J - Music Achievers A blues pianist and singer who recorded for Chess in the early 1950s but thenmoved to the Gospel, Tenor Vocals, Swan Silvertones, 1914, montgomery, AL http://www.alamhof.org/jmusachv.htm
Extractions: A B C D ... Z J JUDGE JACKSON - Montgomery County, Alabama For a more complete listing of achievers: J Return to top of this page. LEON JACKSON - Hamilton, Alabama For a more complete listing of achievers: J Return to top of this page. TOMMY JACKSON - Birmingham, Alabama Jackson is generally considered to be one of the two or three greatest commercial country fiddle players of all time. The first regular Nashville session fiddler, he played on thousands of recordings and ranged from bluegrass to western swing in fiddle styles.
Celebrations And Conferences The montgomery Museum presented an exhibition of Zelda Fitzgerald paintings, andthe Alabama actress Jessica Lange, and jazz pianist Butch Thompson. http://www.sc.edu/fitzgerald/centenary/celebrations.html
Extractions: Montgomery, Alabama Sponsored by Huntingdon College, the first F. Scott and Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald Festival took place in Montgomery, Alabama, on 28 June-1 July 1996. Modeled loosely on the successful annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference in Oxford, Mississippi, FitzFest, as it quickly became known, was designed not as an academic conference, but as a broader celebration, particularly of the Fitzgeralds' ties to Montgomery and the South. Using the Huntingdon campus as a base, FitzFest's organizers recruited support from the Montgomery community, including the F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald Museum, the Alabama Shakespeare Festival, and the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts. Participants attended lectures, shared meals, picnics, receptions, and a "Roaring Twenties" costume ball, and toured Fitzgerald sites in Montgomery. The Montgomery Museum presented an exhibition of Zelda Fitzgerald paintings, and the Alabama Shakespeare Festival staged a private reading of A Piece of Paradise , a new play about the Fitzgeralds in Montgomery, by Montgomery author Wayne Greenhaw. A Festival on the Green provided Twenties-era music, a modern dance performance, and an exhibition of automobiles from the Twenties and Thirties.
Encyclopedia: Nat King Cole Cole was born Nathaniel Adams Coles in montgomery, Alabama. Cole also waspianist in a national touring revival of ragtime and Broadway legend Eubie http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Nat-King-Cole
Extractions: Related Articles People who viewed "Nat King Cole" also viewed: Mona Lisa (song) Natalie Cole W. C. Handy Saint Louis Blues (movie) ... Sarah Vaughan What's new? Our next offering Latest newsletter Student area Lesson plans Recent Updates Private Limited Company By Shares Princess Margriet of the Netherlands Pred dozhdot Potawatomi language ... More Recent Articles Top Graphs Richest Most Murderous Most Taxed Most Populous ... More Stats Updated 16 days 13 hours 25 minutes ago. Other descriptions of Nat King Cole Nat King Cole in The Blue Gardenia Nat "King" Cole March 17 February 15 ) was a hugely popular American singer and jazz musician. Raymond Burr in The Blue Gardenia The Blue Gardenia is a 1953 black-and-white film noir directed Fritz Lang. ... March 17 is the 76th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (77th in Leap years). ... 1919 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar). ... February 15 is the 46th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. ... 1965 was a common year starting on Friday (link goes to calendar). ...
Kirkegaard Associates - Excellence In Acoustics Baltimore Symphony has New Home in montgomery County Strathmore a great hallof suburbia. The Music Center at Strathmore Opens on February 5, 2005 http://www.kirkegaard.com/press/strathmore_open/
Extractions: return to Kirkegaard.com More Press Coverage: One Handsome Hall The Arts, from Classroom to Concert Hall Baltimore Symphony has New Home in Montgomery A Concert Hall for DC Suburb ... Strathmore: a great hall of suburbia The Music Center at Strathmore Opens on February 5, 2005 New Concert Hall Marks a Defining Moment for Arts and Culture