Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Popper was born on March 29, 1967, in Cleveland, Ohio. [1] [2] His father was a Hungarian immigrant who left Budapest in 1948. [3] Popper has stated that he is a distant relative of David Popper, a 19th-century Bohemian cellist. [4] [5] Popper was raised in Stamford, Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey.
Johnson String Instrument is a full service provider of new and previously owned stringed instruments and accessories, including their rental, sales, restoration, repair and appraisal. Located in Newton Upper Falls, Massachusetts, the company was founded in 1976 by Carol and Roger Johnson, and is currently owned by their son, Adam Johnson.
The genesis of Blues Traveler was as a high school garage band formed in Princeton, New Jersey in the mid-1980s. Harmonicist, singer and guitarist John Popper and drummer Brendan Hill formed a group they called The Establishment (later renamed Blues Band) with Hill's brother on bass and a rotating roster of guitarists.
Bill Bell – lead guitar, acoustic guitar, slide guitar; Eric Hinojosa – electric piano, organ, synthesizer, banjo; Ian Sheridan – bass guitar, backing vocals; Adam King – drums; Additional musicians Kenny Anderson – trumpet; JoWestly Boston – saxophone; Johnny Cotton – trombone; John Popper – harmonica
John Popper – The lead singer of the jam band Blues Traveler is noted for playing a Special 20. Brandon Santini - The blues, roots-rock harmonica player and vocalist is endorsed by Hohner and plays Hohner Special 20 and Hohner Rocket harmonicas. John Sebastian, Sr. – The late classical harmonica virtuoso was noted for playing a 64 Chromonica.
John Schneider After finishing second in the finale of The Masked Singer season 10, The Dukes of Hazzard actor John Schneider revealed how the experience helped him get through a very tough year.
Blues Traveler, the debut album by Blues Traveler, was released on A&M Records in 1990. The album features "jam structures on basic blues riffs" focused around the harmonica playing of band leader John Popper, which writer William Ruhlmann said gave the band a more focused sound than that of the Grateful Dead.
John Lennon's Framus Hootenanny guitar, used by the late Beatle on the band's 1965 'Help!' album, sold at auction for nearly five times its estimated price.