Jon Natchez
Jon Natchez | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Origin | Newton, Massachusetts, United States |
Genres | Indie rock, experimental |
Occupation(s) | Musician, composer, producer, writer |
Instruments | Saxophone, trumpet, flugelhorn, bass, lap steel, banjo, tuba, guitar, mandolin, keyboards, trombone, clarinet, French horn, modular synthesizers |
Years active | 2003–present |
Labels | Barsuk Records |
Associated acts | The War on Drugs, Beirut, Yellow Ostrich, Stars Like Fleas, A Million Billion, The Silent League, etc. |
Website | Jon Natchez on Bandcamp |
Notable instruments | |
Saxophone |
Jon Natchez is an American multi-instrumentalist and composer based in New York City.[1][2][3][4][5] He has a prolific career as a sideman and recording artist on albums and soundtracks,[6] composing and arranging as well as playing diverse instruments including saxophone, trumpet, flugelhorn, bass, lap steel, banjo, tuba, guitar, mandolin, keyboards, trombone, clarinet, French horn, and modular synthesizers. He started his career as a member of groups such as Stars Like Fleas, The Silent League and most notably Beirut, which he was a member of for three years. After two years with the trio Yellow Ostrich, he joined the group The War on Drugs, who he continues to tour and record with.[7]
He has also performed and/or recorded with artists such as David Byrne,[5] St. Vincent, Passion Pit, Escort, Spoon, Taylor Mac, Shugo Tokumaru, Nina Persson, Mumford & Sons, Congo Ashanti Roy, and Liza Minnelli among others. In 2011 NPR referred to him as "indie rock's most valuable sideman,"[8] and the Wall Street Journal called him an "all-star sideman" in 2015.[9][10] On June 10, 2015, Natchez released his first solo material in the form of two EPs: the four track Swaths I EP, and the four track Swaths II EP. Natchez wrote all the material, performed all instruments, and recorded, produced, engineered, and mixed the EPs.[11] He has also composed a number of film soundtracks.[7][10]
Early life and education
Jon Natchez was born in Massachusetts, and he grew up and went to school n the Boston suburb of Newton, Massachusetts.[8] By high school he was playing saxophone.[8] He played in a number of student groups for fun, and toured in the United States[3] and the Boston area.[8] After high school he attended Harvard University, where he studied music and creative writing.[3][3]
Music career
Move to New York City (2000s-2005)
A week after graduating,[8] the 23-year-old Natchez moved to New York City[8] to pursue a career in journalism.[8] Initially he worked a variety of part-time jobs and did some freelance writing, as well as occasionally playing music gigs.[3] At this time he continued to listen to genres such as soul and R&B, and described himself as "a jazz snob."[3] After a year or two of working in New York, Natchez found his interest in music performance rekindled.[3][8] In 2003 he saw a show by the six-member band The Silent League, and later stated that he was inspired by their "emotionally rich music full of unique textures." He approached the band and was accepted as a member, and for two years he actively toured with the group, releasing an album and traveling through England several times. Natchez described the experience as "a great chance to experiment in making music I felt connected to, and it was there I learned a lot of new instruments."[3]
Beirut and early collaborations (2006-2010)
In 2006 he joined the lineup of A Million Billion, taking part in the recording of a new single. He also worked on an album by Herman Dune, playing horns as The Jon Natchez Bourbon Horns with Kelly Pratt.[1][2] He was a member of the band Stars Like Fleas by 2007, contributing to their September album The Ken Burns Effect, and also that year he recorded the debut album The Jealous Girlfriends as a member of the group of the same name.[1][2] Around this time Zach Condon, front-man and founder of the indie folk-rock band Beirut, moved to New York to work on the band's next release. Condon's manager approached Natchez about playing horns,[3] and Natchez contributed various instrumentals to the May 2006 album Gulag Orkestar by Beirut. The following year he helped record both the band's EP Lon Gisland and the full-length album The Flying Club Cup.[1][2] Natchez subsequently spent three years on tour with Beirut, with approximately 180 Beirut gigs each year until 2009.[8] During this time he also toured with the band Bishop Allen and the French band Herman Dune, and overall was on the road for around 200 days a year.[3]
