General Johnson and the Chairmen of the Board
General Johnson and the Chairmen of
the Board

General Johnson Update: General has just finished having final knee surgery this past week.
He thanks everyone for their well wishes!!
It won't be too much longer before he can join us in
concert.
We'll keep you updated!!!

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Now available the highly anticipated new CD's by
General Johnson and the Chairmen of the Board

also available online at
bestbuy.com and rollingstone.com

and
Surfside Records presents the new Chairmen of the Board “Chances Are” from the Cd Soul Tapestry

Track 1
CHANCES ARE
(Written by General Johnson)
Sometimes I think about it, where did all the time
go
Seems like just yesterday, I never thought of
growin’ old
When I look in the mirror my daddy’s face I see
Slowly but surely, time has taken its toll on me
Shattered dreams, scattered schemes, the check was
always in the mail
If success is material things I guess I failed
But if
I could live my life all over again
I wouldn’t change a thing
If I could live my life all
over again
I wouldn’t change a thing
Cause if I would change one second of my life
Chances are…I wouldn’t have you
I had some bad times ah but I
had me some good times to
Ain’t it funny how as time goes
by most of the bad times seem like good
times to
When I think about my young and
crazy days
I regret the precious time I
wasted away
Sometimes I wonder how I made
it through it all
I slipped, tripped and stumbled
but I refuse to fall
And If I could live my life all
over again
I wouldn’t change a thing
If I could live my life all
over again
I wouldn’t change one thing
Cause If I would change one
second of my life
Chances are…I wouldn’t have you
Oh without you-what would I do
I’m no good without you
I wouldn’t trade places with
the richest man on Earth
Money can’t buy me a friend;
money ain’t what I’m worth
Ups, downs, round and rounds
help me be who I am
I wouldn’t change a doggone
thing cause you love me for who I am
Oh If I could live my life all
over again
I wouldn’t change a thing
I said if I could live my life
all over again
I wouldn’t change a thing
Cause If I would change one second of my life
Chances are…I wouldn’t have you
Track 11
For Old Time Sake
(Written by General Johnson)
Lonely days Sleepless nights
I’m losin you-but what can I do
You say you can’t do this no more
You got another plan-I’m dealin’with it the best I
can
This heart of mine just won’t let go
The love we shared, I need you so
I gotta face reality – I know you’re leavin’ me
I ask one last favor of you
Please I beg of you
Let me hold you one more time for old time sake
Help me relieve this hurt and pain- my broken
heart aches
Please let me love you one more time for old time
sake
Please give a friend a break for old time sake
One more time before you go
Let me hold you tight-help me make it through
tonight
Tomorrow is another day
Things change with time-hopefully I can change
your mind
If only for old memories
when you shared true love with me
Please give me tonight
Let me try and make things right
We’ll do nothing you don’t wanna do
All I ask of you – is
Let me kiss you more time for old time sake
Help me relieve this hurt and pain my broken
heartaches
Please let me love you one more time for old time
sake
Please give a friend a break
For old Time sake
I’m sorry for the wrong I’ve done
In my heart you’re the only one
You gotta do what you gotta do
But please I beg of you
Please Please I’m beggin’ you
Let me Love you one more time for old time sake
Help me relieve this hurt and pain my broken
heartaches
Please let me love you one more time for old time
sake
Please give a friend a break
For old time sake
Please for old time sake


