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Tommy Jarrell (born Thomas Jefferson Jarrell, March 1, 1901 Surry County, North Carolina, died January 28, 1985) was an American fiddler, banjo player, and singer from the Mount Airy region of North Carolina's Appalachian Mountains. Although he made his living from road construction (operating a motor grader for the North Carolina Highway Department until his retirement in 1966), Jarrell was an influential musician, eventually attracting attention from Washington D.C. when he received the National Endowment for the Arts' National Heritage Fellowship in 1982. Jarrell's style was notable for its expressive use of syncopation and sliding ornamentation, and he was adept at singing while playing. His formidable technique and rough timbre continue to influence modern aficionados of Appalachian old-time music and in particular the Round Peak style of clawhammer banjo. In his later years, Jarrell lived in the small unincorporated community of Toast, North Carolina. His life is documented in two films by Les Blank, listed below. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.

Sail Away Ladies

Come And Go With Me
Hand to the Banjo: Tommy Jarrell
When Sorrows Encompass Me Around

Pickin' On Tommy's Porch
The Legacy Of Tommy Jarrell, Vol. 1: Sail Away Ladies
The Legacy Of Tommy Jerrell, Vol. 3: Come And Go With Me
The Legacy Of Tommy Jarrell, Vol. 2: Rainbow Sign

Rainbow Sign
Legends Of Old-Time Music:Fifty Years Of County Records
Clawhammer Banjo, Vol. 2
Classic Old-Time Fiddle From Smithsonian Folkways