Jason Hamacher

Jason Hamacher is an American musician. He was the drummer for the bands Frodus,[1] Decahedron, Combatwoundedveteran, and the straight-edge band Battery. He also sang under the pseudonym Ponan for the Washington, DC punk band Mancake (Part Man... Part Pancake...), which released an EP on Art Monk Construction in 1999 entitled We will destroy you. Hamacher is in a band called Zealot with Mike Schliebaum of Darkest Hour.[2] He played for the band Good Clean Fun on a tour going through Europe.[3]

Jason Hamacher
Also known asPonan
OriginSatellite, Florida, United States
GenresPost-hardcore
Mathcore
Noisecore
Occupation(s)Musician
InstrumentsDrums, Vocals
Years active1993-present
Associated actsFrodus, Decahedron, Combatwoundedveteran, Battery, Mancake, Regents, Zealot, Good Clean Fun

Aside from music, Hamacher is an accomplished photographer and documentarian and runs Lost Origin Productions LLC. He is currently working in Syria with the ancient Aramaic speaking Syriac Orthodox Church. In March 2008, Hamacher starred in the documentary short, Old Soul which won the 2008 International Documentary Challenge. Lost Origin Productions will release Hamacher's field recordings of the earliest known Christian chant, publish a book of his Syrian photography entitled Aleppo, Syria: Witness to an Ancient Legacy, and launch an international series of limited edition cross cultural images. In between 2006 and 2010, Hamacher recorded ancient Syria chants on his journeys.[4]

In 2014, the Gallery at Convergence in Alexandria hosted an exhibit of his photographs, Syria: Sacred Spaces, Ancient Prayers.[5] Hamacher has also worked with Smithsonian Folkways on a recording of Urfan chants recorded in Syria.[6]

Hamacher has written about the state of Syria and his experiences documenting the communities there for The Washington Post''.[7]

Although he has remained quieter in the music scene than former bandmate Shelby Cinca, Hamacher currently performs in Regents[8] with David NeSmith of Sleepytime Trio.

Hamacher is a licensed massage therapist.[2] He attended the Gigantour with The Dillinger Escape Plan as a Massage Therapist for guitarist Ben Weinman.[2]

Bands

Current
  • Zealot R.I.P - drums (2006–present)
  • Regents - drums (2007–present)
Former
Touring

Discography

Frodus

Studio albums

Live Albums

  • 22-D10 (live at WMUC Radio + Formula 7" Sessions) (1997, No Looking Back)
  • Radio-Activity (live radio recordings at WMUC, WHFS, KXLU) (2002, Magic Bullet Records)
  • Live at Black Cat 1999 iTunes-only (2005, Lovitt Records)
  • Left for Dead in Halmstad! (live in Sweden, April 14, 1998) iTunes-only (2006, Carcrash Records)

Singles and EPs

  • Babe (1993, Gnome)
  • Tzo Boy (1993, Gnome)
  • Treasure Chest (1994, Gnome / Level)
  • Formula (1996, Lovitt / Shute)
  • Split with Trans-Megetti (1996, Art Monk Construction)
  • Explosions (1997, Day After Records)
  • Split with Roadside Monument (1997, Tooth and Nail)
  • Muddle Magazine Promo Flexi (1997, Tooth and Nail / Muddle)
  • Split with Atomic Fireball (1999, Lovitt / Japan: Flatree Records)
  • "Suspicion Breeds Confidence (Jason Vocals)" b/w "G. Gordon Liddy Show Call" (2006, Carcrash Records iTunes Only)
  • Soundlab 1 (2010, Lovitt Records)
Mancake
Regents
Battery
Decahedron
Combatwoundedveteran
  • Electric Youth Crew (2002, Schematics Records; Split w/ Reversal of Man)
  • Duck Down For The Torso (2002, No Idea Records)
gollark: You have failed to justify your statement regarding SPUDNET.
gollark: In what sense is SPUDNET bees?
gollark: I have to say, manually encoding JSON and using `wscat` to test SPUDNET is quite annoying.
gollark: Specific programming languages.
gollark: I mean, sure, but having Unicode contain characters for specific languages is apiohazardous.

References

  1. Gentry, Brandon (Jan 26, 2010). "Secret History: Frodus's F-Letter". DCist. Archived from the original on 2010-01-29.
  2. Hamacher, Jason (April 17, 2016). "Jason Hamacher of Frodus, Lost Origins". Interviewed by Trav Turner and Seth Werkhiser. As The Story Grows. Retrieved April 18, 2016.
  3. Hamacher, Jason (April 17, 2016). "Jason Hamacher (Bonus Frodus)". Interviewed by Trav Turner and Seth Werkhiser. As The Story Grows. Retrieved April 18, 2016.
  4. "Before War, A Punk Drummer Preserved Syrian Chants". NPR.org. August 7, 2014. Retrieved April 18, 2016.
  5. Jenkins, Mark (April 18, 2014). "In the Galleries: 'Syria: Sacred Spaces. Ancient Prayers,' 'Sedition of Sound,' 'Pure'". The Washington Post.
  6. Paschall, Valerie (May 29, 2014). "Jason Hamacher, a Punk "Drummer With a Camera," Is Now a Syrian-Art Preservationist". Washington City Paper.
  7. Hamacher, Jason (September 27, 2013). "The Syria I saw, now in ruins". The Washington Post.
  8. Paschall, Valerie (Sep 2, 2011). "Three Stars: Regents". DCist. Archived from the original on November 6, 2017.
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