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Listen Up: Jombi

Caleb Crouch came up with the name “Jombi.” He then told Bry Hart, “That’s your new nickname.”

“Five months later we decided to make that the band name,” Hart says.

And of Crouch, Hart says, “He’s a nickname guru. He loves to come up with that stuff.”

Hart, 20, is the drummer, and Crouch is bass player in the band that also includes rhythm guitarist/lead vocalist Auden Brummer, lead guitarist Sam Wallace, and keyboardist/second lead guitarist Joe Espinal.

Hart and Crouch were the initial members of Jombi. “We started as a jam band. We are now — I’m quoting a friend of ours — ‘a band of ambiguous genre.’”

The band recently released Jombi Presents… — six songs recorded at Young Avenue Sound.

A native of Jackson, Mississippi, Hart was influenced by his dad, Fred Hart, a guitarist who played in bands in high school and college. “He did a lot of the same things I’m currently doing now.”

And, Hart says, “He formed Grandmaw’s Attic when grunge came around. They all went to Delta State University and they played around Cleveland, Mississippi. They had a decent audience and they made a record. I’m saying all this ’cause I think that had a big influence on me wanting to write my own music and perform it live and network.”

His dad introduced him to a lot of music, including Mötley Crüe, Jimi Hendrix, and The Cars, when Hart was 5 years old. “He showed me all the stuff he listened to when he was younger. He also showed me bands like The Cult and Drivin N Cryin. That’s one of the first CDs I ever listened to — the Smoke album.”

Hart also was into “the toddler stuff.” He recalls dancing to The Wiggles, which was an influence on his own music direction. “The blue Wiggle, Anthony, played drums and I wanted to be like him.”

He also loved the Jet song, “Cold Hard Bitch,” which his parents just referred to as “Drums.”

“I’m sure it was the visceral nature of it, hitting things,” he remembers. “Listening to songs and learning the drum parts attracted me more than learning anything else in the song. Even as a young kid, I could sing the songs a little bit, but I was very into the rhythmic side of things.”

When he was 3 years old, Hart got “a very small kid’s drum set” for Christmas. “I broke it on the first day. I just played it so hard. I was such a hard hitter at that age. The heads busted through and my cymbal got bent. I was disappointed, but they went out and bought me another one.

 “I went through about six of those Walmart hundred dollar kid’s drum sets. By the time I was about 5 [years old], my parents started to understand there was more going on.”

On his 6th birthday, Hart got a Pearl Forum drum kit. “One of their beginner series and it was beautiful. It has black, sparkly wrap. I still have it, but I don’t play it.”

Hart who began taking drum lessons when he was 7 years old, moved with his family to Southaven when he was 11. He began studying at School of Rock Memphis a year after it opened. “Being with kids who shared the same passion as I did, connecting with them, playing, lit some fire in me.

Hart expanded his musical knowledge and foundation while studying at School of Rock Memphis. “Getting so used to playing live before I even went out and did it on my own was super beneficial to me. As well as having and knowing the benefit of having chemistry on stage. Being able to communicate on stage. Being able to communicate in a practice space.”

Caleb Crouch and Bry Hart at a School of Rock Memphis show in 2020 at Newby’s. (Credit: Michael Donahue)
Joe Espinal, Son.Person, and Bry Hart at a School of Rock Memphis show in 2020 at Newby’s. (Credit: Michael Donahue)

His first band, but not one he formed, was 2nd Gen, which played “a good mix of stuff,” including a lot of ’80s material like “Don’t Stop Believin’”and “Don’t You (Forget About Me).”

Hart was in the drum line in marching band from freshman to junior year at Lewisburg High School. “Drum line opened my eyes to a lot of the techniques I think I had missed out on learning [on a] drum set and, specifically, rock songs. Using different grips and focusing more on dynamics as well as writing in general. Hearing a lot of the music that was written for marching band and symphonic band was very influential because I had never been super into that stuff before I was forced to play it.”

Hart became close friends with Crouch and Espinal at School of Rock. Sharing the same musical tastes, the three started a band, Water Illusion, with another friend, Max Dixon. “We had listened to a lot of the progressive rock that had come out of the ’70s as well as some progressive metal like Dream Theater. So, we tried to write this intricate stuff while we were very young.”

After that band broke up, the musicians took a break until the summer of their sophomore year when they formed another band, Illustrated History. “This time writing stuff a little less technical.”

