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I'm a Jockey is an album by the American musician Jimmy Johnson, released in 1994. [1] [2] It was Johnson's first album in a decade; he took a break to recover from a 1988 van crash that injured him and killed members of his band. [3] Johnson supported the album with a North American tour. [4]
Whether taking honey from three million bees, sculpting ice with a chain saw, foraging for truffles, or digging a wine cave, Adam will do anything in the name of food." [3] The concept is somewhat similar to the Food Network program Glutton for Punishment. In each episode, Gertler featured two food related jobs. [4]
Jamey Johnson (born July 14, 1975) is an American country music singer and songwriter. Signed to BNA Records in 2005, Johnson made his debut with his single " The Dollar ", the title track to his 2006 album The Dollar .
The seven-member group of Treadwell High School (Memphis, Tennessee) alumni included Bruce Bowles , Bobby Fisher (saxophone, keyboards), Jimmy Hart (vocals), Jimmy Johnson , Pat Neal (bass guitar), Larry Raspberry (guitar, lead vocalist), and drummer Larry Wall (replaced by Rob Straube) [1] and also with another member, Larry Butler . The ...
Jimmy Ray Johnson (February 4, 1943 – September 5, 2019) was an American session guitarist and record producer. [ 1 ] Johnson was a member of the Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section who was attached to FAME Studios in Muscle Shoals, Alabama , for a period in the 1960s.
Flyte Tyme was a funk band from Minneapolis that launched the careers of vocalists Cynthia Johnson, Alexander O'Neal and producers Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. [1] Many of the group's musicians would later work with Prince. The band's name is a sensational spelling of the phrase "flight time."
The song also samples a small part of the Melvins song "Hog Leg" As mentioned in the song, Beck once had a job blowing leaves. Beck once reminisced, "There's a leaf-blower contingent. There's no union that I know of so far, but there's certainly a spiritual brotherhood. They are the originators of noise music.
In November 1980, Johnson was awarded at the first annual Blues Music Awards, held in Memphis. His career continued to pick up until December 2, 1988, when his touring van crashed in Indiana, killing his band's keyboardist, St. James Bryant, and bassist, Larry Exum. [5] Johnson was injured and took an extended break from the music industry.