When he signed up to serve as an infantryman in Vietnam in 1966, Jim Johnson left behind what many considered the best rock band in Minneapolis at the time, the Underbeats. Then when he returned from war, he left Minnesota behind for Los Angeles, where his group evolved into Gypsy, served as a house band at the famed Whisky a Go Go and recorded for RCA Records.
Perhaps because of his two years of war duty in between those musical runs, the fact that national fame remained elusive apparently never became too much of a disappointment for Johnson, who died Thursday of esophageal cancer. He was 76.
"After Vietnam, he just sort of went with the flow and was happy to just be playing music," said Johnson's longtime bandmate and childhood friend Doni Larson. "The guy was born a musician. It was in his blood."
Also known by the stage name Calvin James — a flip on his first and middle names — Johnson racked up many random bits of fame outside Minnesota over the years.
Both Ray Charles and Guitar Slim recorded his song "Too Hard to Love You." The Fifth Dimension cut two of his tunes for its 1975 album "Earthbound." Gypsy themselves became radio sensations in St. Louis and a few other markets, unbeknown to the band members at the time.
Most of his success, though, came in Minnesota and the Upper Midwest, a fact underlined in 2016 when Johnson became the inaugural recipient of the Bill Diehl Award, named after the WDGY disc jockey and promoter who godfathered that era's garage-rock bands such as the Underbeats, the Accents and the Trashmen.
"The Underbeats were probably the best band that came out of Minneapolis in the '60s," Trashmen guitarist Tony Andreason told author Rick Shefchik for his tome "Everybody's Heard About the Bird: The True Story of 1960s Rock 'n' Roll in Minnesota."
With Johnson leading the charge on guitar and often vocals, the Underbeats scored one of the biggest regional hits of the early 1960s with "Foot Stompin'," issued in 1964 by Nic-o-Lake Record Store operator George Garrett's namesake label. Garrett also first recorded the Trashmen's "Surfin' Bird."