General Johnson and Chairmen of the Board's
new single is now available!!
That's My Story "And I'm
Stickin' To It"
Download now at
Amazon.com ,
Napster.com and
other MP3 online download stores
CHAIRMEN OF THE BOARD
Sometimes it can get frustrating
to count all the songs on a new
CD that have been released
earlier. Off the top of my head
I can say that on Soul
Tapestry
(Surfside, SR 1027;
www.surfsiderecords.com)
at least Bittersweet, You
Gotta Crawl Before You Walk,
Three Women and All in
the Family have been
available before, but that still
leaves us with ten equally
elevating tracks.
Produced
and all songs written by
General Johnson, the rhythm
section consists of live
musicians and as always the
background is rich and
arrangement-wise supports
melodies in a delicate way. In
the line-up of General, Danny
Woods and Ken Knox (www.chairmenoftheboard.com),
the boys bring the heat up on a
melodic dancer called I Go
Crazy, a tough beater titled
Beatin’ the Bushes and
What’s Up, a funky chugger
with social comments.
Mid-tempo songs include
Keep on Foolin’ Me and two
quite infectious tunes, Can’t
Get over You and What a
Woman Wants. The opening
bars of the foot-tapping
That’s My Story (and I’m Stickin’
to it) may remind you of
Rock Your Baby, and with
Danny on lead this song has
evolved into a Southern & shag
hit.
Chances Are is a
nostalgic, melodic beat ballad,
and For Old Times’ Sake
is an even more heart-breaking
sobber. Please Give Some
Love Today is another
touching social plea. Overall,
this whole CD just radiates the
joy of creating back-to-basics
music. With story-telling,
melodic songs and emotional
deliveries - be it a jolly
dancer or a tear-jerker - it
certainly is one of the top
albums this year.
My own
in-depth interview with General
dates back already fifteen years
(in our printed issue # 1/94),
but in case you’re interested in
the history of the group the
members do some reminiscing on
their recent DVD, Under the
Radar (www.soulexpress.net/deep109.htm#chairmen).
|

The 30
or so Greatest Southern
Songs
Y’ALL,
March/April 2009, Volume 7,
Number 1, page 36
A note from Y’all
Magazine associate publisher
Keith Sisson:
Basically all forms of American
music originated in the American
South. From The Carter Family
and Jimmie Rodgers to Elvis
Presley and Robert Johnson, the
South’s cultural influence on
American music cannot be argued
nor measured. Why is it that so
many Southerners go on to make
some of the deepest marks in
musical history? Perhaps it
could be the people and the
place that inspires them. There
is no doubt that the South has
the highest concentration of
regional pride in the country
and that pride can be
illustrated by our music. That
got all of us at Y’all Magazine
thinking about what the greatest
Southern songs of all time would
be. The criteria would have to
be that the songs provoke a
uniquely Southern experience,
either by place or emotion. The
songs could be of any format and
would need to have stood the
test of time. The following is a
list of songs we rank as the
“Greatest Southern Songs.” We
hope you enjoy our list. If you
feel we have made and error in
the rankings or left something
out, we would like to hear from
you. Please email us with your
feedback at southernsongs@yall.com
or leave us a comment at
www.yall.com.
11.
Carolina Girls
A song
doesn’t have to be a smash hit
in order to become popular. That
is evident from the success of
“Carolina Girls.” When the band
Chairmen of the Board first came
to the Carolinas, they noticed
the girls there had a specific
style. Band member Danny Woods
noticed that New York girls and
California girls had their own
songs, and that girls from the
Carolinas felt left out.
With
the release of “Carolina Girls”
in the famed mid-Atlantic beach
music style, girls from both
North and South Carolina had a
reason to be prideful. General
Johnson and the Chairmen of the
Board released the song in 1980,
and it would prove to forever be
an empowering and endearing song
to not only Carolina girls in
the ‘80s, but future generations
of Carolina girls to come. The
song spurned bumper stickers,
license plates, and clothing.
Girls from both states were
proud of the song’s claim that
“Carolina Girls (are) best in
the world.
The
women’s athletic teams at the
University of North Carolina use
the song as an unofficial fight
song. Other schools do
similarly, some even having
marching band adaptations.
|

