Mojo Nixon BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.
Mojo Nixon, the irreverent rock provocateur who shuffled off this mortal coil in February 2024 aboard the Outlaw Country Cruise, continues to haunt the music scene like a ghost with a grudge and a guitar. Lake Placid News reports that USA Luge's 11th annual Running of the Balls fundraiser on December 20 features a special race honoring Nixon as the 1998 honorary team captain, with 98 blue Mojo balls up for grabs at 35 bucks each. Winners snag a reissued copy of his debut album from Pravda Records, which is dropping his full catalog, plus an autographed cymbal from his band Toad Liquors, a cheeky nod to his wild legacy that could cement his spot in Olympic lore.
Over in radio land, Rich Russo's playlist for his December 14 show spotlighted Christmas Mojo Nixon tracks, keeping the holiday punk spirit alive on demand players, while inewsource events pages quote Nixon's Sirius Outlaw Country endorsement for Sara Petite's gig at Grand Ole BBQ North Park, her raw twang transplanted from his old stomping grounds.
The Beat Farmers, San Diego rock relics who shared stages and cruises with Nixon thanks to his Sirius pull, rocked Ojai Deer Lodge on December 14 per setlist.fm, and Good Times Santa Cruz dished that guitarist Jerry Raney reminisced about their shared nutty history ahead of their December 11 Moe's Alley bash. No fresh public appearances or business moves from the man himself, of course, since he's been gone nearly two years, but these tributes whisper of his enduring outlaw swagger. Mother Jones dredged up his name in a Supreme Court spat over campaign cash, citing dairy barons quid-pro-quoing Nixon-era subsidies, but that's ancient history repackaged. No verified social buzz or headlines beyond these echoes, darling, just the afterlife party raging on.
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