John Munson

John Munson (born December 13, 1966) is an American musician who is best known as the bass player for Semisonic. He was also a member of Trip Shakespeare during the late 1980s and early 1990s.

John Munson
Born (1966-12-13) December 13, 1966
InstrumentsBass guitar, piano, guitar, double bass
Associated actsTrip Shakespeare, Pleasure/Semisonic, The New Standards, The Flops, The Twilight Hours, John Munson & the Witnesses, Dan Wilson

Trip Shakespeare

Matt Wilson, lead vocalist of Trip Shakespeare, recalled how Munson joined that band in 1985:

Back in Minneapolis, we started trying out bass players. John is somebody that I'd played with in a band a few years earlier, so we already knew each other. But John was not that good of a bass player when I had known him before, so it didn't really occur to me to try him out. But he came over anyway and played, and he'd improved a lot. And I don't believe it's because he kept active, either. I don't know what it is. He's not a major practicer.[1]

Semisonic

When Trip Shakespeare dissolved, Munson and fellow band member Dan Wilson—Matt's brother—formed a new band called Pleasure with Jacob Slichter, which later became Semisonic.

Current projects

Currently Munson is working on several different projects, including working with former Trip Shakespeare mate Matt Wilson on new songs as The Flops and later The Twilight Hours,[2] and also on the New Standards, a band that plays covers of a wide variety of music in a jazz format. Other members of the New Standards include Chan Poling (formerly of Minneapolis dance pop band The Suburbs) and Steve Roehm. Munson teaches Sound For Image class at MCTC college in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Munson has also provided music and commentary for the program "Wits" on Minnesota Public Radio. While performing on Wits, Munson's back-up band was called the Witnesses and its members were as follows: Janey Winterbauer on vocals, Steve Roehm on vibes, Richard Medek on drums, and Joe Savage on pedal steel.[3]

gollark: I also wonder why most hatcheries are closed-source.
gollark: I mean it wouldn't be that bad.
gollark: Not really, no.
gollark: Oh, yes, they would lose the stored dragons, wouldn't they.
gollark: If they don't have backups, they're idiots anyway.

References

  1. Craig MacInnis, Behold Pop's Extravagant Toolmasters, Toronto Star, October 18, 1991, p. D3.
  2. "John Munson and Matt Wilson ascend to Soft Rock Heaven". The Twilight Hours. Retrieved 2011-07-18.
  3. "Minnesota Public Radio: Wits".


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