Fruteland Jackson

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Blues 2.0 05:27 Tools
It's A Bad Night To Be A Stray Dog 04:36 Tools
Blues Over Baghdad 00:00 Tools
Tell Me What You Say 00:00 Tools
The Lonely Traveler 00:00 Tools
Happy Birthday Blues 00:00 Tools
It's All Good 00:00 Tools
I Won 00:00 Tools
My Pencil Don't Write No More 04:02 Tools
You Are My Sunshine 00:00 Tools
My Grandfather's Blues (He Came Up the Hardway) 00:00 Tools
Laura Marie 00:00 Tools
Sitting on My Front Porch 00:00 Tools
Blues on the Banjo 05:04 Tools
Long Distance Love Affair 00:00 Tools
A Gambler's View 00:00 Tools
My Baby Left Me All Alone In E Minor 00:00 Tools
I Can Still Rock and Roll 00:00 Tools
I Wonder 00:00 Tools
Sometimes Bad Man Blues 00:00 Tools
How Could We Live Without Love 04:56 Tools
Moon Man Rag 00:00 Tools
Big Road Blues 00:00 Tools
The I.R.S. 00:00 Tools
Titanic Blues 00:00 Tools
Alligator Blues 00:00 Tools
Fat Santa 00:00 Tools
Dragon Lady Blues 00:00 Tools
Mango Bango 00:00 Tools
Can't Be Yo' Man 00:00 Tools
Lucky Lady 00:00 Tools
Two Steps to Hell 00:00 Tools
Blues 2.0 ((Fruteland Jackson) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
Goin' Down To King Biscuit 00:00 Tools
Pearlie's Blues 00:00 Tools
Is That Your Real Name? 00:00 Tools
Where's My Daddy? 00:00 Tools
Java Josephine 00:00 Tools
Big Road Blues (Tommy Johnson) 00:00 Tools
Fruteland Jackson - Alligator Blues 00:00 Tools
I Don't Want You No More (Broadcast 13th July 2006) 00:00 Tools
Highway Blues & Key To The Highway (Broadcast 13th July 2006) 00:00 Tools
The Lonely Traveler ((Fruteland Jackson) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
A Gambler's View (Broadcast 13th July 2006) 00:00 Tools
How Long (Broadcast 13th July 2006) 00:00 Tools
Moon Man Rag ((Fruteland Jackson) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
Ida B. 00:00 Tools
I Can Still Rock And Roll ((Fruteland Jackson & Paul Hill) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
I Wonder ((Fruteland Jackson) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
Laura Marie ((Fruteland Jackson)Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
My Pencil Don't Write No More (Bo Carter/ Fruteland Jackson) 00:00 Tools
Sometimes Bad Man Blues ((Fruteland Jackson & Lee Dabagia) Large Nose Publishing/Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
08 - Worksong - Fieldholler - 1996 - ... Is All I Crave 00:00 Tools
Long Distance Love Affair ((Fruteland Jackson) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
How Could We Live Without Love ((Fruteland Jackson & Johnnie Mae Dunson-Smith) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
Cold Cold Woman 00:00 Tools
07 - Ida B. - 1996 - ... Is All I Crave 00:00 Tools
Lucky Lady ((Fruteland Jackson & Paul Hill) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
Blues On The Banjo ((Fruteland Jackson) Warimo Music BMI) 00:00 Tools
Amazing Grace 00:00 Tools
Good as Your Last Dollar 00:00 Tools
Peace In Hell 00:00 Tools
My Baby Left Me Alone In E Minor 00:00 Tools
My baby left me all alone 00:00 Tools
My Grandfather's Blues 00:00 Tools
How's It Goin' 00:00 Tools
How Long 00:00 Tools
All Pain, No Gain 00:00 Tools
Damaged Goods 00:00 Tools
All the Dad I Had 00:00 Tools
the IRS 00:00 Tools
Careless Love 00:00 Tools
I Don't Want You No More 00:00 Tools
Just Another Day 00:00 Tools
There's Gonna Be SOme Changes Made 00:00 Tools
Love In Vain 00:00 Tools
Down The Road 00:00 Tools
04 - How's It Goin' - 1996 - ... Is All I Crave 00:00 Tools
When Death Comes Creepin' In 00:00 Tools
Sittin' On My Front Porch 00:00 Tools
Chicago Flood Song (1991) 00:00 Tools
All The Dady I Had 00:00 Tools
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Fruteland is one of the few Americans dedicated to performing and preserving acoustic blues in its various styles (traditional or contemporary). From field hollers and work songs to Delta and Piedmont styles. Fruteland is a singer/songwriter and educator who performs at blues festivals, cultural centers and clubs worldwide. His songs range from blues ballads to folk and gospel standards and what he refers to as "Baby-Boomer" blues. Many of his original works combine contemporary themes played in the spirit of early blues musicians in the classic styles. Fruteland calls himself a blues activist and oral historian promoting awareness through education by conducting Blues in the Schools programs. "Mr. Fruteland," as he is known by students range from the exceptional to the emotionally challenged and the high risk students as well as the economically depressed areas who have participated in his Bluz in the Hood program and another called Trading Handguns for Harmonicas. Fruteland Jackson was born June 9,1953, in Sunflower County, Mississippi, the fourth child of six. He was reared in a musical and church going family. His maternal grandparents, Willie and Anna Bradley are founders of a church in Doddsville, MS., the New Jericho