Cool John Ferguson

Cool John Ferguson (born December 3, 1953)[1] is an American blues guitarist, singer and songwriter. He has released five albums under his own name and played on around twenty others.[2] He is the Director of Creative Development for the Music Maker Relief Foundation, and plays his guitar "upside down".[3]

Cool John Ferguson
Birth nameJohn Ferguson
Born (1953-12-03) December 3, 1953
Beaufort, South Carolina, United States
GenresElectric blues
Occupation(s)Guitarist, singer, songwriter
InstrumentsGuitar
Years active1970spresent
WebsiteOfficial website

Taj Mahal stated that Ferguson ranks "among the five greatest guitarists in the world. He is a force to be reckoned with in the music industry. He is with the ranks of Jimi Hendrix, Wes Montgomery, and Django Reinhardt."[4] At various times, Ferguson has played the guitar backing Taj Mahal, B.B. King, Kenny "Blues Boss" Wayne, Beverly Watkins and the Stylistics.[3]

Life and career

Ferguson was born in Beaufort, South Carolina, United States.[1] His father, John Wesley Ferguson, was head deacon at the Beaufort New Church of Christ, whilst his mother, Martha Jenkins Ferguson, hailed from Saint Helena Island.[5] The connection to Gullah culture remained strong in Ferguson's life.[6] He had learned to play the guitar by the age of three, but "had to be sat in someone's lap while they sat in a chair."[3] He was naturally left handed, and learned to play on a right handed guitar held upside down.[5] Two years later he was playing gospel music as a professional, and became a featured entertainer with his siblings billed as 'Little John and the Ferguson Sisters' on "The Lowcountry Sing" on Channel 5, a Charleston, South Carolina-based radio station.[7] He expanded his musical knowledge in the early 1960s, by surreptitiously listening to WAPE, "the Big Ape", out of Jacksonville, Florida.[3] At Beaufort High School, Ferguson played the trumpet in a marching band and learned to read music.[5] By 1972, he had joined the Earl Davis Trio. This jazz based beginning led to a five-year stint with Stephen Best and the Soul Crusaders who played across South Carolina.[3] He also played on the tent revival circuit, and recorded with LaFace Records.[4]

To supplement his income from music, Ferguson worked in landscaping and construction as a young man.[8] He relocated to near Durham, North Carolina for a spell,[9] and Ferguson noted that "the local people were, you know, checking me out and saying 'you've got a cool walk,' 'you've got a cool talk.' So they summarized it to Cool John."[10] In addition to supplying studio backing work for various musicians, including Little Pink Anderson and Frank Edwards,[11] Ferguson started to appear under his own name. He has toured widely, performing at the Byron Bay Bluesfest,[3] Lincoln Center Out-Of-Doors, Lucerne Blues Festival, Switzerland's Blues to Bop Festival, the Savannah Music Festival, Columbia Blues Festival,[4] and at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts.[9] He keeps a connection to his roots by having a regular Saturday night engagement at the All People's Grill, a roadhouse situated north of Durham, North Carolina.[3]

At the Penn Center on Saint Helena Island, Ferguson was recruited almost 25 years ago to join a fledgling Music Maker Relief Foundation.[5] Ferguson has worked as Music Maker's Director of Creative Development since the 1990s.[8] In 2003, Ferguson performed at the AmeriServ Johnstown Folkfest. In the early 2000s, he released his albums Guitar Heaven; the seasonal effort, Cool Yule; plus Cool John Ferguson; all issued by Music Maker.[12] In 2007, Ferguson relocated to Atlanta with his wife, where he started his own record label, Cool John Recordings. Ferguson's own With These Hands was the first release for the new label.[9] The album contained fifteen original tracks, ten of them incorporating vocals, encompassing blues, R&B, funk, rock and occasional Latin rhythms.[4]

Ferguson was noted by Living Blues magazine for two years running as 'Most Outstanding Guitarist.'[7] His work with Music Maker has seen him responsible for scores of albums being recorded by lesser known blues, folk and country artists, many of them at the veteran stage of their careers. He played in a fundraiser for the Foundation in Washington, D.C. with Ironing Board Sam, and was featured in a photographic essay called "Music Makers", which was picked up by Garden & Gun magazine.[5] Ferguson appeared in the documentary film, Toot Blues (2008), about the formation and early days of the Music Maker Relief Foundation.[13]

To mark the occasion of fellow Beaufort native, Joe Frazier's death in 2011, Ferguson played an electric version of "The Star-Spangled Banner" at the Henry C. Chambers Waterfront Park.[5] In addition, Ferguson regularly plays in two churches in Atlanta each Sunday.[5]

Often dressed in his trademark flat-brimmed stetson hat, Ferguson continues to play his Fender Stratocaster upside down.[9]

Discography

Albums

YearTitleRecord labelCredited as
2001Cool John FergusonMusic MakerCool John Ferguson
2002Cool YuleMusic MakerCool John Ferguson
2003Guitar HeavenMusic MakerCool John Ferguson
2007With These HandsSelf releasedCool John Ferguson
2015Live at the HamiltonMusic MakerCaptain Luke & Cool John Ferguson

[12][6]

gollark: Anyway, GTech™ runs several petawatts of nuclear reactor capacity tens of kilometres deep in the crust, and nobody has complained yet!
gollark: I cannot actually remember much of it.
gollark: As a young child, I read the entire Wikipedia article or something, on a laptop I had borrowed somehow.
gollark: And the design is now not used anywhere because it was bad.
gollark: Chernobyl was because they decided to do ridiculous secret experiments on running reactors, wrong, repeatedly.

See also

References

  1. Benjamin Franklin V (30 May 2016). An Encyclopedia of South Carolina Jazz and Blues Musicians. University of South Carolina Press. pp. 218–9. ISBN 978-1-61117-622-3.
  2. "Cool John Ferguson - Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 16 April 2019.
  3. "Cool John Ferguson - Music Maker Relief Foundation". Musicmaker.org. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  4. "Cool John Ferguson". Pinecone.org. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  5. David Lauderdale (2015-03-21). "Lauderdale: Beaufort's Cool John Ferguson helps keep Southern roots music alive (+ video)". The State. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  6. "Cool John Ferguson Discography". Discogs.com. 2017-05-26. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  7. "Cool John Ferguson". Bigpinesbluesfest.com. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  8. Weeks, Isaac (2016-06-01). "Cool John Ferguson eschews the price tags and stays true to his kind of blues | Features". Charleston City Paper. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  9. "Cool John Ferguson brings Lowcountry blues to Mars Theatre | Do Savannah, arts and entertainment news for the Creative Coast". Dosavannah.com. 2014-10-27. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  10. "8 Cool Things About Cool John Ferguson". Lcweekly.com. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  11. "Cool John Ferguson | Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  12. "Cool John Ferguson | Album Discography". AllMusic. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
  13. "Toot Blues (2008) : Plot Summary". IMDB.com. Retrieved 2017-05-31.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.