Died On This Date (October 14, 2009) Johnny Jones / Nashville Blues Icon; Mentored Jimi Hendrix

Johnny Jones
DOB Unknown – October 14, 2009

Photo by Joseph A. Rosen
Photo by Joseph A. Rosen

Johnny Jones was a Nashville blues guitar master who got his first big break playing behind Junior Wells back in the 1950s.  By the ’60s, Jones was playing in a band called the King Casuals alongside Billy Cox and a young Jimi Hendrix.  It was in this combo that Jones reportedly tutored Hendrix in the fine art of guitar playing, helping to turn him into the icon we know of today.  And legend has it that one night while on a club stage during the ’60s, Jones and Hendrix went head to head in a guitar duel that rivaled anything Robert Johnson and the devil might have thrown at each other at the crossroads.  Those in attendance clearly cheered Jones on as the “winner.”    Johnny Jones stayed a constant fixture in the Nashville music scene through recent years.  He was found dead in his apartment during the morning hours of October 14, 2009.  He was 73 years old.

Thanks to Jon Grimson who produced the segment below.

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Can I Get an Amen? - Johnny Jones

Died On This Date (October 3, 1969) Skip James / Blues Legend

Nehemiah “Skip” James
June 21, 1902 – October 3, 1969

skip-jamesSkip James was a hard living bootlegger, a sharecropper and a hard laborer.  But above all, he was one of the most influential of the early Delta bluesmen.  With a unique and highly sophisticated style of picking coupled with a ghostly falsetto voice, James was indeed one of a kind.  His form of playing and singing was a direct influence on many, such as Robert Johnson, but no one has ever truly been able to replicate it effectively.  James’ professional music career began in 1931 when he began recording sides of Paramount Records.  James re-recorded many blues standards at the time, but it was generally his versions of the songs that later got covered by the likes of Johnson and even later, Cream, Deep Purple and Beck.  As quick as James came onto the scene, he vanished.  Over the next three decades, he rarely performed live and made no new recordings, becoming not much more than a footnote in blues history, until the early ’60s when he was “re-discovered” during the folk and blues revival.  After being descovered by folk guitarists John Fahey, Bill Barth, and Henry Vestine in a Mississippi hospital in 1964, James’ career was put back on track.  During his later years, he was a featured performer at the Newport Folk Festival and recorded for Takoma Records and Vanguard Records, where he was dubbed a “Vanguard Visionary” by future Vice-President, Dan Sell.   His influence on pop culture has been felt in recent years as well.  Indie rock icon, Beck covered his “He’s A Mighty Good Leader” in 1994, while Chris Thomas King recorded his “Hard Time Killing Floor Blues” for the O’ Brother, Where Art Thou flim and soundtrack.  And his “Devil Got My Woman” was prominently featured both the plot of and soundtrack to the 2001 cult hit, Ghost World, starring Thora Birch and Scarlett Johansson.  With his health deteriorating in later years, Skip James passed away in 1969 at the age of 69.

What You Should Own

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Blues from the Delta - Skip James