In 2010 he took a hiatus from touring, and that year was "on the road" for little more than a week total.[8] Explains Natchez, "after I stopped touring with Beirut, I didn't want to just jump on tour with a band I didn't feel a connection with, so I stayed around New York."[8] He worked as a sideman on various local recording projects and gigs,[3] for example recording an album as a member of The Silent League in 2010.[1][2] By early 2011 he had performed with bands such as Bishop Allen, Camera Obscura,[8] and been a part of The Antlers.[5] Later in the year he contributed some instrumentals to the Beirut album The Rip Tide, and also recorded instrumental tracks for artists such as Alexi Murdoch, Jon DeRosa, and Rebecca Pronsky.[1][2]
Yellow Ostrich (2011-2013)
After several years in New York, Natchez "[found himself] wanting to be on tour again. And then just randomly, within me weeks of me having that realization, I get a call from my friend Michael Tapper, the drummer in Yellow Ostrich."[3] An American indie rock band based in Brooklyn, Yellow Ostrich had formed in 2009 with only Alex Schaaf (vocals and guitar) and Tapper. After recording their first studio album, the duo enlisted Natchez to help achieve their sound on stage, with Natchez taking on the roles of bass, horns, lapsteel, keyboard, and electronics.[10][10] He became a permanent member of Yellow Ostrich in January 2011.[8] Prior to Yellow Ostrich he had always been in larger band of 5 to 10 people, but he described working as part of a trio as "really fulfilling," stating that with the band he could try "whatever [he wanted]" with different instruments.[3] He was touring with the band within three weeks of joining them in practice.[3] While on tour in June 2011, the band signed to Barsuk Records,[8] who released the band's sophomore LP Strange Land.[5] With Beau Sorenson producing, Natchez played eleven different types of horns on the album.[4][10] Around that time NPR referred to Natchez as "indie rock's most valuable sideman."[8] The band did several tours of the United States between 2011 and 2012, including opening for The Antlers and Ra Ra Riot.[10] On June 10, 2013, the Yellow Ostrich announced that Natchez was leaving the band to pursue other things.
The War on Drugs and solo EPs (2014-2015)
By 201, Natchez had joined the Philadelphia indie rock group The War on Drugs. First formed in 2005 in Philadelphia, and band had released their debut shortly afterwards and gone through a number of lineup changes.[7] Natchez took part in recording their 2014 album Lost in the Dream on Secretly Canadian, and he toured with band in 2014 and 2015, performing on number of television shows such as Later...with Jools Holland, Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, and Jimmy Kimmel Live!.[6] He continued to play saxophone with The War on Drugs as of March 2015, and that April they performed at Coachella.[7] In June 2015 he helped Mumford and Sons and My Morning Jacket to cover the song "With a Little Help From My Friends" at Bonnaroo.[12]
In 2015 he helped compose the soundtracks for a full-length documentary titled Alcatraz: Search for the Truth and a short film titled The Surf Report.[6] The Wall Street Journal called him an "all-star sideman" that year,[9] and beyond his work with The War on Drugs he continued to work as a guest musician. He came in last minute to perform all the brass and woodwind parts of Anchored by Jon Derosa,[13] anAmong other projects, he recently contributed reed instruments and trombone to the June 2015 Guster album Evermotion,[9] He contributed reed instruments and trombone to the June 2015 album Evermotion, by Guster,[9] and he also took part in the recording of LÁ-BAS, an eponymous debut by a new indie rock supergroup that also included the members Eric D. Johnson, among others.[14]
On June 10, 2015, Natchez released his first solo material in the form of two EPs: the four track Swaths I EP, and the four track Swaths II EP. With mastering by Eugene Cho, Natchez wrote all the material, performed all instruments, and recorded, produced, engineered, and mixed the EPs Natchez wrote in the liner notes that the track numbers were for reference only, and for "maximum enjoyment" the songs were meant to be heard in a randomly generated sequence.[11] A writer, he has had tour diaries and other articles on music published in media outlets[15] such as Foreign Policy[16] and The Harvard Crimson.[17] As of June 2015 he was writing a public tour diary for The War on Drugs, following their shows at Water Street Music Hall in Rochester and other venues.[15] The New York Times referred to him as a "valued sideman" in 2015.[18]
