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  1. Mississippi John Hurt [Dressed to Kill] by Mississippi John Hurt released in 2001. Find album reviews, track lists, credits, awards and more at AllMusic.

  2. Mississippi John Hurt. John Smith Hurt (March 8, 1893 [1] [nb 1] – November 2, 1966), known as Mississippi John Hurt, was an American country blues singer, songwriter, and guitarist. [3] Hurt was raised in Avalon, Mississippi and taught himself to play the guitar around the age of nine. He worked as a sharecropper and began playing at dances ...

  3. Mississippi John Hurt. "Mississippi" John Smith Hurt ( Teoc, Misisipi, 8 de marzo de 1893, 1 Grenada, Misisipi - 2 de noviembre de 1966 2 ) fue un cantautor y guitarrista estadounidense de blues y folk. Hurt creció en la localidad de Ávalon, Misisipi y aprendió a tocar la guitarra a los nueve años. Pasó parte de su infancia escuchando ...

  4. 9 de nov. de 2022 · A principal object of their musical attention was a diminutive farmer, newly arrived on the New York folk scene from his home in Carroll County, Mississippi. His name was John Hurt. In the crowded guitar cosmos of the mid-1960s, the soft-spoken septuagenarian with the flannel shirt and derby hat was an unlikely star in the firmament.

  5. Mary Frances Hurt, one of 14 children of John Hurt’s son T.C., was a reading teacher in a town outside Chicago. Her grandfather, “Daddy John,” died when she was 10. She revered him and the ...

  6. "Mississippi" John Smith Hurt fue un cantautor y guitarrista estadounidense de blues y folk. Hurt creció en la localidad de Ávalon, Misisipi y aprendió a tocar la guitarra a los nueve años. Pasó parte de su infancia escuchando viejos temas del blues mientras trabajaba como peón de granja. En 1923, debutó de la mano de Willie Narmour, sustituyendo a su habitual compañero Shell Smith.

  7. 23 de abr. de 2024 · Mississippi John Hurt, American country-blues singer and guitarist who first recorded in the late 1920s but whose greatest fame and influence came when he was rediscovered in the early 1960s at the height of the American folk music revival.