Jon Brion

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Jon Brion at The Sunset Tavern in Seattle (photo by by Nadja Dee Tanaka)

Jon Brion is an American rock and pop multi-instrumentalist, singer, songwriter, composer and producer.

Contents

Biography

Jon Brion was born in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. He came from a musical family: his mother was a jazz singer, his father a band director at Yale, and his brother and sister became a composer/arranger and violinist, respectively. Brion had difficulties in high school and at the age of 17 left education for good, opting instead to play music professionally.

Brion was a member of the band The Bats in the early 1980s, and in 1987 he moved to Boston, where he played solo gigs, formed the short-lived band World's Fair and became a member of the last touring version of Aimee Mann's new wave band 'Til Tuesday. In 1994, joined Dan McCarroll, Buddy Judge and Jellyfish guitarist Jason Falkner in the short-lived pop supergroup The Grays.

Brion was signed to the Lava/Atlantic label in 1997, but was released from his contract after turning in his solo debut album Meaningless; the album was released independently in 2001.

He has played various instruments on numerous albums, and branched out into production on then-girlfriend Mann's 1993 solo debut, Whatever; he has also produced albums by Fiona Apple, Rufus Wainwright, Eleni Mandell, Rhett Miller and Evan Dando. He is a film composer, garnering Best Score Soundtrack Album Grammy nominations for his work on 1999's Magnolia and 2004's Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

Brion is renowned for his regular Friday-night gigs at the Los Angeles club Largo, which feature covers and original songs, a variety of instruments and the occasional guest. He dated comedic actress Mary Lynn Rajskub for five years until they broke up in the spring of 2002.

Soon after he begun producing the album Extraordinary Machine with Fiona Apple but the label refused to release it. It has since been leaked onto the Internet, where it has gained a cult following. [1]

Discography

With The Bats

With The Grays

Solo

Film scores

As producer

External links

See also: Jon Brion, 'Til Tuesday, 1982, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999