Josh Werner

Josh Werner (born September 17, 1974) is an American bassist, producer, composer and songwriter.

Josh Werner
OriginMilwaukee, Wisconsin, US
GenresDub, experimental rock, hip hop, jazz, avant-garde
Occupation(s)Musician, producer, songwriter
InstrumentsBass, double bass, vocals, guitar, piano, organ, keyboards
Years active1999–2013
Associated actsHiggins Waterproof Black Magic Band
Lee "Scratch" Perry
Helio Parallax
Living Days
RZA
Wu-Tang Clan
CocoRosie
Matisyahu
Roots Tonic

Life and career

Werner grew up in Milwaukee, WI. He works in a variety of styles, most notably reggae, experimental rock, hip hop and jazz.[1]

He was a private student of Richard Davis. In 1996, he moved to New York city to attend the New School of Jazz and contemporary music program.

Werner has worked with, Lee “Scratch” Perry, Cibo Matto, Robert Glasper, Holly Miranda, Wu Tang Clan, Marc Ribot, Vacationer, Ghostface Killah, Dave Eggar, Vybz Kartel, Jay Rodriguez, The Alchemist, Popcaan, Tunde Adebimpe, CocoRosie, The RZA, Sinkane, Sly and Robbie, Matisyahu, Tim K, and is a frequent collaborator of noted American bassist / producer Bill Laswell.[2][3]

He is a member of Higgins Waterproof Black Magic Band (which includes TV on the Radio singer Tunde Adebimpe, Alex Holden and Ryan Sawyer)[4] Dark romantic pop group Living Days and Sci fi dub noir project Helio parallax.[5][6]

He frequently tours and records with Avant Garde Freak Folk act CocoRosie.[7]

Werner was a co-writer and bassist of the Certified Gold RIAA albums Matisyahu (Live at Stubb's) and the Grammy nominated Matisyahu (Youth album) along with original backing band Roots Tonic.[2]

Solo Releases

Solo Releases:

Josh Werner: Bass (To be Released) 2018 (MOD Technologies)

JD Werner: Station of Lost 2016 (Beyond Science)[8]

gollark: Are you going to wire them all to HDMI inputs or something like that?
gollark: Pine64 had PineCubes, but I don't think they went anywhere.
gollark: Or just bad cameras.
gollark: Well, they might have terrible software and such.
gollark: You can get bad camera-ish things for maybe $50.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.