M. B. Church, and both living testimonies to the family’s oral traditions that date back to Slavery. His grandmother predicted, "This gran’son is gon’ be a preacha’ and save souls". Fruitland's work with young people in schools is making his grandmother’s predictions ring with truth. Unlike many other African-Americans he is fortunate to be able to document his roots back to 1863. Old Jericho MB Church where Fruteland was baptized in 1965 was founded before Emancipation and no longer stands in the town of Doddsville. Fruteland’s paternal grandfather was a prominent Baptist minister, the Rev. R. L. Chandler of Inverness, Mississippi. Fifty years after the establishment of his first church, it still held five of its original members. The elder Chandler lived to be 96 years old and has a public park and a street named in his honor, located in Indianola and Inverness, MS. He was laid to rest in 1982. Fruteland’s parents John Andrew and Ida B. (both deceased) were like many other blacks living in the south in the early 1950’s. They headed north to Chicago in search of better employment, civil rights and education for their growing family. His father rose to become a staff sergeant, before being honorably discharged after WWII. His father was determined not to be a farmer and welcomed the bright lights and big city of Chicago, IL. He retired as a insurance underwriter with North Carolina Mutual Insurance Company (the world’s oldest and largest African-American life insurance company) His mother attended Alcorn A&M and became a licensed nurse at Chicago’s Cook County Hospital. His early childhood was spent between Chicago and Mississippi. Fruitland's "love/hate" relationship with Mississippi would cause him to return to the Magnolia State time and time again for growth and refuge. Fruitland's early exposure to church singing and growing up in a household where blues music was the norm set the foundation for what would become his life’s work. Fruteland fell under the spell of the musical influences of his "favorite" Uncle Woodrow "Dick" Chandler. He was a locally known guitar and piano player in Inverness, Mississippi and he gave Fruteland his first guitar at 12 years old. "I broke the guitar’s neck and tried to repair it with 3 inch nails." The impact of these early influences did not become apparent until Fruteland returned to Mississippi. Fruteland extended his guitar training by learning folk songs and listening to the Motown sounds. "Back then I liked the blues alright but I did not become consumed until later." His formal musical training, however, began in high school where he played the bugle and trombone in the school band and learned music theory. He later attended Columbia College as performing arts major (theatre and music) and Roosevelt University in Chicago where he studied voice. Marriage would later put the arts in the background, when he became a father. He worked as a licensed Private Investigator and later an investigator with the State of Illinois Department of Human Rights. The first concrete symptoms of his blues calling surfaced in the mid- eighties when he returned to Mississippi this time settling in Biloxi, he opened a wholesale seafood company specializing in high quality shrimp and oysters. At about this juncture in his life, Fruteland began strumming blues rhythms and listening to the Blues Doctor, Bill Ferris out of the University of Mississippi. His business the Camel Seafood Company would, after four years, become a casualty to hurricane Elena. With this hurricane, came the blues. "The blues was a comforter for me always my healer during difficult times." Nearly stranded on the Gulf Coast with family he did what it took to survive while imbibing daily on blues music. "I dug up old records. My fathers old seventy eight’s." He began to reclaim his past, putting names with faces. He began to immerse himself in blues music. From the wail of field-hollers to B. B. King Fruteland was rediscovering what he knew as a child. The music spoke loudly, and this time Fruteland was listening. He was moved and shaken. "My father, grandfather and uncles all had the blues and brought them home daily... it wasn’t no festival either." Fruteland had heard Robert Johnson, Howling Wolf and his guru Johnny Shines, Little Walter, Muddy Waters and his uncle Woodrow, but now, for the first time he was listening. His grandmother’s prophecy was now undergoing contractions. The "crossroads would beckon" "I thought of my uncle". For the first time in forty years Fruteland figured out where he was suppose to be and doing what he was suppose to be doing. He had found his pulpit to champion the downtrodden and those who dare to listen through blues education. He would assert himself. He now could communicate with peers and oppressors. "The blues is the recognition of a tragedy and an optimism to deal with it." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.