Nearly
forty years after crashing onto
the pop and soul charts with the
hit "Give Me Just A Little More
Time," the Chairmen of the Board
continue to defy gravity,
regularly playing to sellout
crowds and recording while many
of their early 70s R&B peers
have long since left the music
industry. Two decades ago they
became the face of Carolina
Beach Music, a rollicking brand
of music that mirrors the
feel-good R&B of the 60s and
early 70s (wonderfully captured
in the group's 2008 documentary
Under the
Radar)
and they've ridden
the wave they created to
continued success.
It has been four years since the
group's last regular studio
album, All In The
Family, and fans
could have legitimately thought
that the act's recording days
were over. But General Johnson
was positively enthused late
last year when he talked to us
about the songs he was writing
for the group's brand new
release, Soul
Tapestry. During
a spell in the early 70s,
Johnson was one of popular
music's most celebrated
songwriters, providing hits for
several of the acts on the
Invictus record label. But he
still had the fire, and he
believed, the tunes to share,
even as he and his bandmates
enter their sixties.
The good news is that
Soul Tapestry
demonstrates that both General
Johnson the songwriter and The
Chairmen as a group are solid as
we exit the first decade of the
21st Century. Johnson's
historic success has largely
been due to his talent as a
storyteller, from the now
legendary child-turned-man song
"Patches" to the sly 8th Day hit
"You Gotta Crawl Before You
Walk" (which is covered again by
the Chairmen on
Tapestry). And
these stories are central
to group's concerts, where their
multi-culti, multi-generational
audience sings along with every
word. Soul Tapestry
adds a few new
tales to the collection,
most notably
"That's My Story (and I'm
Stickin' To It"), the private
confession of a philandering man
who won't admit to an affair
despite all the evidence against
him. But just as infectious are
"I Go Crazy," a bouncy cut that
sounds like the successor to
"Dangling On A String," and the
sing-songy "Beatin' the Bushes."
A bigger surprise on
Tapestry
is Johnson's more serious take
on family and social issues.
"What's Up" is a pre-Obama rant
of an exasperated man tryin to
make sense of inequality,
homelessness and an
ill-conceived war, and "All In
The Family" relies on family as
tie-that-binds in a world of
personal and societal failings.
Best of all is "Chances Are," a
rumination of an older man who
looks back at his financial and
business failings, but finds
comfort -- even redemption -- in
the romantic love he found
during his life.
Like many recent independent
albums issued by classic soul
artists, Soul
Tapestry lacks the
rich orchestration that the
Chairmen would have had in their
Invictus days, but programmer
Mark Stallings does a nice job
without a major label budget,
particularly the wall of sound
he establishes on "Chances Are."
It is uncertain how many people
outside the Carolinas will be
able to find Soul
Tapestry in their
local stores, but it is worth
seeking out. It is a fine disc
that features the fun,
entertaining sounds for which
the Chairmen have largely
established their legacy but
also provides a deeper, more
mature set of songs that make
the album a sweet, enjoyable
addition to an already solid
group discography. Recommended.
By Chris Rizik
|
All of the Chairmen of the Board
products are available at
www.surfsiderecords.com or call
(704) 372-9918
"UNDER THE RADAR" Now Available!
The Chairmen of the Board,
against all odds, escape the artistic
and business shackles of the
mainstream music industry.
Under the Radar they found
solace and unprecedented success
in a music utopia called
"Carolina Beach Music".
"Starring General Johnson and The Chairmen of
the Board."
"Written and directed by Billy Camp."
Preview the DVD "Under The Radar"
A Documentary of General Johnson and the
Chairmen of the Board.
Watch it HERE

