Mason Jennings

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Singer, songwriter

Since his self-titled album debut in 1998, Mason Jennings has carved out a distinct niche within the crowded singer-songwriter scene. Jennings's songs, it seems, have a gift for touching a broad category of listeners personally. "Women weep at his songs, middle-aged men nod in silent agreement, teenagers are mesmerized," wrote Vickie Casey in the Minneapolis Star Tribune, "and the collegiate set sings along like a cheerleading squad." His first two albums, released independently, sold 30,000 copies, and his live shows quickly developed a loyal following. Although Jennings received opportunities to sign with major labels, he resisted for a long time, worrying that a corporate atmosphere would harm his growth as an artist.

While he has typically fallen under the singer-songwriter banner, Jennings has also written political folk songs in the tradition of Woody Guthrie, making his music difficult to pigeonhole. "Singer/songwriter Mason Jennings blends the deeply personal insights of a poet, the political broadsides of a protest singer, and the broad musical eclecticism of a jazz musician with the passion and commitment of a rock & roller," wrote Mark Deming in All Music Guide.

Jennings was born in Honolulu, Hawaii, in 1975, but grew up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He started performing songs at 13, and formed punk bands with his brother Matt in high school. Jennings also broadened his musical palette, listening to Delta blues players like Charlie Patton and Robert Johnson. At age 16 Jennings dropped out of school to pursue a career in music. "I felt it was worthwhile to put all my time and energy into music," he told Casey. He drifted for two years, reading classic literature that he checked out of public libraries, and playing in a New Orleans street band.

Eventually Jennings moved to Minneapolis, where his father lived, and quickly gained attention on the local music scene. Jennings was offered as much as $1 million to sign a recording contract, and was encouraged by his father and others to do so, but he refused: he worried that his musical vision might be compromised, and he cared little for the money. As Jennings told Chris Riemenschneider in the Star Tribune in 2002, "I really am not against [signing a record deal]. I'm just against doing it now, with the industry being what it is, and my career where it is."

Jennings wrote, performed, and produced his self-titled debut over a three-year period of time, releasing the album in 1998. He recorded Mason Jennings in the basement of his rented house, recording each instrument himself on a four-track player. He later jokingly said that he listened to it 700 times before releasing it. The album soon received airplay on local stations, and Jennings won a Thursday night spot at the 400 Bar in Minneapolis. "As a debut," wrote Dan Lee in All Music Guide, "this is an amazingly realized work." Jennings, having no idea his first album would sell so well, had printed his home address on the album. As a result, he received an avalanche of gifts, letters, and poems—mementoes of appreciation—from adoring fans.

Jennings formed the Mason Jennings Band with Robert Skoro and Chris Stock, and had started to record his second album when he contracted mononucleosis, sidelining his efforts for six months. "It was a nice learning experience," he told Casey, "because I had a year to just think about exactly what to do differently." When Jennings returned to performing, he laid aside his previous work and opted to record a handful of songs with strong political messages. Birds Flying Away was recorded in eight days, though Jennings would have to wait until he could raise $20,000 to issue the album in 2000. Even then, he was only able to press 5,000 copies initially. "I think this record is important because it pushes out all the musical parameters," he told Casey.

Jennings married in August of 2002, honeymooned in Europe, and toured. That year he also released his third album, Century Spring, and an unofficial follow-up, Simple Life. For the latter album, which he sold at shows and through his website, he returned to an earlier batch of songs At first he had attempted to play the songs with his band, but "[the songs] just didn't work that way," he told Riemenschneider, "They're much more from the traditional folk world. But I hung on to them all these years and always meant to get them out there." The songs on Century Spring also deviated from his previous work, and from the work of many singer songwriters, by expressing a more upbeat mood. "I still try to slip in moments in the songs where everything is not all right," he told Riemenschneider. "But yeah, I figured there's no point trying to hide my happiness."

In 2004 Jennings recorded his forth album, Use Your Voice, a stripped-down recording featuring a new set of songs. He was able to record the album on his own label, but release it through Bar/None, a deal that allowed him full artistic autonomy. He also continued to resist signing to a major label, fearing that there might be pressure to expand the arrangements of his recordings and perform at larger venues. "I toyed with a cleaner production on my last album, and after I sat with it," he told Riemenschneider, "it just didn't feel as close to my heart."

Longtime Jennings fans were shocked when the singer decided to release his next album, Boneclouds, with Epic, a major record label, in 2006. Critics split on whether or not Jennings had departed from his previous down-to-earth sound. "The rough, organic feel that many of his previous albums had," wrote Marisa Brown in All Music Guide, "is replaced with smoother, reverby pianos and guitars and vocal harmonies." Steve Howitz in Pop Matters, however, emphasized the artist's keen songwriting. "Lyrically Jennings combines strength and delicacy in a quirky way that bespeaks the awkwardness of all emotions…. This makes Jennings always worth listening to. Even if one sometimes disparages his sentiments, his music speaks louder than words."

