When his relative Ivory Joe Hunter told the young Ernie Johnson, “You have a beautiful voice,” the comment sparked a lifelong interest in singing. The briefcase full of cash that Hunter carried around with him didn’t hurt either. Ernie Johnson was born on April 4, 1948, near Winnsboro, Louisiana, a place Johnson called “real country, I mean one side of the sign said ‘entering,’ the other side said ‘leaving.’” As a young teenager Johnson refused to pick cotton, learning to drive the truck hauling the harvest in instead. But “Little Ernie” (who stands well over six feet tall) quickly grew bored with the farming life and took off for Dallas.

In the early 1960s he saw Lloyd Price perform in a local park and knew he wanted to have a band of his own. His first public performance came in 1964 in Greenville, Texas, when Johnnie Taylor cancelled on a bill that also featured Miss Lavelle White and Guitar James (with whom Johnson had caught a ride to the show). The pair encouraged Johnson to get up and sing as an opening act and he was a hit. The performance bug bit him so hard that night he quit his job at a local hospital the next day and dove head first into singing. Johnson’s voice is heavily influenced by Bobby Bland, Junior Parker and Sam Cooke, and like his mentors, he possesses the ability to hit the high notes.


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