They were the backing band playing original music by Livia Overton, who was the singer. But that project didn’t gel.

Then Covid hit. During quarantine, Hart, who began writing songs when he was about 12 after “messing around with GarageBand on an iPad,” went to his computer and wrote 15 songs, which he made into demos with Brummer as vocalist. 

Hart, who originally was influenced by drummer Neal Peart of Rush, says, “His lyricism really attracted me.”

A lot of Hart’s lyrics were “fiction-based. I was writing little stories inside of songs.”

He recorded one of his songs, “Vanessa,” at Young Avenue Sound with Brummer as vocalist. “It sounded way better than we could ever have imagined. First recorded song of mine I had ever heard.”

He released it on Spotify and other streaming platforms under his name.

“Vanessa” was the impetus to form Jombi a month later. “I had the idea to get a band together just to perform ‘Vanessa’ live. That’s all I wanted to do. I wanted to perform ‘Vanessa’ live and maybe start writing some other songs for the band.”

He and other members of what would become Jombi got together to “see how the musical chemistry and social chemistry works.”

Jombi (Credit: Michael Donahue)

They listened to a lot of Phish. They liked “the complex arrangements with the live improv and a very heavy emphasis on funk and groove-oriented stuff as well as a commercial sense.”

 “Vanessa” sounded great with the band, so they added some covers. “We do a Band of Gypsies song, a Cream song or two, Doors. We would take those songs and make them jam-based songs. We’d improv over them for long periods of time.

“We would take an idea we had and then everybody would add their own little fairy dust to it and make it a Jombi song.”

They had about three songs finished when they played their first show a year ago at Hi Tone. “When we stepped on stage, we let loose. And everything that makes us us kind of came out. We found our footing as a live band, a live act, just by doing that. Going out and doing it. ’Cause you can’t do that in a rehearsal. There are 70 people looking at you.”

Jombi (Credit: Michael Donahue)

As for the new album, Hart says, “We have written a bunch of songs that all sounded different. Most people nowadays hold onto singles and just release single after single after single. After I realized how different each of our songs sounded, I realized that wasn’t a good idea because the songs sounded so apart from each other. It wouldn’t even sound like the same band.”

So, they decided to do an album so they “could put all of those songs together. I think all of them connect in some way because we wrote them together and recorded them together.”

“Party Time,” one of the songs, lasts 10 minutes. “Lyrically, it came from Crouch’s dad. He wrote poetry when he was younger.”

The poem was about growing older. “As time goes on and time gets harder, you’re still going to have the people that stay with you and make things easier.”

“We’re all nerds,” Crouch says. “We’ve all spent an obscene amount of time practicing our instruments. That amount of study is bound to affect the music you play and write. There isn’t anything we can do about it. Our music is kind of nerdy. To me, that’s what I like about it and what sets it apart.”

And, he says, “I think we do a good job at making heady music accessible to anyone willing to listen.”

“I feel like we’re quite a young band for the music we play,” Wallace says. “I have a lot of musician friends and a lot of them are doing stuff that’s a lot more modern, in my opinion. I know guys who play punk rock, grunge music, but I really feel Jombi, in a way, captures a more classic vibe with kind of a modern twist.”

“We all have fairly different music tastes,” Brummer says. “We can all kind of appreciate each other’s. Caleb really loves jazz. Bry is into progressive music. Me and Joe are into jam bands. And Sam is more into modern indie stuff. And kind of having all those music interests and different styles in one group lends its an interesting sound.”

They bring their influences into the music they create, Brummer adds. “On our last album we had a 10 minute long fusion kind of jam song. And then we had a three-minute pop song as well. It’s a varied musical environment to be in. Having all those different skill sets and creative brains in one place allows us to do certain things with music that other bands — at least in Memphis — might not.”

“We’ve each played with each other for a number of years, so we have a unique chemistry that only comes with time,” Espinal says. “As a result, we have the ‘Jombi sound,’ which is the blend of each of our styles with the cohesiveness of knowing each other really well.”

Wallace will be moving to Nashville before the end of summer, Hart says. “Which may create a bit of a halt in our process, but I don’t fear it.

“The big picture is to record as many songs as possible and to play live out of Memphis. Get around Tennessee, the Southern region, and promote our music and play live. That’s a big goal for us.”

