
Jon Crocker
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"Those that come to music late in life
have a unique appreciation for it," muses Jon Crocker. "Not
having grown up playing, I know what it's like to be without
music, and I cherish every day that my fingers function
well enough to play." The road that brought Jon Crocker
to music was a strange one. Born in Greenville, South Carolina
in 1981, his childhood was filled with ramblings around
the country, eventually depositing him in northern California,
only to soon spend the remainder of his childhood all over
the American west due to a divorce and the subsequent transport
between parents. His childhood was not a musical one at
all- he only played trumpet for a year in fourth grade,
and then nothing more. Most time was spent reading, at school,
riding bikes, or walking the Sierra Nevada mountains, where
he and his brothers lived part time in Sequoia National
Park (due to his first stepfather being a park ranger).
A job transfer later found said stepfather working in the
Santa Monica mountains, and, at age 12, Jon decided to move
from his father's home (in a small town in northern California)
to live with his mother and stepfather and go to school
in Ventura, California. “I really needed to get out of that
town,” Jon says. “Most kids turned to drugs early, due to
boredom. I didn’t want that to happen to me, so I went to
Ventura, where I could pursue my two loves of the time:
surfing and skateboarding.” After a fruitful skateboarding
career throughout his high school years, he found himself
injured, unable to skate, and in love for the first time
as he began college. This led to his first major heartbreak,
and this is when Jon turned to music as an outlet for his
woes. “Like any teenager in that situation, I wrote lots
of breakup songs…I started playing piano, then bass, then
guitar, just writing song after song. None of them were
any good, really, but I had to start somewhere.” Jon soon
found himself fronting band after band, taking the duties
of singing, writing, and playing guitar. “The first couple
of bands weren’t anything special, but they afforded me
the chance to learn and grow as a musician and a writer,
and also how to write for different sized groups.” After
a couple of small tours as part of a two-piece band (“the
Continental Light Brigade”), Jon decided to start touring
and recording exclusively as a solo artist, as this would
not only allow him more chances for experimentation in a
studio setting, but it also meant that he could tour for
indefinite periods of time. “The road suits me well,” Jon
claims. “I’ve always been good at traveling, and it keeps
me busy…I don’t know what I would do if I weren’t touring.
I’m certainly no good at staying in one place for very long.”
Jon’s solo career began to blossom, as he started putting
out albums and touring in a DIY fashion. His 2005 self-released
album Songs About Trains and Other Things caught the attention
of Todd Berry, owner of Portland’s Greyday records. A friendship
soon followed, and Todd started an imprint label (called
Greydawn Records) on which Jon put out his next two full-length
albums: Death (2006) and 7 Days, 6 Nights (2007). Touring
consistently from 2005 to the present, Jon also put out
several CD-R only DIY albums, including an album of songs
written for and about his family (The Family Album, meant
as a Christmas gift) and three experimental albums of songs
that featured no drums, bass, or guitar (Edison-Free Sediment,
volumes I-III), which Jon refers to as “anti-rock” or “pre-rock”
music
Genre: Alt Folk
Hometown: Ventura/San Francisco, CA
MySpace: myspace.com/joncrocker
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