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    • American Piedmont blues musician

      • John Jackson (February 24, 1924 – January 20, 2002) was an American Piedmont blues musician. Music was not his primary activity until his accidental "discovery" by the folklorist Chuck Perdue in the 1960s. Jackson had effectively given up playing in his community in 1949.
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  2. John Jackson (February 24, 1924 – January 20, 2002) was an American Piedmont blues musician. Music was not his primary activity until his accidental "discovery" by the folklorist Chuck Perdue in the 1960s. Jackson had effectively given up playing in his community in 1949.

  3. Blues artist, songster, and storyteller, John Jackson (February 25, 1924 - January 20, 2002) was the most important black Appalachian musician to come to broad public attention during the mid-1960s. The so-called Folk Revival of that decade witnessed the rediscovery of artists such as Mississippi

  4. For more information for the album, please visit: http://www.folkways.si.edu/albumdetai... John Jackson is featured on Classic Appalachian Blues from Smithsonian Folkways, a new album drawn...

    • 3 min
    • 35.1K
    • Smithsonian
  5. 725. 83K views 15 years ago. In rare footage from 1970, all-round folk blues entertainer John Jackson performs "That Will Never Happen No More." From the DVD "John Jackson: The Video...

    • 4 min
    • 84K
    • GtrWorkShp
  6. His music--East Coast Piedmont blues, ragtime, folk, old-time hillbilly songs and ballads--transcended race, class and intellectual backgrounds as if barriers did not exist. Without a doubt, Jackson, an absolute favorite at blues festivals all over the world, was one of the country's preeminent singer-guitarists, a genuine national treasure.

  7. He was one of the great practitioners of the Piedmont blues (formerly East Coast blues) guitar style, which relies on finger picking and melody as opposed to the more percussive nature of Delta blues. He heard a great deal of music on 78 rpm discs by artists such as Jimmie Rodgers, Blind Blake, and Mississippi John Hurt, and he learned to play ...

  8. Jan 22, 2002 · John Jackson, 77, one of the last masters of the so-called Piedmont-style blues singing and guitar picking, who was recognized in 1986 as a National Heritage Fellow by the National Endowment...