In the summer of 2006 Jennings and his band went on the road to support Boneclouds, a tour that included shows with singer-songwriter Teddy Thompson. Unlike a number of commercial performers, Jennings allow fans to record his live shows and trade tapes of the these performances among themselves; he also allows fans to photograph him during shows. For many fans, attending a live show was the best way to experience the man and his music; for Jennings, performing live offered a similar experience. "There are certain times that the music just cuts through," he told Simon Peter Groebner in City Pages, "and I break through and see something…. I'm looking for some kind of truth."

Selected discography
Mason Jennings, Bar/None, 1998.Birds Fly Away, Mason Jennings, 2000.Century Spring, Architect, 2002.Use Your Voice, Bar/None, 2004.Boneclouds, Epic, 2006.
Sources
Periodicals
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN), September 29, 2000; March 24, 2002; March 24, 2002; December 6, 2002; February 13, 2004.

Online
"Mason Jennings," All Music Guide, http://www.allmusicguide.com/ (June 9, 2006).
"Mason Jennings," Pop Matters, http://www.popmatters.com/(June 9, 2006).
"The Mason Jennings Line," City Pages, http://www.citypages.com/ (June 9, 2006).
  • Genres: Rock

Biography

Singer/songwriter Mason Jennings blends the personal insights of a poet, the political broadsides of a protest singer, and the broad musical eclecticism of a jazz musician with a rock & roller's passion. The result made him one of the most talked-about new artists on the acoustic music scene and earned him a loyal cult following, as he moved over 30,000 copies of his first two albums and sold out shows around the country without the benefit of a major-label publicity department.

Jennings was born in 1975 in Honolulu, Hawaii, but moved to Pittsburgh with his family shortly after. While still a young boy, his father moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota and sent his son a series of tapes featuring bands that were storming the then-fertile Twin City music scene. Inspired, Jennings picked up a guitar and starting writing songs by the age of 13. Three years later, Jennings decided to pursue a career in music and promptly dropped out of school, opting instead to move to Minneapolis and work on his songs full-time. At 19, he'd already attracted the attention of a major booking agency and begun receiving offers from record companies, but Jennings was more interested in a situation that would offer him creative freedom, not a fast influx of cash. Jennings soon retreated to his apartment and began working on his first album, which he recorded and scrapped four times before finally settling on a final track list.

Featuring just Jennings and his guitar, Mason Jennings was also produced and released solely by the artist himself. The album proved to be a potent calling card for Jennings; it received significant airplay on local radio stations, and the songwriter began playing a Thursday night residency at Minneapolis' 400 Bar, which soon won him a potent local fan base. Before long, Jennings began gigging with bassist Robert Skoro and drummer Chris Stock, and the Mason Jennings Band began work on their namesake's second album when Jennings contracted mononucleosis and was forced to take six months off from performing and recording. Following his recovery, Jennings opted to scrap the set of live favorites he'd begun to record and instead cut a set of new (and often strongly political) numbers for his second album, Birds Flying Away. More gigging followed, but drummer Chris Stock was unable to reconcile the rigors of touring with his personal life and amicably left the group, with Brazilian jazz musician Edgar Oliveira taking over the percussionist's spot.

Jennings' continued roadwork added to the enthusiasm of his fans and the positive press he received for his first two albums. For his third release, 2002's Century Spring, he finally found a proper record company to release his product (Architect Records) and signed a distribution deal with established East Coast indie label Bar/None Records, which also issued Use Your Voice in 2004. The next year, Jennings joined as the first artist on Modest Mouse frontman Isaac Brock's Epic imprint, Glacial Pace, which then released Boneclouds in 2006. His relationship with Glacial Pace soured, however, and Jennings made yet another jump -- this time to Jack Johnson's Brushfire Records -- for the release of 2008's In the Ever. He remained with the label for Blood of Man, which was recorded in a woodside studio and released in 2009. In 2011, Jennings returned with the studio album Minnesota, featuring the single "Witches Dream." ~ Mark Deming, Rovi
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Mason Jennings
Background information
Born (1975-03-19) March 19, 1975 (age 37)
Honolulu, Hawaii
Genres Folk-rock
Occupations Singer-songwriter
Instruments Vocals, Guitar
Website www.masonjennings.com

Mason Jennings (born March 19, 1975 in Honolulu, Hawaii) is an American pop-folk singer-songwriter. He is well known for his simple yet catchy melodies, intimate lyrics, literary and historical themes, and distinctive voice. His music has appeared in the surf film Shelter and he has toured extensively.

