Remembering Jellybean Johnson, heartbeat of the Minneapolis Sound
Friends, family and fellow musicians remember Garry โJellybeanโ Johnson as more than a legendary drummer and guitarist. From his North Side hugs to late night club gigs, he connected generations, helped shape the Minneapolis Sound, mentored young artists and poured his energy into the Minneapolis Sound Museum so his legacy would keep lifting the community.

On stage, Jellybean Johnson was thunder and electricity. Behind the drum kit, behind the guitar, and behind the curtain of Minneapolis fame, he was a force so steady and full of joy that even those who played beside him for 50 years still struggle to believe heโs gone.
But for his daughter, Bianca Rhodes, the first image that flashes is simpler: a towering man in a long coat stepping into her North Side daycare, arms outstretched. โโDaddyโs big baby, how’s that baby?โโ he would say, scooping her up. โIโll never forget that,โ she said. โHis hugs, his kisses, his joy. Thatโs what comes first.โ
Johnson: drummer, guitarist, producer, and an architect of the Minneapolis Sound, died suddenly Nov. 21, two days after his birthday, sending shockwaves through a community that has long regarded him as one of its brightest cultural pillars. His loss has left Minnesotaโs musical elders grieving, young musicians reflective, and his family determined to protect his legacy. And across the Twin Cities, the stories pouring out reveal a man who lived his life tuned to one frequency: connection.
โBean was the same person wherever you saw him,โ said Gary Hines, bandleader of Sounds of Blackness. โWhether it was the Grammys, Bunkers or on the streetโฆ positive, encouraging, hilarious. His stage persona was just an amplification of who he already was.โ Hines learned of his passing the same day the two traded their usual affectionate texts. โWe always said, โI love you.โ Iโm so glad we said it that day,โ he said. โWhat comes from the heart reaches the heart, and Beanโs heart was enormous.โ
To many in Minneapolis, Johnson was the connective tissue between musical generations. He could be at Flyte Tyme [the Minneapolis funk band Harris and Johnson were a part of] one night, mentoring high-school players the next, then dropping in at Minnesota Music Cafรฉ later that evening. โHe always showed up,โ said James โJimmy Jamโ Harris. โHe might play drums at one club, guitar at another. Every night he was out making music or supporting it. He lived and breathed it.โ
Harris credits Johnson with altering the entire trajectory of his career. โI brought my drums to join Terryโs [Terry Lewis of Flyte Tyme] band, and Terry said, โWe already have a drummerโฆ Jellybean.โ So I became a keyboardist because of him. That changed everything.โ He laughed remembering Johnsonโs dual nature: the quiet, introspective drummer and the fiery, spotlight-ready guitarist. โHe was rock solid and flamboyant at the same time,โ he said. โThat was Bean.โ
At home, Rhodes said, her father moved at a different rhythm: three TVs playing at once, blues humming in the background, guitar riffs drifting through the house while he read the newspaper at lightning speed. โEverybody knows Jellybean. Only a few of us know Garry,โ she said, referring to his legal name. โHe was introverted, relaxed, listening to Parliament or Sly, playing guitar, and watching basketball.โ
Her childhood was filled with small, indelible memories: forehead kisses she refused to wipe off; Timberwolves games at the old Flyte Tyme suite; watching him on โArsenio Hallโ and โSaturday Night Liveโ; listening to him critique drummers who attempted to play โ777-9311โ correctly on YouTube. โAs I got older, I understood, music was his first love. So I met him where he was,โ she said. โIf I wanted to spend time with him, Iโd go to the clubs, go to rehearsals, be part of his world.โ
Johnsonโs musical fingerprints are everywhere: The Timeโs โCool,โ Janet Jacksonโs โBlack Cat,โ Alexander OโNealโs โCriticize,โ and Mint Conditionโs debut album among them. But for those who worked with him, his spirit mattered just as much. โHe didnโt just influence the Minneapolis Sound, he embodied it,โ Harris said. โHe took it international. He helped shape the rock energy, the funk backbone, the precision.โ
Hines agreed. โHis drumming was the heartbeat of the Minneapolis Sound. His guitar was fire. And his soul held it all together.โ
Younger musicians often describe Johnson as a lifeline. โHe was a musiciansโ musician,โ Rhodes said. โHe had nephews everywhere, musicians he loved, who called him Uncle Garry.โ Hines recalled countless moments of Johnson mentoring in schools, community centers, clubs and rehearsal halls. โHe would sit in, advise, and encourage. He made people better,โ he said. Harris added that Johnson also advocated fiercely behind the scenes. โYou always knew Bean had your back.โ
In recent years, Johnson devoted himself to building what he hoped would be a final, lasting contribution: the Minneapolis Sound Museum. Conceived as both a cultural archive and a forward-facing hub for young artists, the space will include rehearsal rooms, classrooms, a soundstage and community gathering areas. Rhodes, who serves as vice president of the board, said the idea took root after the family lost a musician close to them to suicide. โWe realized: how does Minneapolis not have this?โ she said. โThis is music that changed the world.โ
What she wants people to remember, she said, is her fatherโs joy and his shredding. โHis solos are legendary,โ she said. โHe could go until the ancestors told him to stop.โ She hopes fans celebrate rather than mourn: โDaddy wouldnโt want us sad. Heโd want us dancing. Make a playlistโฆ The Time, Janet, Mint Condition, and enjoy yourself.โ
Hines echoed that message. โHis love for this community was fierce,โ he said. โHis spirit is still here.โ Harris summed it up simply: โHe was just a good guy. A great guy. And his influence will ripple out for generations.โ
Rhodes believes her father prepared her for this moment, even if neither fully understood it at the time. โThe body stays, but the energy never dies,โ she said. โDaddy did what he needed to do. He left his legacy in place. And heโs still with us.โ
And she knows exactly what he would say now: โHeโd want you to dance, be happy, and shake your booty.โ
Scott Selmer welcomes reader responses at sselmer@spokesman-recorder.com

This article makes me sick. Jimmy Jam you were no friend to Bean and havenโt reached out to him in YEARS including after we lost our son not to SUICIDE but to fentanyl poisoning in 2021, which was the catalyst for the Minneapolis Sound Museum.
Talk to someone who really knew and loved Bean like James Popeye Greer.
And he was Uncle BEAN. No one EVER called him Garry.