John Fogerty
(Read about John Fogerty after the video)
John Cameron Fogerty (born May 28, 1945) is an American musician, singer and songwriter, early in his career best known as the lead singer and lead guitarist, as well as the principal songwriter, for the band Creedence Clearwater Revival (CCR) and later as a successful solo recording artist.[4] Fogerty was listed on Rolling Stone magazine's list of 100 Greatest Guitarists (at number 40) and the list of 100 Greatest Singers (at number 72).
Early life
Fogerty, the younger brother of guitarist Tom Fogerty, was born in Berkeley, California, and grew up in El Cerrito, California, one of five brothers born to Galen Robert and Edith Lucile Fogerty, who both converted to Catholicism when John was two years old. Galen Fogerty was a native of South Dakota and Lucile Fogerty was a native of Great Falls, Montana.
He first attended a Catholic school in Berkeley, the School of the
Madeleine, for one year, where among other abuses he was not permitted
to go to the bathroom and frequently wet himself and was forced to sit
in his moist clothing. After one year, he was enrolled in nearby Harding
Grammar School. He later attended St. Mary's High School, transferring
to El Cerrito High School.[5]
He took guitar lessons from Barry Olivier, founder and producer of the Berkeley Folk Festival.[6] He spent summer vacations at Putah Creek, near Winters, California, which became the subject of the Creedence Clearwater Revival song "Green River".[7][8]
1959–1966: The Golliwogs
Inspired by rock and roll pioneers, especially Little Richard[9] and Bo Diddley, John and his brother Tom Fogerty joined Doug Clifford and Stu Cook in the late 1950s to form the band Tommy Fogerty and the Blue Velvets in El Cerrito, California. After signing with the jazz label Fantasy in 1965, they became The Golliwogs and released a few singles that were largely ignored.
1967–1972: Creedence Clearwater Revival
He joined an Army Reserve unit. He served at Fort Bragg, Fort Knox, and Fort Lee.
Fogerty was discharged from the Army in July 1967. In the same year,
the band changed its name to Creedence Clearwater Revival. At this time,
John took his brother's place as lead singer for the band. By 1968,
things started to pick up for the band. The band released their self-titled debut album and also had their first hit single, "Susie Q". Many other hit singles and albums followed, beginning with "Proud Mary" and the album Bayou Country.
Fogerty, as writer of the songs for the band (as well as lead singer
and lead guitarist), felt that his musical opinions should count for
more than those of the others, leading to resentments within the band.[10]
These internal rifts, and Tom's feeling that he was being taken for
granted, caused Tom to leave the group in January 1971. The two other
group members, bassist Stu Cook and drummer Doug Clifford, wanted a
greater role in the band's future. Fogerty, in an attempt to keep things
together, insisted Cook and Clifford share equal songwriting and vocal
time on what would become the band's final album, Mardi Gras, released in April 1972, which included the band's last two singles, the 1971 hit "Sweet Hitch-Hiker", and "Someday Never Comes", which barely made it into the Billboard Top 20. Cook and Clifford told Fogerty that the fans would not accept Mardi Gras
as a CCR LP, but he said, "My voice is a unique instrument, and I will
not lend it to your songs." He gave them an ultimatum: either they would
do it or he would quit immediately. They accepted his ultimatum, but
the album received poor reviews. It was a commercial success, however,
peaking at #12 and achieving gold record status. It generated weaker
sales than their previous albums. The group disbanded shortly
afterwards. The only reunion of all four original members would be at
Tom Fogerty's wedding in 1980. John, Doug and Stu played a 45-minute set
at their 20th class reunion in 1983, and John and Doug would reunite
again for a brief set at their 25th class reunion in 1988.
Solo career
1970s
As CCR was coming to an end, Fogerty began working on a solo album of country & western covers,
on which he produced, arranged, and played all of the instruments.
Despite the solo nature of the recordings, however, Fogerty elected to
credit the album to "The Blue Ridge Rangers" -- a band of which he was
the only member.
The "group" released The Blue Ridge Rangers, its only album, in 1973; it spun off the Top 20 hit "Jambalaya",
as well as a lesser hit in "Heart of Stone". Fogerty, still using "The
Blue Ridge Rangers" name, then released a self-penned rock & roll
single": "You Don't Owe Me" b/w "Back in the Hills" (Fantasy F-710). It
was a commercial flop, failing to make the Hot 100 in the U.S.
Fogerty thereafter abandoned the "Blue Ridge Rangers" identity, and
released all his subsequent work under his own name. In early 1974,
Fogerty released "Comin' Down the Road"—backed with the instrumental
"Ricochet". His second solo album, John Fogerty, was released in 1975. Sales were slim and legal problems delayed a followup, though it yielded "Rockin' All Over the World", a Top 40 hit for Fogerty in North America. Two years later, in 1977, British boogie rockers Status Quo
recorded their version of "Rockin' All Over the World", which became a
huge hit and made the song world-famous, not least by opening 1985's Live Aid with the song that had become one of their best-known anthems.
