Jerron Paxton
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And, you know, so I grew up around lots of lovely family and, you know, big backyard that 80 percent of the food I grew up eating came out of, you know. until me and Granny made our last little harvest the year she passed away. Yeah, it was a lovely place full of music and family.
I think I got bored there when I was living there, but now that I'm an older person and you start reminiscing, I recently reconnected with my next-door neighbor. We got to commiserating each other saying, boy, those were some of the happiest times of our lives probably.
I think I got bored there when I was living there, but now that I'm an older person and you start reminiscing, I recently reconnected with my next-door neighbor. We got to commiserating each other saying, boy, those were some of the happiest times of our lives probably.
I think I got bored there when I was living there, but now that I'm an older person and you start reminiscing, I recently reconnected with my next-door neighbor. We got to commiserating each other saying, boy, those were some of the happiest times of our lives probably.
Well, you could probably tell that just in the music I love and my aesthetic that things at certain levels of contemporary don't quite appeal. And I tend to like some people call it tradition. Some people call it old fashioned. You know, I just like things of a certain aesthetic that tend to be old. a little bit older than what we have now. And my grandmother was the same way.
Well, you could probably tell that just in the music I love and my aesthetic that things at certain levels of contemporary don't quite appeal. And I tend to like some people call it tradition. Some people call it old fashioned. You know, I just like things of a certain aesthetic that tend to be old. a little bit older than what we have now. And my grandmother was the same way.
Well, you could probably tell that just in the music I love and my aesthetic that things at certain levels of contemporary don't quite appeal. And I tend to like some people call it tradition. Some people call it old fashioned. You know, I just like things of a certain aesthetic that tend to be old. a little bit older than what we have now. And my grandmother was the same way.
She was born in 28, and she was sort of a throwback to not her mother's age. She was born in 1906, but more her father's age, and he was born in 1886. In certain ways, she was like that, but in certain ways, she was a very modern woman. So when you've got a person who's throwing back to the 1880s, you know, you've got something there. And then her father was a bit of a throwback himself.
She was born in 28, and she was sort of a throwback to not her mother's age. She was born in 1906, but more her father's age, and he was born in 1886. In certain ways, she was like that, but in certain ways, she was a very modern woman. So when you've got a person who's throwing back to the 1880s, you know, you've got something there. And then her father was a bit of a throwback himself.
She was born in 28, and she was sort of a throwback to not her mother's age. She was born in 1906, but more her father's age, and he was born in 1886. In certain ways, she was like that, but in certain ways, she was a very modern woman. So when you've got a person who's throwing back to the 1880s, you know, you've got something there. And then her father was a bit of a throwback himself.
And when you're a throwback and you're born in 1886—
And when you're a throwback and you're born in 1886—
And when you're a throwback and you're born in 1886—
You're going back a long ways. He played the throwback banjo, which is sort of kind of why I played this instrument. The instrument he didn't play didn't match his age. It more matched his parents' age. But that's the kind of person he was.
You're going back a long ways. He played the throwback banjo, which is sort of kind of why I played this instrument. The instrument he didn't play didn't match his age. It more matched his parents' age. But that's the kind of person he was.
You're going back a long ways. He played the throwback banjo, which is sort of kind of why I played this instrument. The instrument he didn't play didn't match his age. It more matched his parents' age. But that's the kind of person he was.
Well, the thing that spoke to me the most about the music was the tone of the instruments. And it's something, till yet, I still have a prejudice towards. I truly, in my heart of hearts, believe... acoustic instruments have more power than any other instruments around.
Well, the thing that spoke to me the most about the music was the tone of the instruments. And it's something, till yet, I still have a prejudice towards. I truly, in my heart of hearts, believe... acoustic instruments have more power than any other instruments around.
Well, the thing that spoke to me the most about the music was the tone of the instruments. And it's something, till yet, I still have a prejudice towards. I truly, in my heart of hearts, believe... acoustic instruments have more power than any other instruments around.
Even hearing the same acoustic music through a speaker or through headphones or anything like that does not compare with having an instrument in the same room as you and having the air that vibrates out of that instrument vibrate you and your eardrums. I've done it. I've experienced it as a