
Johnny
Tillotson
Born in Jacksonville, Florida, on April 20 1939, Johnny
Tillotson was a teenage contributor on Radio W-WPF and on the
television show Toby Dowdy, both local stations.
He had mastered the guitar and ukulele by the time he attended
the University of Florida and his musical ambitions soon overtook
his studies.
In 1958 he was lured to Cadence Records, based in New York, who
released his debut single, the double A-sided disc Well I'm
Your Man and Dreamy Eyes - which became Number 87 and
Number 63 US hits respectively.
Through 1959, True True Happiness made the Top 60;
likewise Why Do I Love You So?. Following a stab at
R&B, Tillotson recorded Poetry In Motion.
The song, born in Nashville and completed in a New York studio,
soared to Number 2 in America during 1960 and reached the top spot
in Britain in January 1961, where it stayed for two weeks. All
told, Poetry In Motion sold in excess of 1.5 million copies
worldwide.
In March, Jimmy's Girl was released. It became a Top 30
US hit but reached only Number 43 in Britain. The follow-up, Without
You, bombed but hit Number 7 across the Atlantic.
Prior
to joining the US Army for six months at Fort Jackson, South
Carolina, Tillotson released his self-penned It Keeps Right On
A-Hurtin' which re-established him in the American Top 3,
selling a million copies on the way.
When he left the Army he instantly embarked upon a promotional
American tour to capitalise on his recent success.
Late in 1962, following another international hit - Send Me
The Pillow You Dream On - Tillotson re-recorded Hank Williams'
I Can't Help It (If I'm Still In Love With You), which
became a British Top 40 hit and reached Number 21 in the US.
A year later, and after a cameo appearance singing Judy,
Judy, Judy in the movie Just For Fun, Tillotson's
British chart run ended with Out Of My Mind. He continued
to enjoy American success although he switched record companies.
In November 1963 he recorded his last hit for Cadence Records -
Funny How Time Slips Away - a cover of the Willie Nelson
original, before joining MGM Records.
A
country ballad, Talk Back Trembling Lips, was his first
release with MGM. It shot into the US Top 10, and throughout 1964
and 1965 a succession of songs, mostly ballads, kept his chart
career alive.
As his career gradually declined, Tillotson adopted a change of
image to drop his teen appeal.
After presenting his new, mature act at the Copacabana in New
York, he was in demand as a performer in Las Vegas and Miami
Beach, and further afield in countries like Germany, Sweden and
Japan, where he enjoyed a staunch following.
When Tillotson moved to California in 1968, he joined the
acting profession with bit parts in movies and television
specials.
A further recording deal in 1970 with Ampex records produced
the Tears On My Pillow album, and a later contract with
Buddah Records resulted in the Johnny Tillotson album. Both
flopped.
Tillotson continues to perform in the US to this day .
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