John Royce (Johnny) Mathis
September 30th 1935 - Texas, USA

Johnny Mathis is an American popular singer of multiracial heritage.
Born in Gilmer, Texas, and raised in San Francisco, California, Mathis began singing publicly at school and church
events shortly after his father discovered his talents. His father found him a voice teacher when he was about
thirteen years old. He remains one of the very few popular singers who received years of professional voice training
that included opera. He also was an athletic talent, earning four athletic letters in high school and a subsequent
athletic scholarship to San Francisco State College. Mathis also remains a large part of San Francisco State College's
sports history—in 1954 he broke future basketball great Bill Russell's high jump record by jumping six feet five
inches (1.96 meters). At the time only four Olympic athletes had managed to clear this height. While training to
become a teacher, he was talent-spotted at a concert and signed by Columbia Records. His most difficult decision was
deciding whether to go to the Olympic tryouts, to which he had been invited, or to keep an appointment to make his
first recordings which were released in 1956. While Mathis opted for a recording career, he has never completely
abandoned his enthusiasm for sports. An avid golfer who has completed a minimum of five holes-in-one, and has hosted
several tournaments in his name in the USA and the United Kingdom.
Although frequently described as a romantic singer, his vast discography includes jazz, traditional pop, Brazilian and
Spanish music, soul/R&B, soft rock, and Broadway/Tin Pan Alley standards. He enjoyed some early cinematic visibility
when he sang one of his first hits, "It's Not for Me to Say", in the film, Lizzie, in which he also had a small acting
role. Mathis also remains highly synonymous with holiday music, having recorded six Christmas albums. He has recorded
over 100 albums and sold more than 100 million albums and singles worldwide.
He has the distinction of having the longest stay of any recording artist on the Columbia Record label, having been
with the label from 1956 to 1963 and from 1968 to the present.
He is one of only a few recording artist whose career has spanned six calendar decades.
Some of his hit songs include "Chances Are, "It's Not for Me to Say,"
"Wonderful, Wonderful",. "The Twelfth of Never,"
"Wild Is the Wind," "Heavenly,"
"Misty",. "Small World"
"A Certain Smile",. "Gina," "What Would My Mary Say," "On a
Clear Day (You Can See Forever)," "I'm Coming Home," "When a Child Is Born," "Gone, Gone, Gone", "Too Much, Too
Little, Too Late" (with Deniece Williams), "The Last Time I Felt Like This" (with Jane Olivor), and "Friends in
Love" (with Dionne Warwick).
Mathis has had much more success as an albums artist. His albums achieved success in part due to their reputation as
an accompaniment to lovemaking. Some of his celebrated early albums include "Heavenly," "Faithfully," "Open Fire, Two
Guitars," "Warm," "Swing Softly," "Johnny's Mood," and "I'll Buy You a Star."
Mathis continues to perform and record regularly and his latest album, 2005's Isn't It Romantic: the Standards Album,
has been enthusiastically received by critics.
A 1982 article in US Magazine quotes Mathis as having had a sexual relationship with a male saxophone player; however,
despite a multiplicity of other, more lengthy articles, no other source documents Mathis as being other than
heterosexual.
Johnny Mathis has the distinction of being the first recording artist to have a Greatest Hits album released. The
album, simply titled Johnny's Greatest Hits was released in 1958 and peaked at number one in Billboard's Pop Album
charts. It would stay on the charts for nearly ten years, a feat that was not equalled until 1983 by Pink Floyd's
"Dark Side Of The Moon" album.