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2002
INDUCTION
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2000 INDUCTION
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Gene performing at the 2000 Hall of Fame Fund Raiser.
Gene Jackson, George
Davis, Jimmy Pryor & "Chicago Rick"
at the 1999 Induction Ceremony.

Gene, Rick,
Jimmy, Harlan & George at the 2000 Hall of Fame Fund Raiser.

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Eugene
Jackson
1999 Inductee
My first introduction to music was from my mom and
dad, Charles and Katherine Jackson. My father bartered for my first set
of drums. He did work for a guy named Bobby Maynard in exchange for an
old set of drums with real skin heads.
Val Carroll was my first instructor when I was 13 years old. He taught
me the basics of rudiments and reading music.
Fred
Thompson was my second and final instructor. He taught me the essence of
music, the drummers true responsibilities and most important of all, the
art of using brushes.
My first "gig" was on the Bill Riley Talent Show, held
at the Iowa State Fair Grounds where I accompanied Harlan Thomas
who played "The Lullaby of Broadway" by Errol Garner. It really does not seem possible, but my professional
music career began forty years ago at the age of 16. I traveled to
Chillicothe, Mo. with a group who backed a dynamic singer named Ronnie
Brewer. We drove all day and played all night and into the next day.
That is when I knew that music would always be a part of my life.
My next gigs were at well remembered places like Stovalhs (backing Sweet
Georgia Brown and Jimmy Pryor), The 790, The NIP, The
Basin Street West, The San Francisco Lounge, Hyperion Golf & Country
Club and many others not mentioned here.
During my forty years of playing I know that I have been blessed to come
up in an era when some of the most talented performers, musicians and
singers, would take you by the hand and help you achieve your dreams. It is understood that there were many that cared
about Gene Jackson enough to help him be the best musician that
he could be.
The following individuals will always be a part of my life. They are
listed in no particular order, however, we all understand that it makes
no difference about order, because it's only when everyone plays their
part that it is possible to make music.
Carl Burst
Jimmy Pryor
Fat Daddy
Rose Marie Gaitors (Webster)
Seymour Gray
Bobby Dawson
Jimmy Gale
Ronnie Brewer
Rufus Spates
Monte Williams
Marvin Simms
Gary Jackson (my very talented brother)
Sam Anthony Salomone
Janey Hooper
Tommy Gordon
Billy Lordon (drummer with the Amazors)
Ross Cornelison
K-Jac's Recording Studio
My musical and real brothers - "The Soul
Brothers"
Now that I have retired from UPS, Gene Jackson is
becoming known in local Blues Clubs in Atlanta, where players that I jam
with better understand that the Blues may have been born in the South, but
in many ways it grew up in the North.
I feel very much honored to have been selected for the
Iowa Blues Hall of Fame, because music will always be a part of my life
and there is no life without the BLUES...
FEATURE PHOTO BY LORI
BOWLING
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