217:. He sang three numbers on a 1952 session, but these were not released at the time (because, according to Jones, the label's owner, Joe Brown, thought his voice was "too rough"). One of the songs, "Rough Treatment", was recorded by the singer and guitarist Little Hudson (Hudson Showers) and released on the same label the following year.
152:, on April 8, 1908. Raised in the church, he developed an interest in music at an early age and learned to play the guitar after his brother bought an old broken one for $ 3. When he was proficient enough, he started playing for country dances.
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and bass (including a homemade bass fashioned from a washtub, a broom handle and a clothesline), in addition to the guitar. He was regarded by his contemporaries as the best guitar player on the
Chicago scene; the noted
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and in nonunion venues, who played an important role in the development of the postwar
Chicago blues sound. He often performed with his first cousin, the singer and guitar player
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Jones is most significant and best known for the singles he recorded in 1948 with his cousin Floyd Jones and the
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By 1939 he had arrived in
Chicago, where he was one of a number of musicians, performing on
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warned Jones not to "fool with that slide" when he sat in with Waters's band one night.
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in the early 1950s, backing musicians such as Snooky Pryor and
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group. By 1955 he had become a pastor of a
Sanctified church.
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player, and singer who contributed to the development of the
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Ledbitter, Mike; Fancourt, Leslie; Pelletier, Paul (1994).
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After 1953 Jones stopped playing blues and joined a
350:. London: Record Information Services. p. 81.
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122:(April 8, 1908 ā March 23, 1988) was an American
16:Chicago blues guitarist, bass player, and singer
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232:Jones died in Chicago, on March 23, 1988.
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348:Blues Records 1943ā1970, Vol. 2 (L to Z)
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438:People from Crittenden County, Arkansas
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256:Komara, Edward M. (24 October 2006).
209:". Jones made further recordings for
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473:20th-century American male musicians
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262:. Psychology Press. p. 547.
448:20th-century American guitarists
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453:20th-century American singers
443:Blues musicians from Arkansas
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428:American blues guitarists
387:. London: Eddison Press.
279:– via Google Books.
259:Encyclopedia of the Blues
140:sound in the late 1940s.
468:Guitarists from Illinois
463:Guitarists from Arkansas
433:American male guitarists
418:Chicago blues musicians
423:American blues singers
458:Singers from Arkansas
328:. hubcap.clemson.edu
326:"Planet and Marvel"
370:Rowe 1973, p. 194.
156:Playing in Chicago
148:Jones was born in
385:Chicago Breakdown
383:Rowe, M. (1974).
310:Rowe 1973, p. 75.
301:Rowe 1973, p. 57.
289:Rowe 1973, p. 56.
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205:'s 1952 hit "
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39:April 8, 1908
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330:. Retrieved
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273:. Retrieved
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199:Snooky Pryor
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183:Muddy Waters
179:slide guitar
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106:Years active
61:(1988-03-23)
413:1988 deaths
408:1908 births
211:JOB Records
166:Floyd Jones
120:Moody Jones
23:Moody Jones
402:Categories
332:2008-11-22
275:24 October
236:References
221:Later life
189:Recordings
144:Early life
110:1930sā1953
35:1908-04-08
195:harmonica
127:guitarist
70:Illinois
46:Arkansas
378:Sources
197:player
181:player
135:postwar
66:Chicago
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227:gospel
95:guitar
91:Vocals
77:Genres
174:banjo
170:piano
124:blues
42:Earle
389:ISBN
352:ISBN
277:2020
264:ISBN
207:Juke
131:bass
99:bass
56:Died
29:Born
404::
315:^
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33:(
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