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Melvin Jackson

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Birth name
  
Melvin Jackson

Genres
  
Blues

Role
  
Guitarist

Name
  
Melvin Jackson

Years active
  
1946–1955, 1960


Melvin Jackson wwwsteveraleighcombluesartistgraphicslilsonj

Also known as
  
Melvin "Lil' Son" Jackson Lil' Son Jackson

Born
  
August 16, 1915 Tyler, Texas, United States (
1915-08-16
)

Origin
  
Tyler, Texas, United States

Died
  
May 30, 1976, Dallas, Texas, United States

Albums
  
Funky Skull, The Complete Imperial Recordings

Record labels
  
Arhoolie Records, Imperial Records, Gold Star Records

Similar People
  
Smokey Hogg, Chris Strachwitz, Frankie Lee Sims, Lightnin' Hopkins, Pee Wee Crayton

Blues musician melvin jackson dead dies at 79


Melvin "Lil' Son" Jackson (August 16, 1915, Tyler, Texas – May 30, 1976, Dallas) was an American blues guitarist. He was a contemporary of Lightnin' Hopkins.

Contents

Melvin Jackson Melvin Jackson Funky Skull Vinyl LP Album at Discogs

Melvin jackson silver cycles


Biography

Jackson's mother played gospel guitar, and he played early on in a gospel group, the Blue Eagle Four. He became a mechanic and served in the Army during World War II, after which he pursued a career as a blues musician He recorded a demo and sent it to Bill Quinn, the owner of Gold Star Records, in 1946. Quinn signed him to a recording contract and released "Freedom Train Blues" in 1948, which became a nationwide hit in the United States. Jackson recorded for Imperial Records between 1950 and 1954, both as a solo artist and with a backing band. His 1950 song "Rockin' and Rollin" was recast by later musicians as "Rock Me Baby".

Jackson was injured in a car crash in the mid-1950s and gave up his music career, returning to work as a mechanic. He recorded an LP released by Arhoolie Records in 1960 but did not resume his career as a musician during the blues revival in the 1960s. He died of cancer in 1976 in Dallas, at the age of 60.

Legacy

B.B. King covered Jackson's "I Got to Leave This Woman", on his 2000 album, Makin' Love Is Good for You. Eric Clapton covered Jackson's "Travelin' Alone", on his 2010 album, Clapton.

References

Melvin Jackson Wikipedia