Buy your R&B Tickets at TicketsNow.com.    
Click here to view our Site Map
San Diego, CA | Change Location
Home > Concert Tickets > R&B Tickets > Johnny Mathis Tickets  

Johnny Mathis Tickets

All Shows


[2 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

Johnny Mathis Concert, Cleveland 2011
By MD from Cleveland, Oh on 4/6/2011
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Opening Acts, Great Sound
Cons:
Too Short
Best For:
Adults, Everyone

This was a great concert. He had a great orchestra and he played all my favorites...sounded like he was in his 30's.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

[8 of 8 customers found this review helpful]

Johnny was Wonderful, Wonderful
By Pat the romantic from Long Island, NY on 8/27/2010
Pros:
Crowd Was In To It, Engaging Stage Presence, Great Encores, Great Lighting, Great Sound
Cons:
Too Hot
Best For:
Everyone

Johnny appeared at Westbury Music Fair on 8/26/2010. My husband and I have been fans for over 50 years. We played his music thru out our courtship and married years. No one can sing a romantic song the way he does. His humility and sincerity are visible in his performance, you've got to love this guy.

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

[3 of 3 customers found this review helpful]

Newest Album is truly worth having!!!
By MSWP from Bowie, MD on 7/7/2009
Pros:
Duet wGladys amazing
Best For:
Adults, Everyone

If you are a real fan and haven't bought the latest album, you are missing the "Magic of Mathis"

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

[2 of 2 customers found this review helpful]

Fond memories
By Vernon from Stuart, Florida on 2/16/2009
Best For:
Everyone

February 14th Just attented concert at King Performing Arts. Spent Valentine Day with my sweetheart listening to Johnny Mathis sing his greatest hits. It doesn't get any better. How do I top this next year??

Was this review helpful to you? Yes/No- You may also flag this review.

Recently Viewed Events
 
Seattle StormFinish Now and receive
5% OFF!
*Cannot be used on NFL & US Open Events
How Buying & Selling Concert Tickets, Theater Tickets & Sporting Events Tickets works at TicketsNow
TicketsNow Guarantee: Authentic Tickets Or Your Money Back! - TicketsNow
Click here for TicketsNow Terms and Conditions.
Insider Email Alerts
Sign up for TicketsNow emails, get 10% off your first order.
Hot Events

Johnny Mathis Biography

One of the last and most popular in a long line of traditional male vocalists who emerged before the rock-dominated 1960s, Johnny Mathis concentrated on romantic readings of jazz and pop standards for the ever-shrinking adult contemporary audience of the '60s and '70s. Though he debuted with a flurry of singles chart activity, Mathis later made it big in the album market, where a dozen of his LPs hit gold or platinum and over 60 made the charts. While he concentrated on theme-oriented albums of show tunes and traditional favorites during the '60s, he began incorporating soft rock by the '70s and remained a popular concert attraction well into the '90s.

Unsurprisingly, given his emphasis on long sustained notes and heavy vibrato, Mathis studied with an opera coach prior to his teenage years, and was almost lured into the profession his other inspirations were the smoother crossover jazz vocalists of the 1940s -- Nat King Cole, Billy Eckstine, and Lena Horne. Mathis was an exceptional high-school athlete in San Francisco, but was wooed away from a college track scholarship and a potential spot on the Olympic squad by the chance to sing. He was signed to a management contract by club owner Helen Noga, who introduced the singer to George Avakian, jazz producer for Columbia Records. Avakian signed him and used orchestras conducted by Teo Macero, Gil Evans, and John Lewis to record Mathis' self-titled debut album in 1957. Despite the name talent and choice of standards, it was mostly ignored upon release.

Columbia A&R executive Mitch Miller -- known for his desperately pop-slanted Sing Along albums and TV show -- decided the only recourse was switching Mathis to Miller's brand of pop balladry, and the formula worked like a charm the LP Wonderful Wonderful didn't include but was named after a Top 20 hit later in 1957, which was followed by the number five It's Not for Me to Say and his first number one, Chances Are. From that point on, Johnny Mathis concentrated strictly on lush ballads for adult contemporary listeners.

Though he charted consistently, massive hit singles were rare for Johnny Mathis during the late '50s and '60s -- half of his career Top Ten output had occurred in 1957 alone -- so he chose to focus instead on the burgeoning album market, much like Frank Sinatra, his main rival during the late '50s as the most popular traditional male vocalist. Mathis moved away from show tunes and traditional pop into soft rock during the '70s, and found his second number one single, Too Much, Too Little, Too Late, in 1978. Recorded as a duet with Deniece Williams, the single prompted Mathis to begin trying duets with a variety of partners (including Dionne Warwick, Natalie Cole, Gladys Knight, and Nana Mouskouri), though none of the singles enjoyed the success of the original.

Mathis continued to release and sell albums throughout the '90s -- his fifth decade of recording for Columbia -- and beyond, among them 1998's Because You Loved Me: Songs of Diane Warren and 2000's Mathis on Broadway. Mathis followed the Broadway album with 2002's The Christmas Album and 2005's Isn't it Romantic: The Standards Album, both of which found the iconic vocalist in fine form. In 2008, Mathis released the Walter Afanasieff-produced and arranged A Night to Remember, his first straight-ahead adult contemporary album in over a decade. Let It Be Me: Mathis in Nashville, Mathis' first full-length album of country music, appeared in September of 2010. ~ John Bush, Rovi