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Cool John Ferguson was born on Saint
Helena Island off the coast of South Carolina. His mother is of the
Gullah people and John grew up with the old ways all around him. His
first guitar was a Harmony #1 with a one-coil pick-up, two knobs, and a
Marvel amplifier. He still remembers the shape and look of it and the
way it made him feel. He learned to play by listening.
He is uniquely equipped for the task at hand. Born December 3, 1953, he
has been playing the guitar since age three. At five he was playing
church music professionally, often out-seating musicians ten times his
age. For three years he was a featured entertainer on the Low Country
Sing on channel 5 Charleston TV, appearing with his three sisters (the
Ferguson Sisters), a popular gospel trio. He was also featured on stage
every morning at school, where the principal found that live music kept
the students civilized before the start of class. In the seventh grade
he was a mainstay of his high school band and chorus. Around this time
he began what was to be a lengthy association with Earl Davis, his music
teacher.
John became a fixture in the band
room, where Earl taught him music theory and charting and John learned
to play every instrument in the room. In the tenth grade John formed his
first band, the Soul Connection, playing rhythm and blues at school
functions. In his junior year he attended the first integrated high
school class in Beaufort and formed an integrated band, the Plastic
Society, venturing into psychedelic pop music and beginning to play club
dates.
Throughout this time John played guitar and piano at a minimum of two
church gigs every Sunday. One day an itinerant preacher rolled into
Beaufort in a rusted out '49 Chevy. His name was Reverend Ike "You can't
lose with the stuff I use" and he soon set up shop at the United House
of Prayer on Duke and Haymore. He hired John for a two week gig and
immediately attracted large crowds with his peculiar philosophy of
personal empowerment through cash donations for Ike's nascent broadcast
empire "The workman is worthy of hire." John pulled his weight and then
some. "I brought in just as much attendance as he did, chicks would see
me play at the honky-tonks and then come to hear me in church." As Ike's
popularity grew and he traveled to preach in ever-larger venues, he took
John on the road with him, to Macon, Savannah, and as far west as the
Houston Coliseum.
President of the student council, he graduated in 1972 and with his
mentor formed the Earl Davis Trio with Earl on sax, Earl's wife on
organ, and John on guitar, playing jazz. This began an extremely active
period for John. He took on a house gig at the Latai Inn at Fripp Island
Resort and was playing four churches on Sunday. His next gig lasted five
years, with Stephen Best and the Soul Crusaders, playing black clubs
throughout South Carolina. This was followed by a long solo engagement
at the Sans Souci in Beaufort, playing dinner jazz interspersed with
blues, soul and rock. "I always gave them a little more than they
wanted. When it was time to beef things up I knew where to go." He
played the Sans Souci four nights a week and it was there, at
twenty-seven, that he was married to his wife Brenda. In the years since
John has traveled where the music has taken him, equally comfortable in
churches and clubs. He has been active on the tent revival circuit, a
little-documented but vibrant niche of American religious culture, and
has been associated with LaFace Records of Atlanta, Ga. collaborating on
pop recordings with his niece Esperanza.
John epitomizes the traditional role of the musician as an integral
entity in the everyday life of the community. Through his work in the
church he has provided the sound-track for thousands of weddings,
funerals, picnics, and parties. He and his sister Bessie made something
of a specialty of funerals, working closely with the director to dictate
the appropriate tone of the event. "He would say, ' Let them cry, but
not too much, then let the spirit out', I would come out with some sad
stuff, then unexpectedly cheer them up. And a lot of them would come to
see me at the club I was playing that night"
John's musical path is immersion. The man breathes music and plays from
the inside out. He commands the rare ability to develop a theme on the
fly, incorporating every element of the situation along the way and
somehow summing them all up neatly when he feels the end coming. His
improvised pieces carry the aesthetic sensibility of careful,
painstakingly crafted works, which in fact they are; it is simply all
done in real time. Coupled with the willingness to play with anybody,
any time, in any style, familiar or not, he possesses a formidable
panurgy that is making him a force to be reckoned with in the music
industry.
-Wesely Wilkes |