
Tommy Johnson: Few Notes — Big Influence
Some quotes change history with seven words.
Music, on the other hand, tends to take the scenic route.
Mozart was not known for saying, “You know what this needs? Fewer notes.” Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji apparently looked at empty staff paper and took it personally (see the musical inkblot test known as Opus Clavicembalisticum, which makes pianists reconsider their life choices).
But occasionally, history belongs not to the composer with the most notes, but to the musician who makes two notes unforgettable.
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Tommy Johnson: The Man Behind the Most Famous Two Notes in Cinema
His name was Tommy Johnson (January 7, 1935 – October 16, 2006), and if that name doesn’t ring a bell, that is precisely the point.
You have heard him. You have felt him. You have probably feared him.

Tommy Johnson was not a rock star, though he played in front of millions. He did not headline stadium tours, though his work echoed in packed theaters across the globe. He was a master of an instrument that most of us associate with middle school band recitals and polite chuckling.
Tommy Johnson was a tuba player.
Yes. The tuba. That majestic brass submarine. The orchestral equivalent of a friendly, extremely large golden retriever that occasionally sounds like it swallowed a foghorn.
The Tuba: Not Just Comic Relief
The tuba rarely gets star billing. Violins soar. Trumpets blaze. Flutes sparkle. The tuba lurks in the basement, holding everything together like a musical foundation slab.
But in the right hands, the tuba is not comic relief. It is gravity. It is dread. It is inevitability.
No one understood that better than Tommy Johnson.
Born in 1931, Johnson became one of Hollywood’s most sought-after studio musicians. Over his career, he recorded for nearly 150 films and television programs. When movie composers needed depth, menace, warmth, absurdity, or an extraterrestrial conversation partner, they called Tommy.
The Sound of Crushing Game Show Disappointment
Let us begin with heartbreak.
If you have ever watched The Price Is Right, you know the moment. A contestant gets so close. The crowd leans forward. Hopes rise.
Then comes that sound. Four descending notes that collectively whisper, “You almost had it.”
The first four notes of that infamous “losing horn” were played by Tommy Johnson on his tuba.
Think about that. An entire generation hears those notes and instinctively experiences mild, culturally inherited disappointment. That is branding.
The Day the Aliens Called — and the Tuba Answered
In 1977, Close Encounters of the Third Kind asked a profound question: Are we alone in the universe?
Humanity responded with five bright musical notes.
The aliens responded with a tuba.
When composer John Williams needed a sound that was massive, resonant, and unmistakably otherworldly, he did not turn to a synthesizer. He turned to Tommy Johnson.
Somewhere out there in the cosmos, if extraterrestrials are conducting historical research, they now associate humanity with brass.
Just Two Notes (And Goodbye, Swimming Forever)

Then came 1975.
John Williams wrote what may be the most efficient piece of terror in film history. Two alternating notes. E and F.
That is all it took to permanently alter beach vacations for millions of people.
The opening pulses of the Jaws theme were performed by Tommy Johnson on tuba. No soaring melody. No elaborate flourish. Just the sound of something enormous approaching with patience and dietary interest.
The brilliance is almost offensive in its simplicity. Two notes. Universal dread. Decades of swimmers glancing nervously at perfectly ordinary ripples.
Hollywood’s Secret Weapon
Johnson’s résumé reads like a greatest-hits album of American cinema. He recorded for Jaws, Close Encounters, Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Planet of the Apes, Home Alone, and nearly 150 others. If a major film between the 1960s and 1990s needed low brass, odds are excellent that Tommy Johnson was in the studio.
Studio musicians occupy a curious place in culture. They are everywhere and nowhere. Their work becomes iconic. Their faces remain unknown.
Johnson once demonstrated circular breathing — a technique that allows a brass player to sustain a note seemingly forever — by holding a single tone for astonishing lengths of time. Which means that if a composer had asked for “even more impending doom,” he could have obliged indefinitely.
The Power of Less
History remembers speeches. Music remembers themes. Culture remembers sounds.
Tommy Johnson proved that musical greatness does not require complexity. Sometimes it requires restraint. Sometimes it requires two notes. Sometimes it requires four. Occasionally, it requires the exact sonic equivalent of “sorry, you overbid.”
The next time you hear ominous low brass rolling in from the depths of a soundtrack, consider the quiet masters behind the curtain.
Somewhere in Hollywood history, a man with a tuba quietly shaped the emotional lives of millions — from game show heartbreak to shark-induced paranoia to interstellar diplomacy.
And he did it without ever needing more than a handful of notes.
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