Hart is confident about Jombi’s future. “In a non-egotistical way, we have developed our craft playing our instruments for a long time. And we’ve done that all in the same place, in the same environment, to where the chemistry we have on stage is undeniable.”

To listen to Jombi Presents…, click here: https://songwhip.com/jombi-presents

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Music Music Blog

Listen Up: Son.person

Elvis — in a way — was responsible for Son.person meeting Justin Bieber, who was his idol at the time.

Son was around eight years old when he and his mom met Bieber backstage before the singer’s performance at FedExForum.

“I gave him an Elvis Presley clock,” Son says. “The one where Elvis’s legs move back and forth.  My mom handed it to him and he started laughing and smiling and we took our photos. I was scared to death. All I said was I was wanted to do what he did one day.”

When he was eight years old, Son.person and his mom, Jacque Sabin, met Justin Bieber at FedFexForum. (Courtesy Son.person)

Son (a.k.a. Whitt Sabin) is now a 17-year-old singer-songwriter following in Bieber’s footsteps as well as the footsteps of many of his other heroes, including Tyler, the Creator. Son released his ninth single, Loved U More May 13th with a video to follow soon.

Son began making videos when he was a baby. “There’s videos you can see on YouTube. Me in diapers just singing songs.”

And, he says, “My mom has a video of me in Wiggles pajamas and I’m doing Fireflies by Owl City over and over again.”

When he was about six, Son began studying at the House of Talent in Germantown. While his fellow classmates were tap dancing or doing theater music, Son was performing songs by Bieber and Bruno Mars. “That’s all I wanted to do. That age was around the time I discovered who Justin Bieber was. I loved his entire everything. I love the whole frontman appeal, like Bruno Mars and the older ones like Michael Jackson. Just being that guy up front and being able to entertain people. Making people happy is such a cool thing.”

Son began taking guitar lessons at age 7 when he went to study at the School of Rock Memphis. “I didn’t hate it,” he says, “but I wanted to be the guy up there shouting out loud. I just wanted to be up front, I guess.” So, shortly after the guitar lessons, Son began concentrating on singing and working on performance, and he credits the School of Rock Memphis for helping hone his skills.

Son used to just “stand still on stage and not move one bit. The change I’ve seen in 10 years has just been insane.”

Son.person (Credit: Michael Donahue)

On his cover version of Wild Flower by the Cult, Son says, “I was just standing there. I’m standing still the whole time. The guitar solo ends and I do one tiny jump. It’s so funny. “I would always try to move a little more every show, but I was very reserved, I guess.”

He decided to step up his game when his School of Rock Memphis house band went on a tour performing with School of Rock house bands from around the country. “That house band was like a light switch. That was the changing point for me. I just started moving around more. I started entertaining the crowd and speaking out loud. I used the entire stage to my advantage. I never stood still.”

Moves suddenly appeared. “It was like, ‘Oh, yeah. I’m going to moonwalk like Michael Jackson.’ I would just go up and move. If it felt good, it felt good.” And he’d do his own thing. “I started making songs my own.”

He also credits School of Rock Memphis for his range of musical tastes. “I would not have such a diverse music background if it wasn’t for them. I started off in Green Day. We did hits by Pink Floyd and Rage Against the Machine and even Muddy Waters. From blues to rock to jazz and pop music.”

Son developed “a deep love for hip-hop. I never used to love it. I guess it grew on me because of the feel. I like Justin Bieber and I like what I heard on the radio. The top 40 stuff. But I wasn’t really open to listening and branching out yet. But School of Rock pushed me to do that. And it really helped.”

Son began listening to performers, including the Beastie Boys, Tupac Shakur, and Grandmaster Flash. “The ’80s were so cool to me. The style and the esthetic of those eras were just so neat.”

Son’s clothing style also changed. “I started caring more about the stuff I was wearing. Someone who really pushed me was my grandma. She started taking me to Urban Outfitters. The whole street cult, Mean Streets wear. I started off with the red jeans and flannels to the vintage T’s. I would see stuff with (Notorious) B.I.G. or Tupac on it. The Nikes and Jordans and stuff like that. I think I’ve got 25 pairs of shoes. And I’m not the biggest sneaker head.”

Three years ago he got a pair of white Lebrons from Footlocker. “I always wear basketball shoes, but wear them as streetwear. And everyone called me out for them. These huge ass shoes on my feet. I love them. It was so cool. I love the ‘out there’ look. Things that make people look at you.”

