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1980 Tommy Jackson Nashville Fiddler - 6-Page Vintage Article

$ 9.3

Availability: 34 in stock
  • Artist: Tommy Jackson
  • Genre: Country
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Modified Item: No
  • Condition: Original, vintage magazine article. Condition: Good
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • Industry: Music

    Description

    1980 Tommy Jackson Nashville Fiddler - 6-Page Vintage Article
    Original, Vintage Magazine Article
    Page Size: Approx. 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm) each page
    Condition: Good
    When Tommy Jackson died in
    Nashville on December 9, 1979, the
    event was hardly noticed by the general
    public. Neither of the Nashville news-
    papers even ran a story on his long and
    full career, and only a sharp-eyed reader
    looking through the tiny death notices
    would have perceived that one of the
    country’s leading and most influential
    fiddlers was gone. The musicians, of
    course, knew; Tommy’s old friends and
    companions, the veteran stars and
    established studio men who had helped
    establish Nashville as a country music
    center, quietly spread the word through
    the Nashville grapevine, and more than a
    few showed up for his funeral. “Tommy
    was only 53 years old,” one remarked.
    “He had a lot more music to play.”
    During his life Tommy Jackson
    played his share of music. For over
    twenty years, he was the premier
    Nashville studio fiddler, and he probably
    played on more records than any fiddler in
    history. His back-up work ranged all the
    way from Hank Williams to acid rock,
    from the western swing of Bob Wills to
    the bluegrass of Bill Monroe, from the
    banjo picking of Grandpa Jones to the
    smooth stylings of Tammy Wynette. In
    addition to countless sessions backing up
    other stars, Tommy emerged as a star in
    his own right in the mid-1950’s, when his
    long series of fiddle albums became
    popular with square dancers around the
    country. Fiddlers and bluegrass musi-
    cians listened too, for during the 1950’s
    Tommy Jackson was about the only
    fiddler you could hear on records and on
    radio, and a strong case could be made for
    Tommy’s keeping fiddling alive in
    Nashville during those lean years when
    rock and roll threatened to engulf country
    and bluegrass. It was difficult for any
    fiddler growing up in the late 1950’s and
    early 1960’s to avoid coming under
    Tommy’s influence to at least some
    extent.
    Lovers of classic bluegrass have
    listened to Tommy’s fiddling more times
    than they realize. He was the fiddler on
    Bill Monroe's 1951 version of “Kentucky
    Waltz,” and was twin fiddling with
    Gordon Terry on several 1957 songs,
    including “Fallen Star." He recorded with
    Charlie Monroe on his 1956 session for
    Decca. He was on the first great Capitol
    session with Jim and Jesse, at the old
    Tulane Hotel in the early 1950’s, and he
    backed his old pal Mac Wiseman on some
    of Mac’s best Dot records, including his
    1960 version of “Two Different Worlds,”
    with the Osborne Brothers. (Mac himself
    also once went out of his way to play
    back-up guitar for one of Tommy’s solo
    fiddle LPs on Dot.) Tommy himself
    recorded an LP of "Greatest Bluegrass
    Hits” which included his unique fiddle
    versions of “Uncle Pen,” “Cabin in the...
    14866-AL-8009-34