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by Terence Lee » Sat Jul 21, 2007 4:14 am
Chances Are, Johnny Mathis Will Shine at Performances with S.F. Symphony
by Rich Freedman
Oakland Tribune, July 20, 2007
One was 5-foot-7, the other 6-foot-10. Destiny would take them in different directions.
But high jumping united Johnny Mathis and Bill Russell when the smooth-as-silk vocalist was at San Francisco State University and the Hall-of-Fame basketball player leaped at the University of San Francisco.
"He and I were and still are good buddies," Mathis said. "I have this wonderful picture of Bill jumping over the bar while I'm under it. We were like Mutt and Jeff."
Mathis recorded a jump a mere 2 inches short of the then-Olympic record when a nightclub owner heard him sing. He was 19. Though Mathis was asked to the 1956 Olympic trials, Columbia Records heard of this talented crooner.
A signature later, Mathis' athletic career ended. And a stellar singing career began.
"Wonderful, Wonderful," ''It's Not For Me To Say" and "Chances Are" and a 1957 Ed Sullivan Show appearance made Mathis a star.
And, 50 years later, Clem and Mildred Mathis' "little Johnny" is still singing, still recording and still leaving audiences misty eyed.
"You don't want to get overjoyed having a career while you're doing it," Mathis said. "But you get to a point where you sit around and think about what you have done. It's just a special feeling you have. It's very meaningful in a very, very private way. You can never go out and shout to the world, "I'm so happy being me!"
The San Francisco Symphony is undoubtedly happy it hosts the man whose Top 40 tunes span four decades. The acclaimed orchestra backs Mathis on Friday and Saturday in a welcome homecoming at Davies Symphony Hall.
"Performing with the symphony is a treat I wish everybody who has ever fantasized about singing could have," Mathis said last week by phone. "It's like being lifted off the ground without doing anything. It's taking you away to wonderful places and is an extraordinary experience."
Mathis called Davies "one of the most beautiful places in the world to perform."
He should know. Mathis has appeared everywhere with everyone from Ray Charles to Bette Midler, Dionne Warwick and the late Beverly Sills. I've worked with extraordinary people who did extraordinary things vocally," Mathis said. "One of my favorite things to do is sing in tandem. You hear yourself constantly. So when you sing with somebody else, it's just wonderful."
Many would put Mathis in that "wonderful" category, though he initially didn't think he was anything special.
"I was disappointed at the beginning of my career," he said. "My voice was too high. It wasn't big and masculine like one of my heroes, Billy Eckstine, or Nat King Cole."
It was a learning experience, Mathis said.
"When I started, I knew how to open my mouth and sing a note without harming my vocal cords. That's all I studied," he said. "I was so busy in athletics and school politics. I never really became the musician I would have loved to become. All I did was learn to produce the tones properly when I was thrust on stage. I really learned how to use my voice and make it palatable and not get too carried away."
Mathis laughed.
"I ruined a lot of songs along the way," he said. "It's a wonderful learning process. Too bad you can't have it when you're a kid."
Perhaps, but Mathis' father, a "big booster," knew his son had the ability.
"And, before I knew it, I had a chance to make a recording," the artist said. "That was the catalyst, the thing that made the difference in whether I continued to sing or whether I went back to San Francisco State. Once I started recording, it opened up a lot of avenues for me."