record until 1963, when his duet album, John Coltrane and Johnny Hartman, appeared on Impulse. A beautiful set of ballad standards, including top-flight renditions of "Lush Life" and "My One and Only Love," the album sparked a flurry of activity for Hartman, including two more albums for Impulse: 1963's I Just Dropped by to Say Hello and the following year's The Voice That Is. During the late '60s and early '70s, he recorded a range of jazz and pop standards albums for ABC, Perception, and Blue Note. Hartman recorded sparingly during the '70s, but returned with two albums recorded in 1980, one of which (Once in Every Life) earned a Grammy nomination just two years before his death in 1983. ~ John Bush, Rovi