The First Brush with Fame
In 1928, a talent scout for Okeh Records traveled to Avalon, Mississippi. Acting on a recommendation from a local white fiddler, Willie Narmour, with whom Hurt sometimes played, the scout auditioned a guitarist named John Hurt. Impressed, the label brought
Hurt to Memphis and then New York City for two recording sessions. He cut several sides, including future classics like “Frankie,” “Candy Man Blues,” and “Avalon Blues.” Hurt’s intricate, gentle fingerpicking style and warm vocals were unique, setting him apart from the harsher sounds of the Delta blues. But despite their quality, the records were only modest sellers. The music industry wasn’t quite sure how to market his gentle, songster style, which blended country, blues, and folk traditions.
The Great Depression and the Long Silence
Any chance for a burgeoning music career was cut short by a force far bigger than Hurt: the Great Depression. As the American economy collapsed, the recording industry crumbled with it. Okeh Records went out of business, and the market for “race records” dried up. Hurt’s musical journey seemed to end as quickly as it began. He wasn't dramatically dropped or defeated; the entire industry that had briefly noticed him simply vanished. With no more recording opportunities on the horizon, John Hurt did what he’d always done: he went home to Avalon and returned to life as a farmer and sharecropper. For him, music had always been a part of life, not a ticket out of it.
A Farmer Who Played Guitar
For the next 35 years, Mississippi John Hurt wasn’t a musician who had quit; he was a working man who happened to be a brilliant guitar player. He worked as a sharecropper, for the WPA, and on the railroad, living a quiet life in rural Mississippi. He played at local parties, barbecues, and fish fries, sometimes for a few dollars, but mostly for the joy of it. He was a local legend, not a national star. By his own account, he was content with his life. At one point during these intervening decades, he didn't even own a guitar and only played occasionally on borrowed instruments. The idea of being a professional musician was a distant memory from another lifetime.
The Knock on the Door
In the early 1960s, the American folk revival was in full swing, and a new generation of fans and collectors were digging through old 78s, unearthing forgotten geniuses. A young music enthusiast from Washington, D.C., named Tom Hoskins became fascinated with Hurt’s 1928 recordings. In one of those songs, “Avalon Blues,” Hurt sang the line, “Avalon’s my hometown, always on my mind.” Taking the lyric literally, Hoskins traveled to Mississippi in 1963 in search of Avalon. To his astonishment, he not only found the town but also found John Hurt, then 71 years old, alive and well, herding cattle. Hoskins, armed with a tape recorder, had found the man most fans assumed was long dead.
A Second Act and Lasting Legacy
The rediscovery catapulted Hurt into a new and unexpected world. Persuaded to move to Washington, D.C., he was embraced by the folk scene as a living legend. He performed at the prestigious Newport Folk Festival, where he was hailed as the star, and played in coffeehouses and colleges for adoring crowds who were mesmerized by his gentle spirit and lyrical guitar work. His career had not just been revived; it was ignited in a way it never had been in the 1920s. He recorded new albums and, for the first time, earned a real living from his music. This second act lasted only about three and a half years before his death in 1966. In that short time, he became one of the most beloved and influential figures of the folk revival, cementing a legacy that had almost been lost to time.