The Chairmen of the
Board came out of
Detroit in the early 70s with a
string of major soul hits, led
by General Johnson's plaintive
vocals and underrated
songwriting. Songs like
"Patches," "Dangling On a
String" and "Give Me Just A
Little More Time" gained for the
group a sizeable following among
R&B fans, but not the kind of
across-the-board success that
their talent merited.
For most of the US, the Chairmen
were an afterthought by the
mid-80s, no longer recording
national hits and seemingly
another in a string of soul
groups that peaked quickly and
faded into oblivion. But the new
documentary Under
the Radar shows a
much different story that has
largely been hidden from the
popular media: that of a group
that has not only survived but
thrived on its own terms, as the
leading purveyors of "Carolina
Beach Music," a brand of
good-time R&B unique to a loyal
fanbase in a specific
geography.
Under the Radar
centers itself at a
Chairmen 2007 outdoor North
Carolina concert of over 12,000
fans, and it is a stunner for
those who assume that all music
is driven by powerful
oligopolies in New York, L.A.
and Nashville. Here are
thousands of people, ranging
from teenagers to senior
citizens, wildly participating
in a concert filled with songs
that 95% of Americans have never
heard. And the audience clearly
knows by heart the dozen or so
sing-along songs like "Gone
Fishin'" and "Carolina Girls."
Even more of a non-sequitur is
seeing a group that 30 years ago
was viewed as an R&B act that
couldn't "cross over" now
performing for an enthusiastic,
almost exclusively white,
Southern crowd.
More than just a concert film,
Under the Radar
provides a history of
an act that, out of the national
spotlight, went to the South and
created a sound for which the
region was ready. For decades,
segregation and racism had
largely kept R&B an
underground music in the
Carolinas, but thousands of
suppressed white R&B fans found
their solace in
the musical freedom that existed
at the beach. The Chairmen
became the right group at the
right time in the 80s to
capitalize on this and create a
very different type of "beach
music" than the Beach Boys/Jan
and Dean version that was known
around the US. It was instead a
rollicking brand of R&B that was
perfect for the regional crowd
and took on the "Carolina Beach"
moniker. And the Chairmen
have been riding that wave now
for over two decades, performing
dozens of concerts in the region
around the year, but especially
in the Summer.
The documentary's interviews
with group members General
Johnson, Ken Knox and Danny
Woods are fascinating but too
short. The explanations of the
group's history and its
surprisingly
successful relocation to North
Carolina provide wonderful
context for the music that
dominates most of the film.
Under the Radar
is a particularly appropriate
release at a time of major label
implosion and the uncertain hope
of independent artists. It
shows the story of a trio
written off by the music
establishment over two decades
ago who have created both DIY
success and an unexpected legacy
as they enter their sixties. It
also provides a much needed --
but previously hidden -- ray of
hope for struggling young
artists to grasp as they
search for their own place in a
changing musical world.
Recommended.
by Chris Rizik
|
Watch the new "King of Kings" video off of
the Merry Christmas CD
Performed by General Johnson and the
Chairmen of the Board.
Watch it HERE
All of the Chairmen of the Board
products are available at
www.surfsiderecords.com or call
(704) 372-9918
|
General
Johnson and The Chairmen of the Board ring tones are now available.
Featuring Hits
like, Carolina Girls, Gone Fishing, On The Beach, Beach Fever and
MORE!
Featuring
songs from
All in the Family
and
Beach Music Anthology |
|
On April
18 2007 in Norfolk ,Va General Johnson was inducted in to the
Legends of Music Walk of Fame. General Johnson was inducted
along with Clarence Clemons and other notable Tide Water Area
Artists.
The Road to Success |
|
Xcel Music
Group will release the Chairman of the Board’s
new southern
soul version of “All in the Family”.

The fifteen track CD
features the R&B rendition of the title track “All in the Family”.
Also featured is the Chairman’s new southern soul single “The
Blacker the Berry” and “You Gotta’ Crawl Before You Walk,”
featuring a soulful performance by Danny Woods as lead
vocalist. The new “All in the Family” CD arranged,
remixed, written and produced by General Johnson, is now available.

Click here for more information and online sales. |
Lyrical excerpts from the “All in the
Family”
It Ain’t Easy Bein’ ME
It ain’t easy bein’ me
I don’t know about you
Just trying to be who I’m supposed to be
It ain’t easy bein’ me
It’s so hard to be good
It’s so good when it’s bad
Tryin’ to live so I don’t make you mad
It ain’t easy bein’ me
I can’t be you, you can’t be me
Why do you try to make me who you want me
to be
I ain’t got but one life to live
I ain’t gon’ let you live it for me
It ain’ easy bein’ me
But who else can I be
I’m just tryin’ to be the best me I can
be
Please let me be
All in the Family
Daddy lost his paycheck gambling all
night long
Baby sister had a baby, her boyfriend
refused to own
Big brother was strung out
Daddy wanted to throw him out
But mama said no, he’s our flesh and
blood and together we can work it out
Mama said, it’s all in the family
Blood is thicker than water
In tryin’ times in our love we find the
strength to keep keepin’ on
Bad boys tried to get baby brother to
sell drugs
He had to choose between doin’ wrong and
his families love
Mom and Dad had taught him right from
wrong
We help him stay in school where he
belonged
Today we’re as proud of him as we can be
He graduated from college with a masters
degree
Mama said, it’s all in the family
Blood is thicker than water
In tryin’ times in our love we find the
strength to keep keepin’ on
All for one, one for all
Together we stand divided we fall
When your back is up against the wall
You can count on family to come when you
call
Big brothers off drugs now
Baby sister and her boyfriend are married
now
I’m trying to make it in this world that
has no love for me
But I know I can make it cause I got my
family
I know it’s all in the family
Blood is thicker than water
In tryin’ times in our love we find the
strength to keep keepin’ on
General
Johnson
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General Johnson
&
The Chairmen of the Board
1409 East
Boulevard, Suite 231
Charlotte, North
Carolina 28205
Telephone: (704) 372-9918 Fax: (704) 372-2754
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