Johnny Jewel | |
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![]() Jewel performing withGlass Candy in 2006 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | John David Padgett |
Also known as | John David V, For Every River Buried, Twenty-Six, Achille Vettessi |
Born | (1974-05-31)May 31, 1974 (age 50) Houston,Texas, U.S. |
Genres | |
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Instruments |
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Years active | 1994–present |
Labels | Italians Do It Better |
Johnny Jewel (bornJohn David Padgett; May 31, 1974)[1][2] is an American musician, record producer, composer, and visual artist. He is amulti-instrumentalist who is known for using all-analog equipment. Jewel has been recording and releasing material since the mid-1990s.
Born inHouston, Jewel mainly began recording music inPortland, Oregon in 1996 after forming the bandGlass Candy with vocalist Ida No. Initially boasting ano wave-influenced sound, the band evolved into an electronic-based duo featuring elements ofItalo disco. In 2006, Jewel founded the independent Portland-based record labelItalians Do It Better, which features an array of artists and groups that produce similar disco, electronic, and synth-based music. Among the label's artists are Glass Candy,Chromatics andDesire, all of whom Jewel wrote, recorded, and performed with.
With Jewel's involvement, Chromatics achieved considerable commercial success with the albumNight Drive (2007), and their music was later featured inNicolas Winding Refn's filmDrive (2011). In addition toDrive, Jewel also scored Refn's filmBronson (2008), as well asRyan Gosling's directorial debut,Lost River (2015). Additionally, between 2014 and 2018, Jewel released three solo albums, largely consisting of instrumental material.
Jewel was born John David Padgett in 1974 inHouston, Texas, where he was also raised.[3] His father was partiallydeaf, and Jewel learnedsign language to help communicate with him.[1] As a teenager, Jewel was a "creative misfit" who was inspired by the music ofThe Velvet Underground andSonic Youth.[3] At age 17, Jewel was the victim of akidnapping, which he stated marked a pivotal moment in his life.[4]
Jewel was a prospective student atRice University, but ultimately decided to forgo attending college.[1] At age eighteen, his father died, after which he relocated from Houston toAustin.[1]
In Austin, Jewel began recording music under the name John David V.[3] He subsequently relocated toPortland, Oregon in the mid-1990s, where he continued to record music, this time under the name Johnny Jewel.[3] In 1996, while working at aFred Meyer grocery store in Portland, Jewel met Ida No, a local fromVancouver, Washington, who also worked in the store.[5]
At the time, Jewel was in the midst of a breakup, and was being kicked out of his apartment.[1] "I had a suitcase with clothes and fiveMoogs, and it was horrible. So the second time I hung out with [Ida], I called her and was like, ‘Can I move in with you?’ And she's like, ‘Uh, sure.’"[1] The two formed the musical groupGlass Candy (initially known as Glass Candy and the Shattered Theatre), and began producing music together.[6] They soon began producing music under the name Glass Candy and the Shattered Theatre.[5] No described their early work as "droney and weird,"[5] drawing on elements ofno wave,post-punk, andart rock.[7][8]
Also in 1996, under the alias Twenty Six, he released apost-rock album,This Skin Is Rust, on Bobby J Records.[9]
In 2003, Glass Candy released their debut studio album,Love Love Love, on the independentTroubleman Unlimited Records.
In 2006, Jewel formed his own record label,Italians Do It Better, based out of Portland, along with Mike Simonetti.[10] Commenting on his decision to form the label, he said:
One of the reasons why I started Italians Do It Better is because I didn’t want someone telling me when a record was due, or when something needed to be written or recorded. Or when I needed to go on tour. I believe in doing things when it’s ready. It’s a dangerous game because the world is moving so fast. But ultimately the only reason we’re having this conversation is because I love music. And that’s the path that it’s led me on in my life. I never set out to be a successful musician, but musical decisions have always guided my life. For that reason, I will stay true to what I really feel…[10]
Italians Do It Better began releasing material from a number of independent artists, featuring music inspired by electronic music,Italo disco,glam rock, and punk.[10] Among the groups signed to the label were Glass Candy,Desire, andChromatics, each of whom Jewel collaborated with musically, co-writing and recording material.[10] The label issued twocompilation albums featuring music from its various artists,After Dark (2007), and later,After Dark 2 (2013).[10]
With Chromatics, apost-punk band that had previously been based inSeattle, Jewel introduced singer and guitaristRuth Radelet, who replaced the group's former vocalist, Johnny Whitney.[11] Jewel and Radelet had been in a years-long relationship prior to her joining Chromatics,[1] and the two were married for eight years during the band's tenure.[12] With Jewel's involvement, the group changed its sound significantly, introducing elements of electronic, disco, and synth-based music.[11] Heather Phares, writing forAllMusic, described the band's trajectory: "After starting out as an abrasive post-punk band, Chromatics evolved into one of the most influential electro-pop acts of their kind... the group's evocative mix of Italo-disco, post-punk, and '80s pop was glamorous, heartbroken, and utterly distinctive."[11]
In 2008, Jewel made his debut as afilm score composer, writing and performing the score forNicolas Winding Refn's filmBronson. He was subsequently hired by Refn to compose the score for his subsequent film,Drive (2011).[13][14] Tracks by Chromatics and Desire also appeared on the film's soundtrack.
In 2014, Mike Simonetti, the co-founder of Italians Do It Better, left the record label and started a new imprint named 2MR.[15] In a series of publicTwitter posts in 2016, Simonetti went on to accuse Jewel of stealing song ideas, among several other accusations regarding money Simonetti alleged was owed to him.[15][16]
In 2014, Jewel recorded the score for theA&E crime drama seriesThose Who Kill (2014). The same year, he released an instrumental album under his own name:The Other Side of Midnight (2014),[17] The same year, Chromatics announced that they were recording a new album, entitledDear Tommy.[18]
Jewel subsequently scored the feature filmLost River (2015), the directorial debut ofRyan Gosling (who had starred inDrive).[19] He then composed the score forFien Troch's filmHome (2016), for which he won theGeorges Delerue Award.[20] In 2017, Jewel appeared with Chromatics inDavid Lynch's seriesTwin Peaks: The Return, a revival of theoriginal 1990 series, in which the band performs in a bar.[21] Also in 2017, Jewel released another solo record,Windswept,[22] followed byDigital Rain in 2018.[23]
The release of Chromatics'Dear Tommy was delayed several times, and in 2017, Jewel purportedly destroyed every copy of the record following a near-death experience[18] in which he almost drowned while swimming inHawaii.[24] Despite this, Jewel continued to record with the band, covering theHole track "Petals" (from their 1998 album,Celebrity Skin) for the official soundtrack of the 2018 horror filmThe Perfection.[25]
In August 2021, singer Ruth Radelet, drummer Nat Walker, and guitarist Adam Miller of Chromatics announced that the group had disbanded.[18] Jewel was not mentioned in the announcement, though a representative for Italians Do It Better released the statement: "Johnny is extremely proud of his work with the project over the years and he’ll continue making music and supporting great art and artists through his label Italians Do It Better."[18]
In 2023, Jewel again collaborated with Fien Troch, composing the score for her filmHolly,[26] which is scheduled to be screened at the80th Venice International Film Festival.[27]
Solo
Film scores
Extended plays