Jackson Delta: Thankful

Jackson Delta: Thankful

Saturday, October 10 • 8:00 PM
Market Hall Performing Arts Centre

Jackson Delta are the kind of band Peterborough doesn’t just claim — it keeps close. The Canadian acoustic blues trio have been flying the hometown flag since the ’80s, turning grit, groove, and plain old musical chemistry into one of the city’s most enduring success stories.

Twice nominated for a Juno for Best Roots & Traditional Album — first for Acoustic Blues in 1990, then for I Was Just Thinking That in 1991 — Jackson Delta built their name the old-fashioned way: sharp songs, lived-in vocals, and a sound that feels equal parts back porch, barroom, and road-worn revelation.

The lineup is pure blues lifer material: Alan Black on vocals, harmonica, and drums, Rick Fines on vocals and guitar, and Gary Peeples on vocals and guitar. Together, they’ve spent decades proving that you don’t need flash when you’ve got feel.

Their story has a few choice details that only deepen the legend. The trio cut their debut album, Delta Sunrise, at the fabled Sun Studio in Memphis in 1988, before following it with Acoustic Blues the next year. Lookin’ Back arrived in 1991, with I Was Just Thinking That close behind in 1992, cementing the band as festival favourites across Canada through the ’90s.

Since then, the members have hardly been sitting still. Rick Fines has continued to earn critical praise, including a 2021 Juno nomination for Best Blues Album for Solar Powered Too. Alan Black released the terrific Happy As A Monkey in 2010. These days, Rick is living overseas, which makes this performance more than just another hometown date — it makes it a genuinely rare chance to see Jackson Delta together again.

And in Peterborough, that still means something. Their annual Market Hall appearance isn’t just another gig — it’s a hometown ritual, delivered by a trio that knows exactly how to raise the roof without ever losing the soul. Expect a spirited, loose-limbed, toe-tapping night from a band that helped write the local musical DNA.