Freedy Johnston
By All Music Guide
By All Music Guide
ew wave scene and became a passionate fan of local legends the Embarrassment. Johnston also began listening to everything from Neil Young to XTC and developed a taste for country music. After several years of working in restaurants and writing songs on a four-track recorder in the evening, Johnston pulled up stakes in 1985 and moved to New York City. (A collection of Johnstons early four-track recordings was released in 2004 under the title The Way I Were.) After several years of making the rounds, Johnstons work caught the attention of Bar/None Records, a respected independent label based in Hoboken, NJ.
Johnston made his recording debut in 1989 with two tracks on a Bar/None label sampler, Time for a Change, and his first album, the scrappy and genially eccentric The Trouble Tree, followed in 1990. While the album received largely positive reviews and became a minor hit in Holland, sales were poor in the United States, and in order to finance recording of his second album, Johnston was forced to sell some farmland which had been with the Johnston family for generations (an decision Johnston set to music in his song Trying to Tell You I Dont Know). However, the risk paid off as 1992s Can You Fly earned enthusiastic reviews and was named among the years best albums by The New York Times, Billboard, Spin, and Musician Magazine; Robert Christgau in The Village Voice went so far as to call it a perfect album. The album also earned a healthy amount of alternative radio airplay, and Can You Flys success convinced Elektra Records to sign Johnston. His first set for Elektra, 1994s This Perfect World, received similarly positive press and spawned a minor hit single in the song Bad Reputation. While Johnstons next three albums for Elektra -- Never Home, Blue Days Black Nights, and Right Between the Promises -- didnt fare as well in terms of sales, he maintains a loyal fan following and the respect of critics and peers. He released The Way I Were: 4-Track Demos 1986-1992 in 2004, followed by Live at McCabes Guitar Shop in 2006. Johnston has also dabbled in film scoring by writing incidental music for the Farrelly Brothers comedy Kingpin, and he performs occasionally with the Know-It-All Boyfriends, an informal cover band featuring Butch Vig and Doug Erikson of Garbage.










