ABOUT JACK TURNER
Jack Crawford Turner (born December 22, 2006) is an American singer-songwriter, record producer, multi-instrumentalist, and busker from Greenville, South Carolina. He is best known for creating the musical solo project Jacks Flat.
Turner is currently a senior at Greenville High Academy, and additionally studies Recording Arts at the Fine Arts Center. For postsecondary education, he will be attending Furman University with an intention to major in Theatre Arts. He makes and performs music for fun, as a part-time job, and with/for friends. In addition to making music, he enjoys hanging out with his friends, skateboarding, biking, hiking, and shooting hoops. His work experience not related to music includes part-time employment at Big Air Trampoline Park (March 2024-November 2024) and Culver's (November 2024-present). His family currently owns a kitten named Figaro, whom his sister found on the side of the road and rescued.
In addition to Jacks Flat, Turner is also in two bands: one called Mr. N, in which he and two friends are currently making a comedy album titled "For Your Grammy Consideration", and one called Violent Young Gentlemen, in which he and three friends intend to soon begin work on either an album or an EP. Disbanded projects he was once part of include a band called 1Another, a band called Rise 25, and a collective called FMB, with which he released music under the name Jack T.
Jack's top 5 favorite albums of all time are: Magdalena Bay's "Imaginal Disk"; Twenty One Pilots' "Trench"; My Chemical Romance's "The Black Parade"; Tyler, The Creator's "IGOR"; and Bastille's "Wild World".
In addition to music, Jack is also really big into movies. Some of his favorites include I Saw the TV Glow, Everything Everywhere All at Once, Whiplash, Parasite, Midsommar, The Empire Strikes Back, Planes, Trains, and Automobiles, Elf, Inside Out, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, Little Shop of Horrors, and more.
At a young age, Turner was diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. Originally a taboo subject to Turner, he has since come to terms with it and his experiences with this diagnosis have become a recurring theme in a lot of his recent work.