Jason Webley is a musician who began as a busker, playing accordion in the streets of Seattle, but has since moved in-doors and on stage, playing venues and festivals all across the world. His music is a combination of folk, gypsy, punk, and sea shanties.Contents [hide] 1 Biography 2 Camp Tomato 3 Monsters of Accordion 4 Collaborations 5 Discography 5.1 Collaborations 6 References 7 External links
[edit] Biography
In high school Webley played in a punk band called Moral Minority. He picked up the accordion in 1996 in his last year in college at the University of Washington when he was part of a performance of Bertolt Brecht's play The Caucasian Chalk Circle, and wrote a couple songs for the play on the accordion.[1] He later recalled, "I was just a geeky kid; accordion came later. It's since playing accordion that I've become cool. I used to be a geek with an electric guitar. I had a guitar and played in punky bands and I had a computer. I sequenced stuff. I was much geekier."[2]
In the spring of 1998 Webley quit his day job, picked up his accordion, and hopped on a Greyhound bus with the intention of playing in the streets until his money ran out.[3]
He used to theatrically die every Halloween only to be born in the spring (usually around May Day or Webley's springtime birthday). Webley first "died" on Halloween of 2000 when, after a concert, he led his fans to a park on the University of Washington campus and had a group of women take off his signature porkpie hat and black trench coat, which were burned. He then had his head shaved, was placed in a coffin and driven away in a hearse, and disappeared for six months.[4] At the 2005 Halloween show he stated that he no longer wanted to live and die with the seasons. He did not die that year, and is expected to continue not dying on future Halloweens.
He released four albums using Springman Records as a distributor but now owns his own record label, Eleven Records, and sells his merchandise via website or at concerts.
On Webley's albums various instruments can be heard such as guitar, accordion, piano, marimba, and glockenspiel, but when he tours he usually only brings his guitar, an accordion, and a vodka bottle filled with coins from around the world (but he has been known to do short tours with a backing band). Webley has performed at several festivals including Burning Man, Glastonbury Festival, and the Oregon Country Fair[5]. His sound is most often compared to Tom Waits[4] or Vladimir Vysotsky[6] but also Leonard Cohen[4], Shel Silverstein, Bob Dylan[7], Neutral Milk Hotel, Nick Cave and the Dead Kennedys.
Some of Webley's most famous songs are the apocalyptic [1] "Dance While the Sky Crashes Down" (which appears on his album Against the Night) and his most common show finale, [2] "The Drinking Song" (which appears on Counterpoint). During "The Drinking Song" the audience is asked to sing as though in a drunken stupor:
When the glass is full drink up, drink up this may be the last time we see this cup. If God wanted us sober he'd knock the glass over so while it is full we drink up.
Webley has a fascination with the number eleven[8], and his songs include a lot of vegetable imagery[9]. His late 1990s model Toyota Corolla ([3]) has been converted into a giant tomato. It is painted red, and used to have a green fiberglass stem attached to the roof of the car (until the stem was stolen). Instead of saying Toyota on the hood, it says tomato, and the Toyota logo is broken and reshaped into a circle with a stem. Webley announced in a post on his website's forum that the fiberglass stem was stolen from atop his car on July 13, 2006, during one of his frequent concert tours[10]. [edit] Camp Tomato
On April 30, 2005, Webley ran an event called Camp Tomato where he created an organization called the Tomato Scouts, a light-hearted reply to claims that he is a dangerous cult leader. It starts with a day in the park of fun, games, and antics, followed up by a performance by Webley in the evening-on into the night. The camp featured activities such as a "Tomato Pageant," "Tomato Race," and the highlight, the "Tomato Raid." Camp Tomato has continued in 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009. [edit] Monsters of Accordion
Webley is the brains behind the Monsters of Accordion tour, an all-accordion extravaganza that takes place on the West Coast.[11] The tour came together when Webley was invited to play at an accordion shop in Oakland, and met two Bay Area accordionists, Daniel Ari and Aaron Seeman. They decided to do a little accordion only tour, which was the first Monsters of Accordion.[12] The tour has since featured such accordionists as Corn Mo, Geoff Berner, Amy Denio, Mark Growden, (former Gogol Bordello member) Stevhen Iancu, and Eric Stern (frontman of Vagabond Opera). [edit] Collaborations
Webley has announced that there will be a series of eleven collaborative projects between him and his songwriter friends, and each recording will be limited to 1,111 numbered copies. He has thus far collaborated with Jay Thompson, Andru Bemis, Reverend Peyton, and Sxip Shirey.[13]
In September 2007 Jason Webley collaborated with Amanda Palmer to release Evelyn Evelyn's debut EP "Elephant Elephant" via Webley's Eleven Records.
After a December 2007 concert at Hampshire College, Webley and Hampshire student Professor Science collaborated on a song about mittens known as "The Mitten Opera." Webley repeated this tradition the following two nights. The first being after a concert at Bard College, where he and a group of students collaborated on a song called "Clown Car to Mulberry." The night following, at Sarah Lawrence College, Webley and almost the entire audience (a whopping ten people) performed the hardcore punk-inspired "Bad Milk." All three songs are available on YouTube. [edit] Discography Viaje (1998) Against the Night (1999) Counterpoint (2002) Only Just Beginning (2004) The Cost of Living (2007) [edit] Collaborations Eleven Saints (EP with Jay Thompson) (2006) How Big Is Tacoma (EP with Andru Bemis) (2006) 2 Bottles of Wine (EP with Reverend Peyton) (2007) Elephant Elephant (EP with Amanda Palmer, under the name 'Evelyn Evelyn') (2007) Days With You (EP with Sxip Shirey) (2009) Evelyn Evelyn (Album by Evelyn Evelyn, produced by Webley and Amanda Palmer) (2010)