jackdappablues

  • The Lady and the Empress! Lady D’s One Woman Bessie Tribute Show

    The Lady and the Empress! Lady D’s One Woman Bessie Tribute Show

    Published By: Lamont Jack Pearley On this episode of Jack Dappa Blues, enjoy the collaboration of Jack Dappa Blues Radio and Southern Ohio Folklife for a conversation w/ Lady D (West Virginia’s First Lady of Soul) to talk about her recent performance of The Lady and the Empress, a one-woman show about the life…

  • Why Is It Always About Race? – “Country, Country Blues, and Blackness”

    Why Is It Always About Race? – “Country, Country Blues, and Blackness”

    For some reason, when it comes to Country Music, most people do not associate it with black folk or folk musical expression. The thing is, country music, in its many forms, comes directly from black expression. i.e., the blues, country blues, and more. To give the context to the roots of commodified music presented…

  • Candice Ivory – Queen Of Avant Soul Sangs The Blues

    Candice Ivory – Queen Of Avant Soul Sangs The Blues

    Hosted and Published By: Lamont Jack Pearley Today, I speak with Candice Ivory about her new project, When The Levee Breaks. As said on her website After releasing three acclaimed albums of jazz-driven original songs, vocalist Candice Ivory reveals a whole new sound on When the Levee Breaks: The Music of Memphis Minnie. Raised…

  • Black Scholarship And Black Culture

    Black Scholarship And Black Culture

    Hosted and Published by: Lamont Jack Pearley Many Black Academic Scholars are also active practitioners in our respective cultures and traditions. That doesn’t negate their ability to teach, mentor, or share skills and tricks of the trade with the folk. It actually makes them even more qualified. Some feel Black Scholars who are educated…

  • Hannah Mayree and the Black Banjo Reclamation Project

    Hannah Mayree and the Black Banjo Reclamation Project

    Pubished by: Lamont Jack Pearley On this episode, I speak with singer, songwriter, and music educator Hannah Mayree about her journey in music, culture, tradition, and the Black Banjo Reclamation Project. Hannah Mayree (she/her/they/them) is a  creative facilitator and musician who’s work and art lends itself as a tool for redesigning and reconnecting to…

  • Kristina R. Gaddy-  Well of Souls

    Kristina R. Gaddy- Well of Souls

    Published By: Lamont Jack Pearley In this episode, I will speak with Kristina R. Gaddy about her journey and New York Times best-selling book, Well of Souls – Uncovering The Banjo’s Hidden History. Kristina R. Gaddy is an award-winning writer who believes in the power of narrative nonfiction to bring stories from the past…

  • Brei Carter: Country Singer-Songwriter

    Brei Carter: Country Singer-Songwriter

    By: Lamont Jack Pearley On this episode, I speak with Brei Carter, Country Singer-Songwriter about her journey in Music and her signing with Brown Lee Entertainment For Exclusive Global Music Distribution & Digital Marketing. Emerging crossover country and southern pop recording artist Brei Carter is proof that sometimes faith, patience and time pays off.…

  • Black & Indian Folklife, Storyville, Oklahoma, & The Blues

    Black & Indian Folklife, Storyville, Oklahoma, & The Blues

    By: Lamont Jack Pearley There is excellent Black Folklife, Indian Folklore, Black Music, AND educational oral history in Kentucky and nationally that Jack Dappa Blues Heritage Preservation Foundation archives and builds a repository for. In this episode, I discuss Storyville, Oklahoma, Freedmen, Blues, and the People of the Blues To Raise Cultural and Ethnic…

  • What Really Happened in Tulsa

    What Really Happened in Tulsa

    The Greenwood District of Tulsa, Oklahoma After sitting in and listening to the presentation “Greenwood’s Past, Present, and Future” at this year’s #American #Folklore Society Conference in #Tulsa, #Oklahoma, where Quraysh Ali Lansana (Tri-City Collective) Carlos A Moreno (Tri-City Collective) shared the true story of the happenings before, during and after the #1921Riots of…

  • Glen David Andrews

    Glen David Andrews

    Treme’s Trombone Singer By Lamont Jack Pearley On this episode, I speak with Glen David Andrews, born and raised in Treme‘s 6 Ward, only blocks away from the historical Congo Square in New Orleans, Louisiana! Andrews shares that the gumbo of New Orleans culture is evident in the music and traditions and should be…