He was RocknRolls First Tragedy-not Buddy Holly&The Bopper
L. E STOTTLEMEYER | KCMO | 03/20/2002
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Rock n Roll's first tragedy happened on the night of December 24th,1954 when Johnny Ace (Rock and Souls biggest sensation at the time) died from supposedly playing russian roulette. This happened almost a full 5 years before the Buddy Holly tragedy in 1959.And please people stop believing in the political non-sense that rock n roll started in 1955... The African American community had been rockin and a rollin since the late 40's with the likes of Wynonie Harris and Louis Jordan-it just took the majority of the other half a long time to get hip.Pledging my love was his posthumous crossover hit but everything he recorded was pure classic stuff. This cd contains those songs that are just as good or even better than Pledging-songs like "The Clock","Never let me go","Anymore",and "Please forgive me" and "Saving my love for you". All of these are beautiful classics that everyone from Elvis to Jackie Wilson to Brook Benton to Sinatra to James Brown all were taking notes and wishing for their day to come in the spotlight. Now an injustice has been corrected-- for Johnny Ace was Rock n Rolls very first tragedy.P.S. And if you count in the "king of the stroll" Chuck Willis passing away in an Atlanta hospital operating room due to bleeding ulcers-Holly,Valens,and the Bopper were actually Rock n Rolls 3rd tragic ending."
Johnny epitomizes the soulful balland crooner.
05/27/1999
(4 out of 5 stars)
"The late, great Johnny Ace deserves much recognition for being a trailblazer in the genre of soul balladers. It is unfortunate that his career ended so quickly and abrubtly, but his name will forever be entwind with a warm summer breeze, a moonlit night, and the girl of our dreams. "Pledging my Love" takes on a special meaning for all born romantics lost in a moment, frozen in time. This record is a must for serious listeners of 1950's R & B."
Has Finally Been Updated
Jason Gubbels | San Diego, CA | 11/21/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"This has, for thirty years, been the only collection of the late Johnny Ace's material. It's rather skimpy - 12 tracks, about thirty minutes long. But it's still great, with the selection leaning heavily on Ace's ballad work, with a few r&b ravers thrown in for variety. Just this past summer of 2005, a new Johnny Ace compilation was released with twice the amount of material and new remastering and liner notes. The new cd is the obvious version to pick up. It's about time."
Johnny Ace, sound-track for a time in history...
Reasonstobe | Florida | 07/03/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)
"The life of Johnny Ace was woefully too short, and such a tragic end. But his music lives on. Growing up in England in the 1960s it seemed all the people fresh off the planes and boats from the Caribbean bought themselves a copy of the Johnny Ace album. Whenever I hear Johnny Ace, I think back to the style and the swagger of the grown-ups back then; smoke filled rooms at the end of the work week at someone's house to chill and relax, regardless of children like me running around. The black men in their tweed suits and fedoras, the women in their stilettos and flared skirts. Cold foggy nights, card games, lots of talk... and the timeless sound of Johnny Ace wending its way through a time when there was a lot of struggle, hardship and personal tragedy. I've returned to Johnny Ace time and again over the years and each time he still sounds fresh and still serves as a soundtrack of my thoughts of times passed, steeped in memories both bitter and sweet."
I wish I was born when Johnny Ace was alive.
Reasonstobe | 03/15/2005
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I have listened to the blues kind of music for a long time and my very favorte is Johnny Ace. I wish he made more music and I wish he didn't die."