Style and influences
Natchez plays a diverse array of instruments, including electric bass, synthesizers, a multitude of horns, and clarinet. According to Natchez, "I've always described myself as a 'frosting' guy. I play mainly woodwinds... and I've learned to get around on most brass instruments... none of the things that bake the cake, just the ones that ice it."[8] For most of his career he has contributed to projects as either a bandmember or a sideman, and he only released his first solo material in 2015.[11] He has stated that he finds something "noble and romantic" about being a sideman, explaining "I romanticize the players of the 50s and 60s... I loved the idea of bringing my own personal touch to something that isn’t mine."[3]
Discography
Solo material
Year | Album title | Release details |
---|---|---|
2015 | Swaths I EP |
|
Swaths II EP |
| |
Collaborations
Yr | Release title | Primary artist | Type (album/EP) |
Release details (label/debut) |
---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | Gulag Orkestar | Beirut | Studio album | Ba Da Bing! (May 9, 2006) |
2007 | Lon Gisland | Beirut | Studio EP | Ba Da Bing! (January 30, 2007) |
The Jealous Girlfriends | The Jealous Girlfriends | Studio album | Last Gang (April 4, 2007) | |
The Ken Burns Effect | Stars Like Fleas | Studio album | Talitres (September 18, 2007) | |
The Flying Club Cup | Beirut | Studio album | 4AD (October 9, 2007) | |
2010 | But You’ve Always Been The Caretaker | The Silent League | Studio album | Something in Construction (2009) |
2011 | The Rip Tide | Beirut | Studio album | Pompeii (August 2, 2011) |
2012 | Strange Land | Yellow Ostrich | Studio album | Barsuk (2012) |
Ghost EP | Yellow Ostrich | Studio EP | Barsuk (2012) | |
2014 | Lost in the Dream | The War on Drugs | Studio album | Secretly Canadian (March 18, 2014) |
2015 | LÁ-BAS | LÁ-BAS | Studio album | Modern Imperial (May 12, 2015) |
Guest appearances
Yr | Release title | Primary artist(s) |
Release details | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | Giant | Herman Düne | Source Etc. (Oct 15, 2006) | Horns, brass as The Jon Natchez Bourbon Horns w/Kelly Pratt |
2007 | Burning Birthdays | Harlem Shakes | P-Vine (Feb 6, 2007) | Accordion, saxophone |
The Reminder | Feist | Interscope (Apr 23, 2007) | Arranger | |
Fort Nightly | White Rabbits | Say Hey (May 22, 2007) | Horn | |
Passion Before Function | The GoStation | BMG (July 23, 2007) | Horn | |
The Broken String | Bishop Allen | Dead Oceans (July 24, 2007) | Main personnel (clarinet, flute, horn, saxophone) | |
Coronation Thieves | Dragons of Zynth | Gigantic Music (2007) | Saxophone | |
Amoral Certitudes | LD & the New Criticism | Acuarela (2007) | Clarinet | |
2008 | Next Year in Zion | Herman Düne | Source Etc. (Sep 9, 2008) | Main personnel (brass, horns, woodwind) |
Spectrum, 14th Century | Final Fantasy | Blocks (Sep 30, 2008) | Musician | |
2009 | Colonia | A Camp | Nettwerk (Jan 29, 2009) | Horns and woodwinds |
Grrr... | Bishop Allen | Dead Oceans (Mar 10, 2009) | Horns | |
Technicolor Health | Harlem Shakes | Gigantic Music (Mar 2009) | Sax (baritone) | |
The Big Machine | Emilie Simon | Barclay (Sep 14, 2009) | Woodwinds | |
2010 | Ways of Escape | Great Lakes | Orange Twin (2010) | Clarinet (bass), sax (baritone, tenor) |
Here's to Taking It Easy | Phosphorescent | Dead Oceans (May 11, 2010) | Horn | |
2011 | Towards the Sun | Alexi Murdoch | Silber (March 8, 2011) | Clarinet, horn |
Anchored EP | Jon DeRosa | City Slang (2011) | Clarinet, bass clarinet, euphonium, flute, peck horn, trumpet | |
Viewfinder | Rebecca Pronsky | Nine Mile (2011) | Accordion | |
2012 | Look to the Sky | James Iha | EMI (March 14, 2012) | Horns, woodwinds (on "Dream Tonight" and "Appetite") |
Gossamer | Passion Pit | Frenchkiss (July 20, 2012) | Sax (tenor, baritone) | |
2013 | Muchacho | Phosphorescent | Dead Oceans (March 19, 2013) | Bass saxophone (4 and 5), bass clarinet (6, 7 and 9) |
2014 | Lost in the Dream (US #26) | The War on Drugs | Secretly Canadian (March 18, 2014) | Saxophone (baritone) |
Familiars | The Antlers | ANTI- (June 17, 2014) | Trombone (tracks 4, 6, 8), euphonium, tuba, bari/tenor sax | |
