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David Myles
David Myles
Canadian singer-songwriter of jazzy, bluesy folk music
1
Joel Plaskett
Joel Plaskett
Canadian rock musician
2
Mary Jane Lamond
Mary Jane Lamond
Canadian singer
3
Mo Kenney
Mo Kenney
Canadian singer-songwriter
4
George Canyon
George Canyon
Canadian musician
5
Jimmy Rankin
Jimmy Rankin
Canadian singer-songwriter
6
The Stanfields
The Stanfields
Canadian Rock Music Group (2008–present)
7
Tom Fun Orchestra
Tom Fun Orchestra
Canadian indie rock band
8
Jenn Grant
Jenn Grant
Canadian Singer
9
Doyle Lawson
Doyle Lawson
American musician
10
Gypsophilia
Gypsophilia
Canadian gypsy jazz band
11
Natalie MacMaster
Natalie MacMaster
Canadian musician
12
Dave Gunning
Dave Gunning
singer
13
Barachois
Barachois
Acadian folk band of Canada
14
Infamous Stringdusters
Infamous Stringdusters
band that plays bluegrass music
15
Tony Rice
Tony Rice
American guitarist and bluegrass musician
16
Chris Colepaugh
Chris Colepaugh
Canadian blues-rock musician and front man of the band Chris Colepaugh and the Cosmic Crew
17
Old Crow Medicine Show
Old Crow Medicine Show
Americana string band based in Nashville, Tennessee, United States
18
John Hartford
John Hartford
American singer-songwriter and musician
19
Mason Williams
Mason Williams
American guitarist
20
Bryan Sutton
Bryan Sutton
American musician
21
Madison Violet
Madison Violet
band that plays folk music
22
Ron Block
Ron Block
American musician
23
The Grascals
The Grascals
American bluegrass music group
24
Rawlins Cross
Rawlins Cross
25
John McEuen
John McEuen
American musician
26
Sam Bush
Sam Bush
American musician
27
Alison Brown
Alison Brown
American musician
28
Laurie Lewis
Laurie Lewis
American musician
29
Jerry Douglas
Jerry Douglas
American musician
30
Blue Highway
Blue Highway
American contemporary bluegrass band
31
Del McCoury
Del McCoury
American musician
32
Old Man Luedecke
Old Man Luedecke
Canadian singer-songwriter and banjo player
33
Nothin' Fancy
Nothin' Fancy
34
Susan Crowe
Susan Crowe
Canadian singer
35
Bill Monroe
Bill Monroe
American bluegrass musician, songwriter
36
Ashley MacIsaac
Ashley MacIsaac
Canadian musician
37
Duane Andrews
Duane Andrews
Canadian guitarist
38
Battlefield Band
Battlefield Band
Scottish folk group
39
Ron Hynes
Ron Hynes
Canadian singer
40
Alert the Medic
Alert the Medic
41
Scott Vestal
Scott Vestal
musical artist
42
Eric Weissberg
Eric Weissberg
American musician
43
Bernie Leadon
Bernie Leadon
American musician
44
The Dillards
The Dillards
American bluegrass band
45
Peter Rowan
Peter Rowan
American singer
46
Tony Furtado
Tony Furtado
American musician
47
Tim O'Brien
Tim O'Brien
American musician
48
Rita MacNeil
Rita MacNeil
Canadian singer
49
Gordie Sampson
Gordie Sampson
Canadian musician
50
Foggy Mountain Boys
Foggy Mountain Boys
American bluegrass band
51
J. D. Crowe
J. D. Crowe
American musician
52
Eddie Adcock
Eddie Adcock
Musician; banjo player
53
Amelia Curran
Amelia Curran
Canadian singer-songwriter
Intro
Canadian musician

John Paul "J.P." Cormier (born January 23, 1969), is a Canadian bluegrass/folk/Celtic singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist. To date he has won thirteen East Coast Music Awards and one Canadian Folk Music Award.

Cormier was born in London, Ontario and began playing guitar around age five. As a child he displayed an unusual ability to play a variety of instruments by ear and won a guitar contest at age nine. Appearances on Up Home Tonight, a television show devoted to bluegrass music, followed at age fourteen.

Cormier has stated that he learned to play guitar by listening to such noted country / bluegrass musicians as Chet Atkins and Doc Watson. Other instruments J.P. has played on his albums include fiddle, twelve string guitar, upright bass, banjo, mandolin, drums, percussion, synthesizer, cello, tenor banjo and piano.

By age sixteen Cormier had recorded his first album (a collection of bluegrass instrumentals) and he began working the U.S. festival circuit. This led him to move to the United States and to begin working as a session musician. He continued to perform live on the festival circuit and at the Grand Ole Opry with country artists Waylon Jennings, Marty Stuart, Earl Scruggs, Bill Monroe and others.

In 1989 he attended the now-named Northeast Mississippi Community College in Booneville, Mississippi, where he majored in music education. At the time it was one of only three colleges in North America that offered a specialty in bluegrass instruments. During his stay at Northeast he began playing the dobro and piano. It was also during this time he first had the idea for the song "Northwind".

Cormier was involved in a serious truck accident in 2009, resulting in a fractured vertebra and a halt to his touring in 2012. He went back into the studio, focused on his singer-songwriter abilities, and released Somewhere in the Back of My Heart in the same year.

In April 2015 Cormier released a new album, The Chance, which included the previously released single Hometown Battlefield, about soldiers experiencing posttraumatic stress disorder. The song, inspired by Cormier's 2007 Afghanistan tour and news about soldiers' suicides, went viral, with millions of Facebook visits and 800,000 YouTube views (July 2015).