In 1976, Fogerty finished an album called Hoodoo.
A single, "You Got the Magic" backed with "Evil Thing", preceded the
album's release, but it performed poorly. The album, for which covers
had already been printed, was rejected by Asylum Records
a couple of weeks before its scheduled release, and Fogerty agreed that
it was not up to his usual high standards. Fogerty told Asylum Records
to destroy the master tapes for Hoodoo sometime in the 1980s.
However, net-accessible bootlegs still exist. Fogerty says that he was
unable to write music during this period of his life, primarily due to
stresses from ongoing financial and legal difficulties with Fantasy
Records. Although Fogerty was signed to Asylum in North America, Fantasy
continued to hold rights to his records for the rest of the world;
unwilling to allow the label to continue to profit from any new
material, in 1980 he managed to terminate his contract with the record
company by forgoing any future sales royalties on all of the music he
produced with CCR.
1980s
After a multi-year hiatus from the music industry, Fogerty's solo career re-emerged with 1985's Centerfield, his first album for Warner Bros. Records (which took over co-ownership of Asylum's contract with Fogerty). Centerfield went to the top of the charts and included a top-ten hit in "The Old Man Down the Road".
The title track is frequently played on classic rock radio and at
baseball games to this day. But that album was not without its legal
snags.
Two songs on the album, "Zanz Kant Danz" and "Mr. Greed", were believed to be attacks on Fogerty's former boss at Fantasy Records, Saul Zaentz.
"Zanz Kant Danz" was about a pig who can't dance but would "steal your
money." When Zaentz responded with a lawsuit, Fogerty issued a revised
version: "Vanz Kant Danz" (changing the lead character's name to Vanz).
Another lawsuit (Fantasy, Inc. v. Fogerty) claimed that "The Old Man Down the Road" shared the same chorus as "Run Through the Jungle"
(a song from Fogerty's days with Creedence to which Fantasy Records had
owned the publishing rights). Fogerty ultimately won his case when he
proved that the two songs were wholly distinct compositions. Fogerty
then countersued for attorney fees (Fogerty v. Fantasy). After losing in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, Fogerty won his case in the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled that a trial court has discretion in awarding fees to defendants or plaintiffs.
On May 31, 1985 Fogerty filmed a one-hour music and interview special for Showtime called John Fogerty's All-Stars. The set list consisted of R&B tunes from the 1960s as well as material from the Centerfield LP and the song "No Love in You" written by Michael Anderson which John found on the Textones' debut album Midnight Mission and he later recorded with Textones band leader Carla Olson. John Fogerty's All-Stars
was recorded in front of an audience of Warners Brothers Music
employees and other invited guests at A&M Record on La Brea in
Hollywood, CA. The band included Albert Lee, Booker T. Jones, Duck Dunn, Steve Douglas and Prairie Prince amongst others.
The follow-up album to Centerfield was Eye of the Zombie
in 1986, and it was significantly less successful than its predecessor.
Fogerty toured behind the album, but he refused to play any Creedence
material. Eye of the Zombie took on a darker mood, talking about a troubled society, terrorism, and pop stars selling out. For over 20 years after the Eye of the Zombie
tour ended in late 1986, Fogerty refused to play material from the
album in concert. However, "Change in the Weather" was included in the
set list for his 2009 tour, and it was even re-recorded for that year's
solo release, The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again.
Fogerty played Creedence material again at a concert in Washington,
D.C., for Vietnam veterans that took place on July 4, 1987. The show was
aired on HBO. Aside from a guest appearance at the Palomino and performance at the 1986 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
induction ceremony, this was the first time Fogerty had performed any
Creedence Clearwater Revival songs for a large audience since 1972. On
May 27, 1989, he played a set of CCR material at Oakland Coliseum for the Concert Against AIDS. His backing band that night consisted of Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir on guitars, Randy Jackson on bass, and Steve Jordan on drums.[11]
1990s
In 1990 Tom Fogerty died of complications of AIDS (a tuberculosis
infection) at the age of 48, having contracted HIV from blood
transfusions for back ailments. John Fogerty has recalled that the
darkest moments in his life were when his brother took the record
company's side in their royalties dispute, and the fact that when his
brother died, the two of them were not speaking to each other.[12]
In the eulogy he delivered at Tom's funeral, John said: "We wanted to
grow up and be musicians. I guess we achieved half of that, becoming
rock 'n roll stars. We didn't necessarily grow up."[13]
Fogerty traveled to Mississippi in 1990 for inspiration and visited the gravesite of blues legend Robert Johnson.
