Songwriter, harmonica player, and singer
Johnny Mars was raised in a sharecropping family. He was given his first harmonica at age nine. His family lived in various places around the South, including North Carolina, Georgia and Florida. When
Mars' mother died in 1958, the older family members settled in Florida, while
Johnny and his younger brother went to live in New Paltz, N.Y. After he graduated from high school, he played club shows around New York and recorded with his band Burning Bush for Mercury Records.
In the mid-'60s,
Mars moved to San Francisco, where he met Dan Kennedy and formed
the Johnny Mars Band, playing clubs and festivals in northern California, as well as shows for rock promoter/impresario/producer Bill Graham. However,
Mars could not seem to expand his audience much in San Francisco. After hearing about the greener pastures across the pond from his friend
Rick Estrin of
Little Charlie & the Nightcats, he toured England in 1972. There, he recorded a couple of albums, eventually moving to West London in 1978. Working with producer
Ray Fenwick, who also worked with
Spencer Davis and
Ian Gillan,
Mars met with success on the much praised album, Life on Mars.
In 1991,
Mars became a featured soloist with the British new wave pop group
Bananarama. The group used him on their singles "Preacher Man," "Megalomaniac," and "Long Train Running," and he appeared in the group's video of "Preacher Man." Throughout the '90s,
Mars retained his strong European fan base, and he enjoys particularly strong followings in Ireland, Scotland, and Scandinavia. Critics there have called him "the
Jimi Hendrix of the harmonica." Over the years,
Mars has shared bills with
Hendrix (before he was well-known) and
Magic Sam. In 1992, after a long absence from the Bay Area blues scene, owing to his new foothold in England and the rest of Europe,
Mars was invited to play at the San Francisco Blues Festival.
Mars' 1994 U.S. release for MM&K Recordings, Stateside with Johnny Mars, features brilliant, original, topical compositions and superb, unique harmonica playing, unfettered by the standard Chicago blues conventions. ~ Richard Skelly