Rod Jones (musician)

Rodric Iwan Pryce Jones (born 3 December 1976) is an English guitarist, singer and songwriter.

Rod Jones
Jones performing on 24 July 2006.
Background information
Birth nameRodric Iwan Pryce Jones
Born (1976-12-03) 3 December 1976
Durban, South Africa
OriginLeeds, England
GenresIndie rock
Occupation(s)Musician, guitarist, backing vocalist
Instrumentsguitar, vocals
Years active1995–present
Associated actsIdlewild, The Birthday Suit, The Fruit Tree Foundation, Roddy Woomble, Inara George
Websitewww.rodjonesmusic.com

He is best known as a founding member of Scottish indie rock band Idlewild, with whom he has co-written and recorded six studio albums. Jones has released two solo albums and also currently fronts rock band The Birthday Suit. He is also a co-creator of the ongoing musical project, The Fruit Tree Foundation.

Early life

Jones was born in Durban, South Africa[1] and grew up in London and Leeds, England.[2] His parents are classical musicians,[3] English soprano[4] Alison Jack and Welsh conductor John Pryce-Jones.[5] Jones began playing music at four years of age and initially resisted the musical influence of his parents.[3]

Jones' first job was working as a kitchen porter at a Harry Ramsden's restaurant. The first piece of recorded music he purchased was the "Do they know it's Christmas?" single, by the Band Aid project.[6]

Musical career

Idlewild

Idlewild formed in Edinburgh, with the original line-up consisting of Jones, Roddy Woomble, Phil Scanlon and Colin Newton.[7] Jones first met Newton and Woomble at an Edinburgh university, and the band proceeded to release seven albums and three compilations—two albums debuted in the UK "Top 10" chart, while twelve of Idlewild's singles ranked in the UK "Top 40" chart. Together with the band, Jones toured extensively, both in the UK and internationally, in headline and supporting roles; Idlewild toured with popular bands such as REM, U2, the Rolling Stones, Pearl Jam and Coldplay. Following Idlewild's commitments for the band's seventh album, Post Electric Blues (released in October 2009), an "indefinite hiatus" was announced.[8][9]

Solo

Jones released his debut solo album, A Sentimental Education, in 2009.[10] In a 2010 interview with The List website, Jones briefly explained the history of his inaugural solo effort: "This album only started out as a hobby initially,’ he says. ‘I recorded the songs on my own and worked on them for about a year, until it got to the point that I thought what I was doing was actually OK."[11] Music journalist, Chris Buckle, writing for the UK "independent cultural" media outlet, The Skinny, awarded the album two "stars" out of a possible total of five, stating that "his [Jones] voice is passable but leaves little impression, which wouldn't be a problem if the songs imposed themselves more strongly."[12]

Jones released his second solo album, A Generation Innocence, in August 2012; however, while writing for the second album, Jones encountered a hurdle at the halfway mark, as he discovered that he was not satisfied with any of the material that he had written thus far. In 2011, Jones explained, "I was a bit fed up with the whole folk music thing – I mean every man and his dog was doing the faux folk thing"—Jones then proceeded to learn the drums and eventually formed the band, The Birthday Suit, to record the material that he had created in the period following the drumming diversion.[10]

The Fruit Tree Foundation

In 2010, Jones founded The Fruit Tree Foundation "mental health arts group", alongside former Delgados guitarist and vocalist, Emma Pollock, and musician, Jill O'Sullivan, in order to raise awareness of mental health issues. In an article promoting Jones' participation in the Scottish Mental Health Arts and Film Festival (SMHAFF), the musician revealed that he had previously suffered depression and explained the importance of music as a support mechanism: "It is such a universal art form. A positive force. It can really change your mood, both watching and playing ... There’s such a loneliness and stigma associated with mental illness but music can really bring people together." Jones was a member of a music initiative, entitled "Music Like A Vitamin", that has appeared twice at the SMHAFF. As of October 2012, Jones was running community-based music therapy workshops in Edinburgh, Scotland.[1]