Lights Out | Bishop Allen | Dead Oceans (2014) | Horns | |
2015 | Evermotion | Guster | Ocho Mule (June 2015) | Reed instruments, trombone[9] |
Filmography
Soundtracks
Yr | Release title | Type | Producer | Role |
---|---|---|---|---|
2007 | The Ten | Full-length film | Madman Films (Aug 3, 2007) | Musician (saxophone) |
2009 | Paper Man | Full-length film | FilmColony (June 15, 2009) | Musician (clarinets, saxophones, alto horn) |
2013 | A Case of You | Full-length film | Writer of "Marathon Runner" | |
2014 | The Skeleton Twins | Full-length film | Venture Forth (Jan 19, 2014) | Musician |
2014 | God's Pocket | Full-length film | Park Pictures (Jan 17, 2014) | Musician |
2014 | Animals | Full-length film | Independent (May 15, 2015 in US) | Musician (bass clarinet, bari saxophone, tenor saxophone) |
2015 | The Diabolical | Full-length film | XLrator Media | Musician (tuba, euphonium, trombone) |
2015 | Alcatraz: Search for the Truth | TV documentary | Composer | |
2016 | The Surf Report | Short film | Composer | |
TV appearances
Yr | TV show | Role and notes |
---|---|---|
2011 | The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon | Horn player with Okkervil River in January 2011[8] |
2013 | Late Show with David Letterman | Appearance with St. Vincent in Jan 2013 |
2014 | Later...with Jools Holland | Appearance with The War on Drugs |
2015 | Late Night with Jimmy Fallon | Appearance in January with The War on Drugs |
2015 | The Ellen DeGeneres Show | Appearance on Ep. 139, S. 12 with The War on Drugs |
2015 | Jimmy Kimmel Live! | Appearance on Ep. 53, S. 13 with The War on Drugs |
Further reading
- "Meet Indie Rock's Most Valuable Sideman". NPR. June 16, 2011.
- "Jewcy Interview: Jon Natchez of Yellow Ostrich". Jewcy. March 6, 2012.
- Jon Natchez Articles at Brooklyn Vegan
- Jon Natchez Discography at Allmusic
- Jon Natchez Discography at Discogs
- Articles authored by Jon Natchez
- "From Miley Cyrus to Arcade Fire, how the disco beats of Berlin conquered the world". Foreign Policy. November 1, 2013.
- "On Tour with The War on Drugs: Rochester's Church of Gear". Atlas Obscura. June 23, 2015.
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Jon Natchez". Discogs. Retrieved 2015-07-06.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Jon Natchez". Allmusic. Retrieved 2015-07-06.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Winkler, Joe (March 6, 2012). "Jewcy Interview: Jon Natchez of Yellow Ostrich". Jewcy. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- 1 2 "Ghost EP - Yellow Ostrich". Barsuk Records. October 2012. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- 1 2 3 4 "Strange Land". www.yellowostrich.com. 2012. Retrieved June 10, 2012.
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Jon Natchez". IMDB. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- 1 2 3 4 Thompson, Christina (March 30, 2015). "Get to know a 2015 Coachella band: The War On Drugs". AXS. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Tyler-Ameen, Daoud (June 16, 2011). "Meet Indie Rock's Most Valuable Sideman". NPR. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Fusilli, Jim (January 6, 2015). "Updating a '90s Sound". Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Biography". yellowostrich.com. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- 1 2 3 4 "Jon Natchez". bandcamp.com. Retrieved 2015-07-06.
- ↑ Minsker, Evan (June 14, 2015). "Mumford & Sons Bring Out My Morning Jacket, Jon Natchez to Cover "With a Little Help From My Friends" at Bonnaroo". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- ↑ "Jon Natchez on NPR". Jonderosa.com. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- ↑ Farrell, Margaret (May 7, 2015). "LÁ-BAS". SPIN. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- 1 2 Natchez, Jon (June 23, 2015). "On Tour with The War on Drugs: Rochester's Church of Gear". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- ↑ Natchez, Jon (November 1, 2013). "From Miley Cyrus to Arcade Fire, how the disco beats of Berlin conquered the world". Foreign Policy. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- ↑ Natchez, Jon (October 27, 2000). "Sympathy for the Devil: 'Gimme Shelter' Reveals the Bad Vibes of the Sixties". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
- ↑ Ratliff, Ben (October 9, 2015). "Kurt Vile and War on Drugs Share a Middle Ground". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-07-06.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jon Natchez. |