Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q161753> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 57 of
57
with 100 triples per page.
- Q161753 description "American musician".
- Q161753 description "American musician".
- Q161753 subject Q6381982.
- Q161753 subject Q6490896.
- Q161753 subject Q6646955.
- Q161753 subject Q7442685.
- Q161753 subject Q8205186.
- Q161753 abstract "Dewey Jackson (June 21, 1900 – January 1, 1994) was an American jazz trumpeter and cornetist.Jackson began playing professionally at an early age, with the Odd Fellows Boys' Band (1912), Tommy Evans (1916–17), and George Reynolds's Keystone Band. He played with Charlie Creath on riverboats, and then led his own Golden Melody Band from 1920 to 1923. In 1926, he performed with his St. Louis Charleston Peacock Band on the Streckfus Steamboat Lines' new steamer, Capitol. He continued to be a regular performer on riverboats into the early 1940s, heading his own groups and working as a sideman for Creath and Fate Marable. His only major stint off boats during this time was in 1926, when he played for four months with Andrew Preer at the Cotton Club in New York City.Jackson played little in the 1940s but returned to work in the 1950s with Singleton Palmer and Don Ewell. He recorded four sides as a leader in 1926 and the album Live At The Barrel, 1952 with 10 tracts on the Delmark label, released in 2006. Among his sidemen were Pops Foster, Willie Humphrey, Don Stovall, Morris White, Albert Snaer, William Thornton Blue, and Clark Terry.".
- Q161753 birthDate "1900-06-21".
- Q161753 birthYear "1900".
- Q161753 deathDate "1994-01-01".
- Q161753 deathYear "1994".
- Q161753 wikiPageExternalLink seaa.tulane.edu.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q1136776.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q1239110.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q1669488.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q2005676.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q202027.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q2090483.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q210173.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q2330233.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q3115193.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q31181.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q432924.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q4711240.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q5293576.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q60.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q6381982.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q6490896.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q6646955.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q723116.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q743133.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q7442685.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q7524109.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q7789399.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q8205186.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q8341.
- Q161753 wikiPageWikiLink Q863970.
- Q161753 dateOfBirth "1900-06-21".
- Q161753 dateOfDeath "1994-01-01".
- Q161753 name "Jackson, Dewey".
- Q161753 shortDescription "American musician".
- Q161753 type Person.
- Q161753 type Agent.
- Q161753 type Person.
- Q161753 type Agent.
- Q161753 type NaturalPerson.
- Q161753 type Thing.
- Q161753 type Q215627.
- Q161753 type Q5.
- Q161753 type Person.
- Q161753 comment "Dewey Jackson (June 21, 1900 – January 1, 1994) was an American jazz trumpeter and cornetist.Jackson began playing professionally at an early age, with the Odd Fellows Boys' Band (1912), Tommy Evans (1916–17), and George Reynolds's Keystone Band. He played with Charlie Creath on riverboats, and then led his own Golden Melody Band from 1920 to 1923. In 1926, he performed with his St. Louis Charleston Peacock Band on the Streckfus Steamboat Lines' new steamer, Capitol.".
- Q161753 label "Dewey Jackson".
- Q161753 givenName "Dewey".
- Q161753 name "Dewey Jackson".
- Q161753 name "Jackson, Dewey".
- Q161753 surname "Jackson".