Roy Lee Johnson

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Boogaloo No 3 02:06 Tools
Boogaloo #3 02:04 Tools
Patch It Up 00:00 Tools
The Dryer 00:00 Tools
Two Doors Down 02:51 Tools
Boogaloo No. 3 01:58 Tools
Mr Moonlight 02:38 Tools
Too Many Tears 02:13 Tools
So Anna Just Love Me 02:06 Tools
Nobody Does Something For Nothing 02:26 Tools
Black Pepper Will Make You Sneeze 01:55 Tools
When a Guitar Plays the Blues 00:00 Tools
Busybody 02:42 Tools
Boogaloo No.3 02:07 Tools
Busy Body 00:00 Tools
My Best Just Ain't Good Enough 02:31 Tools
Love Is Amazing 02:32 Tools
Mister Moonlight 02:37 Tools
Patch It Up - Roy Lee Johnson 02:28 Tools
Sea Breeze 02:48 Tools
I'm So Happy 02:08 Tools
Slowly I'm Falling In Love With You 01:55 Tools
Take Me Back And Try Me 02:49 Tools
Plowing Playboy 02:25 Tools
Love Birds 02:46 Tools
That's All I Need 02:27 Tools
Guitar Man 01:48 Tools
The Dryer - Roy Lee Johnson 02:22 Tools
Mr. Moonlight 00:00 Tools
Stanback Headache Powder 02:15 Tools
Chunk Some Love 02:33 Tools
Can You Handle It 02:26 Tools
She Put the Whammy to Me 02:26 Tools
Black Pepper Make You Sneeze 00:00 Tools
So Anna Just Loves Me 02:12 Tools
Boogaloo #3 (Josie 965) 02:26 Tools
Cheer Up Daddy's Coming Home 02:12 Tools
Its All Over 02:12 Tools
Cheer Up Daddys Comin Home 02:12 Tools
Two Wrongs (Wont Make it Right) (Feat. Curtis Smith) 02:12 Tools
It's All Over 02:32 Tools
Dont Do this to Me (Feat. Curtis Smith) 00:00 Tools
She Put The Whammy On Me 02:27 Tools
Who Do Me 00:00 Tools
Come Here Baby (Feat. Curtis Smith) 00:00 Tools
Red Hot 00:00 Tools
Want to Be Touched by You 00:00 Tools
Livin in Reverse 00:00 Tools
Ive Got A Feeling (Feat. Curtis Smith) 02:32 Tools
Dryer 02:22 Tools
Ain't Nothin' Good About Bein' Lonely (Demo) 02:22 Tools
Love Is Calling On Me 02:04 Tools
I Thought About You 02:22 Tools
The Dryer (Pt. 1) 02:04 Tools
Cheer Up, Daddy's Coming Home 02:04 Tools
Boogaloo nr.3 02:03 Tools
Come Here Baby 02:03 Tools
I'll Be Your Doctor Man 03:18 Tools
What Your Love's Gonna Turn Out To Be (Demo) 02:03 Tools
Boogaloo 02:04 Tools
What Our Love's Gonna Turn Out to Be 02:03 Tools
Don't Do This To Me 02:33 Tools
I've Got A Feeling 02:21 Tools
Two Wrongs (Won't Make It Right) 02:33 Tools
Hooks and Wheels 02:03 Tools
11.Nobody Does Something For Nothing 02:03 Tools
Too Much Houch 02:03 Tools
You're the One 02:03 Tools
Busybody (2) 02:03 Tools
Tell Me Nothing About My Woman 02:03 Tools
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Roy Lee Johnson (born December 31, 1938) is an American R&B and soul songwriter, singer and guitarist. He is best known for his composition "Mr. Moonlight", which has been covered by many artists, including The Beatles. He was born in Centralhatchee, Georgia, and began playing guitar as a child. Around 1955, he joined his first band, The Brassettes, who included Robert Ward and who played local dances in and around Hogansville. After the band won a talent contest in Atlanta, they recorded Johnson's song, "Nobody Does Something For Nothing", for the small Stat label. In the late 1950s, Johnson moved to Ohio, joining Ward in the Ohio Untouchables. However, by 1961 he had returned to Atlanta, and began playing in Piano Red's band, the Interns. His song "Mister Moonlight", which he had written in high school, was first recorded by Piano Red, credited as "Dr. Feelgood and the Interns", and released in 1962 as the b-side of "Doctor Feel-Good" on OKeh 4-7144. Johnson left the Interns in about 1963, and released his first solo record, "Too Many Tears", on OKeh that year. Neither it nor its follow-up, a reworked "Nobody Does Something For Nothing", were successful. However, in 1964 the Beatles covered "Mr. Moonlight" on the album Beatles for Sale (on Beatles '65 in the US), the success of which allowed Johnson to form his own band. He recorded three singles for Columbia Records in 1966-67, including "My Best Just Ain’t Good Enough", and another single for the Josie label. Otis Redding, for whom he had previously been a support act, then introduced him to Phil Walden, who recorded three singles with him in 1968 at the FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, featuring the studio rhythm section. The singles included "Cheer Up, Daddy’s Coming Home" and "Take Me Back And Try Me", but again were not hits. He then formed a new band, Roy Lee Johnson & The Villagers, who recorded a self-titled album for Stax Records in 1973, influenced by the funk style of James Brown. However, the band broke up after the sudden death of 21-year old bass player Michael James. He continued to release occasional singles in the late 1970s and 1980s, setting up his own studio and continue to perform with various bands. In the early 1990s, tracks he had recorded were released in England as the album All Night Long (Howzat LBW1). He released another album, When a Guitar Plays the Blues, in 2003. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.