James Jackson may refer to:
James Arthur Jackson (born October 14, 1970) is an American retired professional basketball player. Over his 14 NBA seasons, Jackson was on the active roster of 12 different teams, tying the league record shared with Joe Smith, Tony Massenburg and Chucky Brown. He is currently a basketball analyst for Fox Sports 1, having previously worked for the Big Ten Network.
Jackson was a 6'6" (198 cm), 220 pound (100 kg) shooting guard. Jackson started all four years at Macomber High School in Toledo, Ohio. The former McDonald's All American led Macomber to the 1989 Division I state championship over Cleveland St. Joseph. He was high school teammates with former NFL safety Myron Bell.
Jackson was a member of the Ohio State Buckeyes. He instantly contributed, starting as a freshman for the 1989-1990 season, Jackson averaged 16.1 points and 5.5 rebounds per game while shooting 49.9% from the field. He played two more seasons through 1991-1992, earning consensus First Team All American honors in 1991 and 1992 UPI college basketball, and the UPI player of the year in 1992.
Jim Jackson (c.1884 – 1933) was an African-American blues and hokum singer, songster, and guitarist, whose recordings in the late 1920s were popular and influential on later artists.
Jackson was born in Hernando, Mississippi, United States, and was raised on a farm, where he learned to play guitar. Around 1905 he started working as a singer, dancer, and musician in medicine shows, playing dances and parties often with other local musicians such as Gus Cannon, Frank Stokes and Robert Wilkins. He soon began travelling with the Rabbit Foot Minstrels, featuring Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith, and other minstrel shows.
He also played clubs on Beale Street in Memphis, Tennessee. His popularity and proficiency secured him a residency at Memphis's prestigious Peabody Hotel in 1919. Like Lead Belly, Jackson knew hundreds of songs including blues, ballads, vaudeville numbers, and traditional tunes, and became a popular attraction.
In 1927, talent scout H. C. Speir signed him to a recording contract with Vocalion Records. On October 10, 1927, he recorded "Jim Jackson's Kansas City Blues", which became a best-seller, and in the melody and lyrics of which can be traced the outline of many later blues and rock and roll songs, including "Rock Around The Clock" and "Kansas City". Following his hit Jackson recorded a series of 'Kansas City' follow-ups and soundalikes. It also led to other artists covering and reworking the song, including Charlie Patton, who changed it to "Gonna Move To Alabama". Jackson moved to Memphis in 1928, and made a series of further recordings, including the comic medicine show song "I Heard the Voice of a Pork Chop". He also appeared in King Vidor's all-black 1929 film Hallelujah!, however it is unclear what role he played.
Kansas City blues is a genre of blues music. It has spawned the Kansas City Blues & Jazz festival and the Kansas City Blues Society.
Although Kansas City, Missouri is known primarily for jazz, it has also contributed to the history of and the preservation of the blues.
Kansas City did not enter into blues history until the 1940s. Kansas City blues artists Pete Johnson and Big Joe Turner recorded a style of music called jump blues, which later provided the foundation for rhythm and blues, and later rock and roll. Charlie Parker dabbled in the blues in the late 1940s with his release of the hit "Now's the Time", a bebop jazz number that gave a nod to the popularity of the blues in Kansas City, by using the familiar blues pentatonic scale and blue notes.
The blues scene in Kansas City produced Jay McShann, Julia Lee, Little Hatch, Sonny Kenner, and Cotton Candy. The blues was popular in small nightclubs and after-hours jam sessions. Many Kansas City musicians would finish their "paying" gigs at weddings, jazz clubs etc. and then pack up and head to the 18th and Vine-Downtown East, Kansas City district to participate in all-night parties that would sometimes continue well into daylight. The 18th & Vine jam sessions continue today at Kansas City's Musician's Foundation. The Musician's Foundation has immunity from liquor laws, and has not changed its outlook since the 1940s.
The Minnesota Twins are a Major League Baseball (MLB) team based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. They play in the Central Division of the American League. The team is named after the Twin Cities area comprising Minneapolis and St. Paul. They played in Metropolitan Stadium from 1961 to 1981 and the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome from 1982 to 2009. They played their inaugural game at the newly completed Target Field on April 12, 2010.
The team was founded in Washington, D.C. in 1901 as one of the eight original teams of the American League, named the Washington Senators or Washington Nationals. Although the Washington team endured long bouts of mediocrity (immortalized in the 1955 Broadway musical Damn Yankees), they had a period of prolonged success in the 1920s and 1930s, led by Baseball Hall of Fame members Bucky Harris, Goose Goslin, Sam Rice, Heinie Manush, Joe Cronin, and above all Walter Johnson. Manager Clark Griffith joined the team in 1912 and became the team's owner in 1920. The franchise remained under Griffith family ownership until 1984.
Kansas i/ˈkænzəs/ is a U.S. state located in the Midwestern United States. It is named after the Kansa Native American tribe, which inhabited the area. The tribe's name (natively kką:ze) is often said to mean "people of the wind" or "people of the south wind", although this was probably not the term's original meaning. Residents of Kansas are called "Kansans". For thousands of years, what is now Kansas was home to numerous and diverse Native American tribes. Tribes in the eastern part of the state generally lived in villages along the river valleys. Tribes in the western part of the state were semi-nomadic and hunted large herds of bison. Kansas was first settled by European Americans in the 1830s, but the pace of settlement accelerated in the 1850s, in the midst of political wars over the slavery issue.
