Anthony Jackson

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
September Second 00:00 Tools
Sweet Inspiration 00:00 Tools
Home 00:00 Tools
Training 00:00 Tools
Little Peace in C for U 00:00 Tools
Cantabile 00:00 Tools
Inner Power 00:00 Tools
Love Letter 00:00 Tools
Footprints 00:00 Tools
Colors 00:00 Tools
So What 00:00 Tools
Interspirit 00:00 Tools
Caldera 00:00 Tools
Cuore Vibes Part 1 00:00 Tools
Seviglia 00:00 Tools
What Jamaican? 00:00 Tools
Parhelia 00:00 Tools
Cuore Vibes Part 2 00:00 Tools
Poppy Girls (Instrumental) 00:00 Tools
Ionio II 00:00 Tools
Poppy Girls 00:00 Tools
Anthony Jackson - How Long Has That Evening Train Been Gone 00:00 Tools
Africa 00:00 Tools
A Little Silver In My Pocket 00:00 Tools
September Second (Live) 00:00 Tools
Home (Live) 00:00 Tools
If 00:00 Tools
The Girl A Dime 00:00 Tools
Movin´on 00:00 Tools
Anadolu 00:00 Tools
Beyoglu 00:00 Tools
Saturday 00:00 Tools
Cool 00:00 Tools
Cantabile (Live) 00:00 Tools
Glow with the Flow 00:00 Tools
Convergence 00:00 Tools
Spur of the Night 00:00 Tools
Two Ways 00:00 Tools
Ten Eight 00:00 Tools
ReallA Than 3 D 00:00 Tools
Altitudes 00:00 Tools
Yana Yana 00:00 Tools
For You 00:00 Tools
Back Home 00:00 Tools
Take the A Train (Live) [Bonus Track] 00:00 Tools
About Autumn (Seasons Change) 00:00 Tools
Bass Players You Should Know. Ep4 00:00 Tools
Ritmo de la Noche 00:00 Tools
Goin' For The Gold 00:00 Tools
Cantabile (Live) (Live) 00:00 Tools
September Second (Live) (Live) 00:00 Tools
Home (Live) (Live) 00:00 Tools
On my last day 00:00 Tools
How Long Has That Evening Train Been Gone 00:00 Tools
Cuore Vibes, Pt. 1 00:00 Tools
Just Reconnoitering 00:00 Tools
Thru Traffic 00:00 Tools
Cuore Vibes, Pt. 2 00:00 Tools
The Suits 00:00 Tools
Angels - Original Mix 00:00 Tools
Time to Unwind 00:00 Tools
Take The 'A' Train 00:00 Tools
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Anthony Jackson is a Grammy-nominated American electric bass guitar player based in New York City. By those who know his playing, musicians and non-musicians alike, he is considered a master, who has furthered the technical and idiomatic boundaries of his instrument. He is seen by many to have added considerable legitimacy to the instrument in more jazz-related musical contexts, though he has had a career that has gone beyond that style. Born on June 23, 1952, in New York City, Anthony Jackson has been a distinctive voice on the electric bass ever since he entered the scene in New York City. He began learning the piano as a teen before switching to the guitar, and finally picking up the bass after being influenced by legendary Motown bassist James Jamerson. At age 18, Jackson became a working session musician, whose playing was eventually in high demand. Most musicians familiar with Jackson’s playing know that he has a very particular style. This style can partly be attributed to Jackson’s musical influences. Jackson cites his main influences as James Jamerson — one of Motown’s most prominent bass players and the electric bass’ first virtuoso, Jack Casady of Jefferson Airplane, and French composer Olivier Messiaen. Jackson initially invented what has now caught on as the “six-string bass,” - a bass guitar tuned B-E-A-D-G-C. His idea, which he called the contrabass guitar, precedes any modern standard six string bass by at least twenty years. Jackson said that the idea for adding more strings to what was previously the “Fender bass” came from a limited range and frustration with the decreased sonority and loss of upper range of de-tuned strings. When asked what he makes of criticism of the six-string, Jackson replies: “Why is four [strings] the standard and not six? As the lowest-pitched member of the guitar family, the instrument should have had six strings from the beginning. The only reason it had four was because Leo Fender was thinking in application terms of an upright bass, but he built it along guitar lines because that was his training. The logical conception for the bass guitar encompasses six strings.” Though Jackson came up with the idea some years previously, and first approached various luthiers about the construction of his idea in about 1974, he began playing the six string bass exclusively in 1981. Carl Thompson built the first 6-string for Jackson in 1975. But he later switched to basses built by Vinnie Fodera and Joey Lauricella. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.