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The Texas Tenors are a three-time Emmy Award-winning classical crossover, trio vocal group formed in 2009 by country singer JC Fisher, pop singer Marcus Collins and opera singer John Hagen. They were a top four finalist in the fourth season of America's Got Talent, making them the highest ranking vocal group in the show's history. [1]
John Hafen (March 22, 1856 – June 3, 1910) was a Swiss-born American artist, primarily of landscapes and portraits. As a child, Hafen immigrated to the United States from Switzerland and settled in Utah.
John Hagan (died June 8, 1856) was a well-known [1] [2] American interstate slave trader who operated slave jails in both Charleston and New Orleans, as well as maintaining strong business and personal ties to the Richmond slave markets.
[8] On the other end of the financial spectrum from the agents were the investors—usually wealthy planters like David Burford, [9] John Springs III, [10] and Chief Justice John Marshall [11] —who fronted cash to slave speculators. They did not escort coffles or run auctions themselves, but they did parlay their enslaving expertise into profits.
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John Hagan may refer to: John Hagan (1785?–1856), American slave trader; John N. Hagan (1873–1952), North Dakota politician; John Hagan (sailor) (born 1946), eighth Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy; John L. Hagan, American sociologist; John Hagan (Ohio politician), former Republican member of the Ohio House of Representatives
They were frequently accompanied by the well-known Austin cellist John Hagen, who plays in Lyle Lovett's large band. Shoulders' first album, Trashman Shoes, rose to the top of the rock charts in France. Their second was The Fun Never Stops, which did well in Europe but never attained the success of "Trashman Shoes".
Akin to the many distinct forms his art took, Sherman's work found an international audience. Although perhaps most at home with his New York contemporaries, he performed, exhibited, and lectured throughout the US (San Francisco, Cambridge, Boston, Indianapolis, Chicago) and abroad (Germany, the Netherlands, France, Wales, Japan, Australia).