Welcome to www.jjjones.us. You are listening to my latest CD "Total Inspiration" dedicated to the children of the world. I hope you will find it as moving and inspiring as I had the pleasure recording it. J.J. Watch my music video covering the title "Danny Boy ( Londonderry Air) from the CD
Back during the so called “swing” era of the 1940s and 50s, Jesse James “J.J.” Jones Junior of Atlanta was considered one of America’s most celebrated saxophone players. Jones and his tenor sax had come to prominence amidst a plethora of horn players of the day like Eddie Harris, Earl Bostic, Sil Austin Julian “Cannonball” Adderley and Stan Getz plus a generation of singing greats to include Little Richard, Billy Wright, Willie Mae “Big Mama” Thornton and Jimmy Witherspoon. He even remembers calming down an anxious blues singer making his debut on the live stage in Atlanta in 1953. “I was watching television the other night and there was B.B. King accepting the Presidential Medal of Freedom,” Jones chuckled from Los Angeles where he now makes his home. “I remember telling him from backstage of the Ponciana Club to relax and just be himself. He was shaking like a bowl of jelly.” For the last 35 years, however, Jones hasn’t touched a saxophone. In fact, Jones, who pursued record production for a time in LA and Atlanta in the 1960s and 70s, washed his hands of music, period. “I retired,“ he said. “My wife [Tracy] and I got into the business of ceramics and were doing fairly well. I just decided to focus on that and raising my family.” With the kids grown and doing well, Jones began re-thinking his abandoned music career, and especially the saxophone. “I was a gifted musician,” he said. ”I started playing instruments in high school in Atlanta, and the band director noticed that I wasn’t reading the music. In fact, when I got my first professional job with a band playing at a local night club in town, some of the band members noticed the same thing. They told the bandleader John Peek that I wasn’t reading a note. He told them what’s the difference. He’s playing the music right, isn’t he?”
By Harold Lamar allaboutjazz.com |