The Birthday Suit

In late 2011, Jones formed The Birthday Suit and described the band as "essentially a solo project ... It’s an ever-changing bistro of musicians." The band released its debut album, The Eleventh Hour, in October 2011.[10] Writing for the PopMatters website, David Bloom, critiqued the album in the following manner (Bloom rated the album "6" out of a possible 10):

... The Eleventh Hour plows along with a familiar intensity and melodic flavor, which should please most Idlewild fans, but also makes it suffer by comparison. Jones’ known strengths as a writer and guitarist work against him as a lead vocalist, as his limitations are put into sharpest relief against those songs that most resemble his work with Idlewild; it’s hard to not hear Woomble’s iconic delivery doing them greater justice.[13]

The Birthday Suit's second studio album, A Conversation Well Rehearsed was released on 3 December 2012.[9] The album was listed in 19th place in the Clean Slate Music website's "Top 21 Albums of 2012" list, although the website write that the second album "doesn't carry the punch" of the band's debut album.[14]

Collaborations

In 2000, Jones played second guitar for Graham Coxon on a UK solo tour that occurred in 2000.[15]

Jones collaborated with Woomble on his solo album, My Secret is My Silence, released in 2006.[8]

In 2006, Jones recorded a self-titled album with singer, Inara George, called George is Jones. The album was due for release in the autumn of 2006; however, the project has not been revived after a period of hiatus and has yet to be released. Jones notes that a release of the album is "doubtful", a situation that is due to "too many problems surrounding it."[16]

Personal life

Jones is married and the song, "Me and Mrs Jones", by Billy Paul, was played at his wedding.[6]

Discography

Solo

Idlewild

The Birthday Suit

The Fruit Tree Foundation

  • First Edition (2011)

George is Jones

  • George is Jones (unreleased) (2006)

Roddy Woomble

  • My Secret is My Silence (2006)

Under One Sky

gollark: https://0t.lt/
gollark: Mine is shorterer.
gollark: 90% of crimes are committed by right-handed people.
gollark: Something something base rate fallacy.
gollark: I see.

References

  1. "Idlewild guitarist Rod Jones says 'music can help mental illness'". Daily Record and Sunday Mail. Media Scotland. 2 October 2012. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  2. "Idlewild – Rod Jones (2003)". The Culture Shock. 15 April 2003. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  3. MusicEd (18 September 2012). "INTRODUCING: THE BIRTHDAY SUIT". The Street Savvy. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  4. "Hero Worship: Thurston Moore". The Skinny. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  5. Rachael Bentham (14 February 2013). "CLASSICAL INTERVIEW: John Pryce-Jones on Classical Spectacular at the Echo Arena". The Liverpool Daily Post. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
  6. Neale Smith (22 August 2012). "Rod Jones of Idlewild and The Birthday Suit – interview". The List. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  7. "Idlewild Biography". StarPulse. Starpulse.com™ and TMZ.com. 1999–2013. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  8. "Biography". Roddy Woomble. 2013. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  9. Rod Jones (11 October 2012). "Guest column – Never meet your heroes? What about supporting them asks Idlewild's Rod Jones". Q Music. Bauer. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  10. Rachel Devine (24 August 2011). "Rod Jones & The Birthday Suit set for UK tour". The List. The List Ltd. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  11. David Pollock (6 January 2010). "Rod Jones and The Birthday Suit". The List. The List Ltd. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  12. Chris Buckle (10 May 2010). "Rod Jones – A Sentimental Education". The Skinny. Radge Media Limited. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  13. David Bloom (8 December 2011). "The Birthday Suit: The Eleventh Hour". PopMatters. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  14. "CLEAN SLATE MUSIC TOP 21 ALBUMS OF 2012: 21–3". Clean Slate Music. WordPress.com. 6 December 2012. Archived from the original on 8 May 2013. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  15. Veikko Hynninen (1998–2013). "Graham Coxon live at Garage, 2000". Veikko's Blur page. Veikko Hynninen. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  16. "stereokill.net". Web.archive.org. 28 January 2016. Retrieved 14 July 2020.
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