According to him, while there he had the realization that Robert
Johnson was the true spiritual owner of his own songs, no matter what
businessman owned the rights to them, and thus Fogerty decided to start
making a new album and to perform his old Creedence material regularly
in concert.[14][15]
It was at this time visiting the Mt. Zion Missionary Baptist Church
cemetery that Fogerty met Skip Henderson, a New Jersey vintage guitar
dealer who had formed a nonprofit corporation The Mt. Zion Memorial Fund to honor Johnson with a memorial marker. Fogerty subsequently funded headstones for Charlie Patton, James Son Thomas, Mississippi Joe Callicott, Eugene Powell, Lonnie Pitchford and helped with financial arrangements for numerous others.[16]
Creedence Clearwater Revival was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
in 1993. John Fogerty refused to perform with his former band mates and
fellow inductees Stu Cook and Doug Clifford during the musical portion
of the induction ceremony. In place of the surviving members of CCR,
Fogerty recruited session musicians on drums and bass and was also
joined by Bruce Springsteen and Robbie Robertson in performing three songs: "Who'll Stop the Rain", "Born on the Bayou" and "Green River".[17]
During the induction speech, Springsteen said, "As a songwriter, only a
few did as much in three minutes [as John Fogerty]. He was an Old
Testament, shaggy-haired prophet, a fatalist. Funny, too. He was severe,
he was precise, he said what he had to say and he got out of there."[18]
Fogerty returned to the commercial music industry in 1997 with Blue Moon Swamp. The layoff between Zombie and Swamp had been longer than his mid-1970s to mid-1980s break. The album was much more successful than Zombie and won the Grammy for best rock album in 1997. A live album, named Premonition,
of the equally successful Blue Moon Swamp tour was released to similar
acclaim and good sales in 1998. On October 1, 1998, Fogerty was honored
with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his contributions to the music industry. His star is located at 7000 Hollywood Boulevard.[19] [20]
2000s
In 2004, Fogerty released Deja Vu All Over Again. His new record contract was with DreamWorks Records, which had taken over distribution of Fogerty's Warner Bros. catalog. Rolling Stone wrote: "The title track is Fogerty's indictment of the Iraq war as another Vietnam,
a senseless squandering of American lives and power". On the album,
Fogerty squeezed 10 songs into only 34 minutes. The sale of Fantasy
Records to Concord Records in 2004 ended the 30-plus-year estrangement between Fogerty and his former label as the new owners took steps to restore royalty rights Fogerty gave up in order to be released from his contract with Fantasy in the mid-1970s.
In September 2005, Fogerty returned to Fantasy Records. That was made
possible when DreamWorks Records' non-country music unit was absorbed
by Geffen Records,
which dropped Fogerty but continued to distribute his earlier solo
albums. The first album released under the new Fantasy contract was The Long Road Home, a compilation CD combining his Creedence hits with solo material which was issued in November 2005. A live CD and DVD concert was released the following year.
Fogerty's touring schedule increased in the period after Deja Vu All Over Again. In October 2004, Fogerty appeared on the Vote for Change tour, playing a series of concerts in US swing states. He also appeared in a Christmas special video produced by the Australian children's group The Wiggles.
"Centerfield" was also played at the 2008 Republican National
Convention when John McCain introduced Sarah Palin as his running mate.
Fogerty's numbers were played with Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band. Fogerty toured with John Mellencamp in the summer of 2005 and with Willie Nelson in the summer of 2006. On June 29, 2006 he played his first headlining British concert since 1972, at the Hammersmith Apollo
theater in London, as part of the European leg of the tour. During that
leg he also performed in Sundsvall, Sweden, where 25,000 people came to
see him perform at the town square. On Thanksgiving Day of 2006,
Fogerty performed at halftime at the Miami Dolphins/Detroit Lions game as well as at the Denver Broncos/Kansas City Chiefs halftime later that evening.[21][22][23]
Alongside Bill Withers, the Sherman Brothers, Steve Cropper, Isaac Hayes, and David Porter, Fogerty was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame
in 2005. On June 23, 2007 John Fogerty appeared at Glastonbury
Festival, England, playing a very energetic hour-long set of 17 songs,
mainly CCR classics.[24]
Introducing "Who'll Stop the Rain", Fogerty said he didn't perform the song Stop the Rain at Woodstock as rumoured, but wrote the song inspired by the event.[25]
Fogerty completed his first new rock album in three years, Revival, which was released on October 2, 2007.[26] Heavily promoted by the label, Revival debuted at number 14 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart with sales about 65,000 copies in its first week. Revival was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Rock Album of 2008 but lost to the Foo Fighters.
