WJ - I don't know, to be honest who may be those that might have been revolutionized those genres. In the last half a century of music history, how many artists have, in your opinion, revolutionized the blues and the rock genres besides the ones we mentioned above? It's all an accident, really (laughs).īBR - When you started to listen and appreciate music at a young age, people like Mick Green, The Stones and most of the artists coming from the Chess label made a big impact on your musical formation as a guitarist. When I realized that I was starting to become successful as a musician, I just thought that perhaps, making music was something I would have done for the rest of my life. It was never an ambition of mine to become a musician and playing guitar was just something I started doing just for fun. When I was a teenager, I would have never thought that one day I would have become a musician. I just try to do my best every time and I am very happy if people like it and appreciate it. I do what I can and you know, it's not for me to say what you said about me because I don't see it like that. WJ - Well, truth to be told, I feel more like a very normal guitar player. Have you ever imagined, back when you were a teenager, that the boy from Canvey Island that used to save every penny to buy a Telecaster would have become, in a career-span of five decades, one of the most influential guitarists in music history, an actor and a writer? 2017 marks another important landmark in your life and career, between your 70th birthday and the 30th anniversary of the Wilko Johnson Band. The artist, in occasion of his 70th birthday and the 30th anniversary of his career with the Wilko Johnson Band, will play a very special concert at a true music temple of the United Kingdom, the Royal Albert Hall on 26th September.īluebird Reviews has just managed to catch up with Wilko Johnson few days before the concert and talk about his glorious career as an artist at 360 degrees.īBR - Wilko, thank you so much for talking to us at Bluebird Reviews. What was intended to be the last year of the artist's life and his legacy to music was documented in a truly wonderful and touching music documentary called The Ecstasy Of Wilko Johnson, directed by one of the most respected filmmaker worldwide, Julian Temple, who had worked previously with Johnson in the 2009's award-winning Oil City Confidential.īetween his commitment as being an actor in one of the most famous TV series, Game Of Thrones and being a musician with the Wilko Johnson Band, the guitarist found also the time to release his second memoir, Don't Leave Me Here, a truly moving and inspiring book about his rollercoaster-type life and career.Ģ017 is certainly a special year for Wilko Johnson. Johnson though, being a fighter all his life, decided to undergo an operation that would try and remove every single part of the cancer, an operation that proved to be fortunately successful. In a career-span of almost 50 years made of many highs and very rare lows, Johnson has then reached in 2014 the top spot of the worldwide charts with the album Going Back Home, a record he made together with The Who's front-man Roger Daltrey, in a time of his life when Johnson, diagnosed with a terminal cancer, was mentally prepared to the idea of dying. Feelgood or about the artist from Canvey Island joining Ian Dury's band, The Blockheads, later in 1980. It's rather difficult to find the right way to describe in one word the artistry of somebody like the 70 years-old rock pioneer Wilko Johnson, whose personal life and music career are of such stature that even the expressions "legendary" or "miraculous" struggle to express in its entirety.Įvery respectable music fan knows of Johnson as being the former member, with Lee Brilleaux, of the mid-70's seminal rock band Dr.
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