Son.person (Credit: Michael Donahue)

Around the time he got the Lebrons, Son began asking himself, “What am I going to do with music? I was 13 and I started to really get into Tyler, the Creator, the first guy in hip-hop I idolized. He did such a cool fusion of pop and hip-hop and jazz music.”

Son saw Tyler perform at the 2018 Beale Street Music Festival. He thought, “This is the greatest experience of my life.” And when he heard Tyler was going to perform at a festival in Los Angeles, his mom got tickets and they went to California. “This dude has his own brand of clothing. Him and his team. The way he brands himself and having his own festival was insane to me.”

Son thought, “I want to do this.”

The day before the show, Son and his mom saw Tyler walk into his GOLF store, which sells a range of Tyler’s branded clothing and accessories. Later, at lunch, his mom pointed out “this tall guy in an alligator suit.” It was Tyler. “And so I walk up to him. I tapped his shoulder and I was like, ‘Are you Tyler?’ And he was, ‘Yeah.’”

Son told Tyler, “The reason I’m so passionate about music and the reason I want to pursue this dream is because of what you do.”

Tyler laughed and began to leave with his friends. Son asked him, “Can I get a picture with you?” Tyler said no. “He doesn’t like photos,” Son says. Then Tyler says, “But I’ll shake your hand.”

Suddenly someone ran up behind him and snapped a quick photo with the singer. That was when Tyler says to Son,  “You got one second.” He told him the photo had to be taken “super quick.” So, Son snapped a quick selfie. And then he said to Tyler, “You need to watch for me. I’m going to be in the very front. Don’t miss me.”

The selfie of Tyler, the Creator and the 13-year-old Son.person. (Photo by Son.person)

Son and his mom got to the festival at 9 a.m. the next day. Son immediately ran to the stage where Tyler was going to perform and stood in front of the stage for the next 11 hours.

What happened next still astonishes Son, who says this part of the show is on YouTube. Tyler tells the audience, “The craziest thing is like in this crowd right now, is somebody that makes beats or like rap or sing or just got ideas. And in four to five years he’s gonna scare me and be my competition. And I know that person. I shook your fucking hand. You’re somewhere in here, motherfucker.”

“When he says that line, he’s looking down. And from my perspective — we were on the railing — we looked at each other. It was like a moment of BAM. It was like chills.”

Son, who is convinced Tyler was talking about him, thought, “OK. That’s it. In four to five years, I’ve got to do this. That’s the point in my life I have to be an artist. I have to make this happen. I’ve got to get to a point where I can meet him again and ask him if I was the person he was talking about that day. This November will be four years from that date.”

Son.person (Credit: Michael Donahue)

He began working with School of Rock Memphis general manager Landon Moore on putting out a record. The music for his first one, Girl Like You, was written by Moore. “I told him the type of song I wanted to make and he wrote the instrumental for it.”

Son describes it as a “love song ballad.” “I based it off of the Notorious B.I.G. remix by Elijah Who, My Favorite Ladies.

In the Notorious B.I.G.’s song, he would try to the find the “perfect lady,” Son says. “There was always something that would keep her from being his perfect lady. So, I said, ‘I’m going to write this from a teenage perspective.’” The video shows Son sitting at the head of a long table with women seated around it. He recounts his past lovers.

“I like to make small stories out of my music. For every song that I write I really like to get some depth with it. And I like to visualize that. Especially in my newer works. I started releasing more short form videos as opposed to a single, long video.”

He describes his latest single, Loved U More, as “a message of honesty and torn emotion mixed with colorful sampling and roaring guitar loops.”

An ever-changing series of photos, statements, show dates, and videos appears on his Instagram page. “It feels like right now, especially with my goals and aspirations with music, I understand I have to give it my all. It feels like 100 percent of the time revolves around music. If it’s not me, it’s me helping someone else with their music.”

As for the big picture, Son speaks with confidence. “Elvis was two generations ago. Justin Timberlake was this last generation. When you think of the next generation of Memphis music, that’s Son.person.”

To hear Loved U More, click here: notorietymusicgroup.com/sonperson-links

Son.person will perform at 7 p.m. on May 27th at Mushroom Fest at Shelby Forest. Tickets for the four-day-event are $20 each day or a four-day-pass for $50.

Son.person (Credit: Michael Donahue)