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Mo’ Better Jazz and Blues

Jaimoe’s Jasssz Band, led by the Grammy Lifetime Award-winning drummer, performs at the Iron Horse Grill on Saturday, Jan. 10. Photo courtesy Carl Vernuld

Jaimoe’s Jasssz Band, led by the Grammy Lifetime Award-winning drummer, performs at the Iron Horse Grill on Saturday, Jan. 10. Photo courtesy Carl Vernuld

Jai Johanny Johanson, better known by his stage name, Jaimoe, has been playing drums and percussion since he was 16. From the beginning, he was so certain of his career path that he didn't even want to finish school. "I just finished because my mother asked me to," he says.

Before touring with the likes of Otis Redding, Percy Sledge and The Five Stairsteps, a young Jaimoe washed dishes in restaurants between drumming jobs.

"That would usually last about four or five months, and I'd be off on the road again," he says.

In 1969, Jaimoe helped to found legendary southern rock group Thee Allman Brothers Band, which earned him a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2012. After 45 years, the surviving band members—hailed as pioneers of the jam-band genre—still rock the stage together.

To say that Jaimoe is a master of his craft after 54 years of performing is somewhat of an understatement. At 70, the 1995 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee is still keeping time in the rhythm section; only, now, it's literally to the beat of his own drum.

Today, instead of washing dishes between gigs, Jaimoe jams on. In 2006, he assembled a seven-piece ensemble to indulge in the jazz side of his musicality. Naturally, Jaimoe's Jasssz Band features Jaimoe on drums. The group's seasoned musicians also include guitarist and vocalist Junior Mack, bassist Dave Stoltz, keyboardist Bruce Katz, and a show-stealing horn section comprised of saxophonist Kris Jensen, trumpeter Reggie Pittman and Paul Lieberman, who splits his time between saxophone, flute and piccolo.

Jaimoe's Jasssz Band delivers a masterful blend of jazz, R&B, blues and rock-n-roll, all of which is definitively captured on its third album and first studio-recording project, "Renaissance Man," released in 2011. Jaimoe pays homage to his Allman Brothers roots with a bossa nova version of the classic tune "Melissa" from The Allman Brothers Band's 1972 studio album, "Eat a Peach."

Jaimoe's Jasssz Band will play in Jackson for the first time at the Mississippi Blues Marathon's after-party, but Jaimoe isn't unfamiliar with the local music scene. His list of jam-session partners features a few notable Jackson natives, such as singer Tommy Tate. Jaimoe has also heard about Jesse Robinson's guitar-playing, and says he wouldn't mind meeting him while in town.

After Jackson, Jaimoe's tour makes a stop in his hometown, Gulfport. "That's where I went to school, and I lived there until I was 22," he says. He'll be in town there for the unveiling of a Mississippi Blues Trail marker in his honor on Jan. 13, at 3 p.m. at the intersection of Arkansas Avenue and Martin Luther King Boulevard.

While Jaimoe won't pin down a release date for the band's fourth album, only saying to expect it "in the next year and a half, maybe sooner," fans can expect another worthy addition to the drummer's ever-growing legacy.

Jaimoe's Jasssz Band performs at the Mississippi Blues Marathon After Party at 8:30 p.m., Saturday, Jan. 10, at the Iron Horse Grill (320 W. Pearl St.) For more information, visit jaimoe.com.

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