When it was officially opened to settlement by the U.S. government in 1854, abolitionist Free-Staters from New England and pro-slavery settlers from neighboring Missouri rushed to the territory to determine whether Kansas would become a free state or a slave state. Thus, the area was a hotbed of violence and chaos in its early days as these forces collided, and was known as Bleeding Kansas. The abolitionists eventually prevailed, and on January 29, 1861, Kansas entered the Union as a free state. After the Civil War, the population of Kansas grew rapidly when waves of immigrants turned the prairie into farmland. Today, Kansas is one of the most productive agricultural states, producing high yields of wheat, corn, sorghum, and soybeans. Kansas is the 15th most extensive and the 34th most populous of the 50 United States.
The Kansas River (also known as the Kaw; via French Cansez from kką:ze, the name of the Kaw (or Kansas) tribe) is a river in northeastern Kansas in the United States. It is the southwestern-most part of the Missouri River drainage, which is in turn the northwestern-most portion of the extensive Mississippi River drainage. Its name (and nickname) come from the Kanza (Kaw) people who once inhabited the area. The state of Kansas was named for the river.
The river valley averages 2.6 miles (4.2 km) in width, with the widest points being between Wamego and Rossville, where it is up to 4 miles (6.4 km) wide, then narrowing to 1 mile (1.6 km) or less in places below Eudora. Much of the river's watershed is dammed for flood control, but the Kansas River is generally free-flowing and has only minor obstructions, including diversion weirs and one low-impact hydroelectric dam.
Beginning at the confluence of the Republican and Smoky Hill rivers, just east of aptly named Junction City (1,040 feet or 320 metres), the Kansas River flows some 148 miles (238 km) generally eastward to join the Missouri River at Kaw Point (718 feet or 219 metres) in Kansas City. Dropping 322 feet (98 m) on its journey seaward, the water in the Kansas River falls less than 2 feet per mile (38 cm/km). The Kansas River valley is only 115 miles (185 km) long; the surplus length of the river is due to meandering across the floodplain. The river's course roughly follows the maximum extent of a Pre-Illinoian glaciation, and the river likely began as a path of glacial meltwater drainage.
Das ist Hamburg und die Sonne scheint ... nicht.
Nein, es ist wie immer
Hier sind die Beginner
Erzählen aus ihrem Leben im Regen
Denn bei euch im Süden von der Elbe
Da ist das Leben nicht dasselbe.
Der Winter ist hart, der Sommer n Witz
Der schöne Tag am See, endet mit Donner und Blitz.
Der Wind peitscht Kragen hoch, Kopf runter, Tunnelblick,
die Pullis und Jacken machen Magersüchtige pummelig.
Wir müssen mit allem rechnen, weil man hier sonst erfriert,
Deswegen wirken wir so komisch und so kompliziert.
So viele Strapazen und dennoch kein Grund umzusiedeln
Das Herz am rechten Fleck, die Füße in Gummistiefeln.
Der Grund warum die Leute hier gern leben,
weil die Leute erst fühlen dann denken, dann reden.
Und egal wie es nervt, dass ständige Grau, dass Sonnenlose
Wir zeigen stets Flagge rot weiß wie Pommessauce.
Ich sage Hamburg ist die Hälfte von 2.
Die Schönste, die Nr. 1, dass Gelbe vom Ei.
Und statt unsympathisch, jung-dynamisch wie Friedrich Merz
ist hier alles laid back, relaxed und friesisch herb.
Hamburg - nicht verwechseln mit Hans Wurst,
denn selbst der kleinste Pimmel hier ist nicht ganz kurz.
Also scheiß auf Tief Anna, Tief Berta, Tief Lora
Dafür ham wir Musik, ham den Kiez, ham die Flora
Oh ja, scheiß drauf, wir sind's gewöhnt.
Wir finden's schön und außerdem an euch im Süden von der Elbe,
da ist das Leben nicht dasselbe.
Denn dort im Süden von der Elbe,
da sind die Leute nicht dasselbe
es ist Arschkalt, scheiß Sturm und es regnet wieder
Apotheker fahr'n Porsche dank der Antidepressiva.
Das ist kein Winter ne wir haben das jeden 2. Tag
Das ist Hamburg, Mann, willkommen in meiner Heimatstadt.
Moin, ist doch klar das so ein rauhes kühles Klima prägt,
Sich über Jahrhunderte auf die Gemüter niederschlägt.
Heißt, nicht mit jedem reden und nicht jeder Sau trau'n
Wir brauchen halt ne' kleine Weile bis wir auftau'n.
Tja, man glaubt's kaum, aber dann sind wir echt kuschelig.
Hamburg ist ein derber Beat und schön und schmuddelig.
Und der Hafen der ist das Herz, die Bassline
Fuck Internet, wir war'n schon immer mit der Welt eins.
International, weite Seen und weiter Horizont,
in Deutschland sind wir damit fast allein wie Robinson.
Doch ich liebe das und bin dankbar für die Einflüsse.
Dankbar für St. Pauli, Altona und Eimsbüttel. Scheiß auf Eppendorf!
Bin stolz darauf und trink mein Holsten aus
und weiß dass man zum Feiern keinen Himmel ohne Wolken braucht.
Nee man, man braucht nur Tempelhof, Golden Pudel Club
Oh ja, ja das ist meine Stadt, schön und abgefuckt.
In dicke Klamotten eingepackt.
Hier labert mich keiner voll, will keiner ein Autogramm.
woanders nennen sie sowas arrogant, hier nicht.
Hier kann man chillen, machen was man will.
Und da bei euch im Süden von der Elbe,
da ist das Leben nicht dasselbe.
Denn da im Süden von der Elbe,
da sind die Leute nicht dasselbe.
Ich sag im Süden von der Elbe,
da sind die Menschen nicht dasselbe.
Denn da im Süden von der Elbe,
sind die Gedanken nicht dieselben.