Contents

Biography

Born in Hawaii, Jennings moved with his family to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at an early age. Jennings learned to play guitar at the age of 13, when he began writing songs. Jennings later dropped out of school and moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota to pursue his musical career.[1]

Jennings produced his self-titled debut album in 1997 on an analog four-track in the living room of a rented home, playing all instruments himself. In October 1998, joined by drummer Chris Stock (a.k.a. Chris Stocksmith) and bassist Robert Skoro, he began a weekly gig at Minneapolis' 400 Bar as the Mason Jennings Band. The two week gig ended up lasting four months. In April, 1999, six months after forming, The Mason Jennings Band and Mason were voted by the 1999 "Picked to Click Poll" conducted by Minneapolis newspaper, City Pages. Mason began touring nationally and expanded the depth of his sound by inviting saxophonist Chris Thomson to play with them occasionally and replacing Stock with Brazilian jazz drummer Edgar Olivera.

Birds Flying Away (2000) revealed Jennings' political activism and penchant for singing first-person narratives of imaginary rustic characters. Following the release of this album, Noah Levy of The Honeydogs took over drumming duties from Olivera.

In 2002, Jennings released a studio album, Century Spring, and a "fans only" collection of acoustic songs, Simple Life. An EP supporting Century Spring was also released, featuring the album's opening track, "Living In The Moment," two live tracks, and the previously-unreleased "Emperor Ashoka." Jennings released all three discs — and re-released his earlier albums — on his homebrew record label, Architect Records.

In 2003, Skoro and Levy left the band and were replaced by bassist Chris Morrissey (Bill Mike Band) and drummer Brian McLeod.

On February 10, 2004, Jennings released Use Your Voice, which notably included the songs "Keepin' It Real," ostensibly written at the request of Shrek 2 producers (but not used in the film), and "The Ballad of Paul and Sheila," an acoustic dirge for late Minnesota senator Paul Wellstone. On September 30 of that year, the band released a DVD entitled Use Your Van, which chronicled the recording of Use Your Voice and part of the promotional tour. The DVD was filmed by Andy Grund.

On June 17, 2005, Jennings signed with Glacial Pace, a subsidiary of Sony's Epic Records headed by Modest Mouse frontman Isaac Brock. Minnesota's Star Tribune credited Brock with convincing Jennings to sign after the Mason Jennings Band had opened for several Modest Mouse shows in 2004. Jennings had long avoided the major labels, citing desires to maintain creative control and dodge big-label politics.[citation needed] Glacial Pace is now an independent label.

Jennings recorded his sixth album, Boneclouds, at Pachyderm Studio in Cannon Falls, MN with producer Noah Georgeson. The album was released on May 16, 2006 by Glacial Pace. Soon thereafter, bassist Chris Morrisey left the band.

Mason Jennings opened for Guster during their Winter 2007 tour. Accompanying Mason was new bassist Arabella Kauffmann and Brian McLeod on drums.

Mason sang two Bob Dylan songs for the soundtrack of the movie "I'm Not There" (released in November 2007 in the U.S.): "The Times They Are a-Changin'" and "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll."

In early 2008 Mason signed with Jack Johnson's record label, Brushfire Records. Jennings released In the Ever in May 2008. The title was inspired by his son referring to where he was before he was born as, "In the ever". Mason and Johnson met at Gustavus Adolphus College's Earth Jam in 2001 when Mason was scheduled as Johnson's opening act. Both enjoyed the other's musical style and toured together shortly afterward.

Mason announced at the Elemental Experience Music & Arts Festival in San Diego on May 2, 2009, that he would be releasing a new album (later entitled Blood of Man) in summer 2009. He also mentioned that he would have music on the soundtrack for the documentary "180° South". The documentary was released in March 2010.

On June 2, 2009 the single "Sunlight" was released on iTunes and all proceeds will go to the Surfrider Foundation in efforts to help clean up beaches around the country.

On June 20, 2009, Mason Jennings headlined the Locally Grown Festival in Ojai, CA. Jack Johnson sat in for a portion of the set, singing both Mason and Jack's songs. Zach Gill performed as well, as the show ended with "I Shall Be Released", a song written by Bob Dylan.

On September 15, 2009, Blood of Man was released on CD and vinyl format. A free bonus EP titled Independent (containing the tracks "Mark My Heart With Ashes" and "Wide Open Country") was distributed with the album at independent record stores. A week before the official CD release, a version of the album containing the exclusive track "Waves" was made available exclusively on iTunes.

In late 2010, Live at First Ave. his first live album ever was released. Mason Jennings is the subject of the second episode of BYUtv's AUDIO-FILES on April 24, 2012.

Discography

References

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Mason Jennings (1998 Album by Mason Jennings)
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