On February 10, 2008, he appeared with Jerry Lee Lewis and Little Richard on the Grammy Awards
Show. Along with these rock icons and his regular touring band, he
played his ultra-rare 1973 single "Comin' Down the Road" leading into
Lewis and Richard's performances of "Great Balls of Fire" and "Good
Golly Miss Molly", respectively.
On March 16, 2008, Fogerty kicked off an Australian tour. On March 22 in Point Nepean, Australia, surprise guest Keith Urban joined Fogerty on stage, performing two songs: "Broken Down Cowboy", off Fogerty's newest album Revival, and "Cotton Fields", from CCR's album Willy & the Poor Boys. On June 24, 2008, Fogerty made a return to the Royal Albert Hall,
a venue he last played with CCR in 1971. It was the last concert on his
2008 European Tour. This concert was filmed (causing staging problems
that annoyed some fans)[27][28][29]
and was released in 2009. On April 16, 2009, Fogerty performed his hit
"Centerfield", from center field, at the opening day festivities of the
new Yankee Stadium.[30]
On July 2, 3 and 4, 2009, Fogerty performed with the Los Angeles
Philharmonic at the Hollywood Bowl, which was completely sold out for
these shows. Although the night was billed as Fogerty with the LA
Philharmonic, the LA Philharmonic began the night with music by US
composers, and Fogerty and his band came on after intermission and
played all of his greatest hits. Fogerty and his band played only three
songs with the orchestra.
On August 31, 2009, Fogerty released a sequel to his 1973 solo debut The Blue Ridge Rangers, called The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again. The album includes a duet with Bruce Springsteen on the 1960 Everly Brothers classic "When Will I Be Loved?" Don Henley and Timothy B. Schmit of The Eagles sing with Fogerty on a cover of Ricky Nelson's 1972 classic "Garden Party".[31] The album was the first issued on Fogerty's own label Fortunate Son Records, which is distributed by the Verve Forecast Records unit of Universal Music Group(UMG).[32]
On October 29, 2009, Fogerty appeared at Madison Square Garden for
the first night of the celebratory 25th Anniversary Rock and Roll Hall
of Fame concerts. Bruce Springsteen, with the E Street Band, called
Fogerty out to play three songs with them. "Fortunate Son" was their
first song, followed by "Proud Mary" and finally the duo tried their
take on Roy Orbison's "Pretty Woman". The show aired as a four-hour
special on HBO on November 29, 2009.[33][34]
On November 3, 2009, Fogerty released the Royal Albert Hall DVD entitled Comin' Down the Road, named after his 1973 single, which he performed at this concert. Fogerty was also nominated for a Grammy Award at the 2010 Grammys. He was nominated for the Best Rock Solo Vocal Performance Grammy for the song "Change in the Weather". which he recorded for The Blue Ridge Rangers Rides Again.
2010s
For his songwriting achievements, Fogerty was honored as a BMI
Icon at the 58th annual BMI Pop Awards on May 18, 2010. BMI Icons are
selected because of their "unique and indelible influence on generations
of music makers."[35]
Fogerty began recording Wrote a Song for Everyone in 2011, which was released on Vanguard Records
on May 28, 2013, his 68th birthday. The album is a collection of
classics and tracks from his canon of hits performed with other artists.[36] The album also includes two brand-new Fogerty-penned songs. On November 17, 2011 John Fogerty performed on the Late Show with David Letterman.[37]
On November 17 and 18, he performed two Creedence Clearwater Revival albums, Cosmo's Factory and Green River (respectively), in their entirety at the Beacon Theater in New York City (he also played Cosmo's Factory in Atlantic City on November 20). He was also featured on the CBS coverage of the Thanksgiving Day Parade, performing several prerecorded songs.[citation needed]
In January 2012, Fogerty's new song "Swamp Water" debuted over the opening credits of the new FOX TV series The Finder. Fogerty wrote the song specifically for the show and guest starred in its debut episode.[citation needed] On November 12, 2012 Fogerty announced that he was writing his memoirs, and that the book was expected to be released in 2015.[38]
During the 2014 Veterans days celebration "Salute to the Troops" at
the White House, Fogerty performed for veterans. On February 21, 2015,
he was a featured artist for the NHL stadium series hockey game between the Los Angeles Kings and the San Jose Sharks at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California.
Personal life
Fogerty married Martha Paiz in 1965. They had three children before divorcing in the 1970s.[39] He met Julie Kramer[40] in 1986 while on tour in Indianapolis, Indiana, and married in Elkhart, Indiana, on April 20, 1991. Kramer had a daughter from a previous marriage.[41] John and Julie have two sons and a daughter.[42] As of 2009, they live in Beverly Hills, California.[43]
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