Johnnie Frierson is a relatively unknown Gospel and Soul singer who has played in and around Memphis. He was quite active during the late 1960s. He started teenage music in a Gospel group The Sunset Travelers, then formed a quartet, The Drapels, with his sister Mary Frierson Cross (Wendy Rene). Johnnie then assisted, advised and wrote for Mary, for Stax artists and other artists of the Gospel and Soul scene of the late 1960s.
Returning from the Vietnam War Johnnie suffers from post-traumatic stress, which reduces his productivity. His pieces are more and more inhabited by faith. We can find some of his tracks under the name of Khafele Ajanaku, at the time he hosted a Gospel show on the radio WEVL Memphis.
Johnnie Frierson’s last pieces were recorded and edited by himself, occasionally sold at Memphis festivals. A time when he was tormented by his memories of the war.
In 2016 the label Light In The Attic remastered and distributed Have You Been Good To Yourself a posthumous medley.
Complete Biography:
A relatively minor player on the mid-‘60s Memphis soul scene, Johnnie Frierson got his start at a young age, joining gospel act the Sunset Travelers while still a teenager. The year was 1964 and he made his first appearance on record playing guitar on the Travelers’ Peacock label single “On Jesus' Program.” Born and raised in Memphis to a devoted Christian family, Frierson would spend most of his intermittent career alternating between gospel music and secular soul and R&B. Around the same time he was beginning his gospel career, he and his younger sister, Mary Frierson Cross, formed the R&B quartet the Drapels with the aim of cutting a record for Stax. The young group eventually earned its way into the studio by persistently hanging out at Stax’s office after school and trying to forge connections. While the Drapels' four Stax sides never quite took off, Mary and her singing partner, Marianne Brittenum, became increasingly busy singing backup for Otis Redding and a number of other prominent Stax artists.
Around the same time he was beginning his gospel career, he and his younger sister, Mary Frierson Cross, formed the R&B quartet The Drapels. While The Drapels never quite took off, Mary and her singing partner, Marianne Brittenum, became increasingly busy singing backup for Otis Redding and a number of other prominent Stax artists.
When Mary was eventually signed as Wendy Rene, Johnnie worked more behind the scenes, co-writing her biggest Stax hit, “After Laughter (Comes Tears),” and doing some backup gigs of his own.
His efforts from this era weren’t just limited to the Stax roster, as he became active at Willie Mitchell’s Royal Studio, co-writing Tony Ashley’s funk song “I’ll Go Crazy” and fronting the Hi Rhythm Section (under the name James Fry), who released a single, “Tumbling Down”, for Hi Records in 1968.
This era of the late ‘60s would be Frierson’s most prolific and, following a stint with the U.S. Army in Vietnam, he spent most of the following two decades out of the music business. Back from the Vietnam, he was really affected by what he saw and what he did there. He became rigoureasly religious. He and a couple of friends did release one 1975 gospel single, “Can You Lose by Following God,” using the band name Whole Truth, but for the most part, Frierson stayed out of the spotlight, raising a family, working a number of jobs, and playing only occasionally at local clubs and festivals.
In the early ‘90s he hosted a gospel show on local radio station WEVL Memphis, and sometime in the early part of the decade he became known as Khafele Ajanaku. It was under this name that he began releasing music again. Recording himself with just a simple tape recorder, he began to self-release cassettes, selling them at local festivals and corner stores around Memphis. Upbeat and soulful songs which were religious by nature, with Frierson accompanying himself live on electric guitar. His daughter Keesha refers to this period as one of her father’s most difficult times, as he continued to suffer from what was most likely post-traumatic stress disorder brought on by his time in Vietnam.
About five years after Frierson’s death in April 2010, his homemade cassettes were discovered in a Memphis thrift store by local music aficionado Jameson Sweiger, who brought them to the attention of reissue label Light in the Attic. In 2016, they gave Frierson’s unique songs a deluxe reissue under the name Have You Been Good to Yourself, posthumously plucking him out of obscurity.
Johnnie Frierson's first album Have You Been Good To Yourself released on Fri Aug 19 2016.
The most popular album by Johnnie Frierson's is Have You Been Good To Yourself
The most popular song by Johnnie Frierson's is Have You Been Good To Yourself
Johnnie Frierson's first song Have You Been Good To Yourself released on Fri Aug 19 2016.