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Jack Hody Johnson [1] (born May 18, 1975) is an American singer-songwriter. His music falls into genres like folk, surf-rock, and various other subgenres.. Johnson's musicianship has earned him multiple spots on the Billboard 200 chart, reaching number one on the chart with his albums Sing-A-Longs and Lullabies for the Film Curious George in 2006, Sleep Through the Static in 2008, To the Sea ...
Hawaii-born musician Jack Johnson has released eight studio albums, one soundtrack album, one remix album, two live albums, two extended plays (EPs), twenty-one singles and four video albums. Johnson's first album was the result of his primary hobbies, film-making and surfing.
Jack Johnson, member of the American pop-rap duo Jack & Jack; Big Jack Johnson (1940–2011), blues musician; Jack Johnson (actor) (born 1987), American actor; Jack Johnson, a 1970 documentary film about the boxer; Jack Johnson, a 1971 album by Miles Davis; Jack Johnson (character), a fictional character in the U.S. TV series Black-ish
Jack & Jack are an American pop-rap duo from Omaha, Nebraska, consisting of Jack Johnson and Jack Gilinsky, based in Los Angeles, California. After success via the social media app Vine, the duo turned to careers as musicians. [1] Their 2014 single "Wild Life" peaked at number 87 on the US Billboard Hot 100. [2]
Animal Liberation Orchestra (also known casually as ALO) is a California rock band currently signed to Jack Johnson's Brushfire Records label. They have released four full-length albums for Brushfire, as well as a number of prior independent releases including a film soundtrack.
G. Love featured Jack Johnson on his 1999 album Philadelphonic playing an early version of Jack Johnson's "Rodeo Clowns" when Jack was an unknown artist. Jack later featured the song on his 2003 album On and On. G. Love met Johnson through a mutual surf buddy who said, "Hey man, there's this kid you got to meet.
It is narrated by Keith David, [1] with a soundtrack by Wynton Marsalis and with Samuel L. Jackson as the voice of Jack Johnson. [2] Alan Rickman also contributed his voice to the documentary. Stanley Crouch appears, offering commentary, including a quote from Johnson responding to a question from a white woman about black people, "We eat cold ...
Jack N. Johnson, [1] known as Big Jack Johnson (July 30, 1939 [1] or 1940 – March 14, 2011) was an American electric blues musician, one of the "present-day exponents of an edgier, electrified version of the raw, uncut Delta blues sound." [2] [3] He was one of a small number of blues musicians who played the mandolin.