Roger Joseph Manning Jr.

Roger Joseph Manning Jr. (born May 27, 1966) is an American keyboardist, singer, and songwriter who co-founded the bands Jellyfish, the Moog Cookbook, and Imperial Drag. He has also spent several years as a member of Beck's backing band, contributed to several recordings by the band Air, and toured or recorded with acts such as Jay-Z, Blink 182, and Johnny Cash.[1] In 2005, he released his first solo record, Solid State Warrior, followed with Robo-Sapiens (as "Mailibu", 2007), Catnip Dynamite (2008), and Glamping (2018). He is usually credited by his full name to avoid confusion with the folk musician Roger Manning.

Roger Joseph Manning Jr.
Also known as
Born (1966-05-27) May 27, 1966
OriginLos Angeles, California
Genres
Occupation(s)
  • Musician
  • singer
  • songwriter
  • session musician
  • arranger
Instruments
  • Vocals
  • keyboards
  • guitar
  • bass
Years active1988–present
Associated acts
Websiterogerjosephmanningjr.com

Early life

Roger Joseph Manning Jr. was born May 27, 1966, the first child of Roger Manning, a businessman for Monroe Calculators, and Jane DeLara, a schoolteacher.[2] He has two brothers: Chris (born October 6, 1968) and Tim (born September 10, 1970).[3] The family later moved from Valencia, California to Pleasanton.[4] As a child, Roger was enamored with ragtime music and took piano lessons; later he taught himself to play the drums.[5] The first records he bought with his own money were Kiss' Alive! (1975) and the Beach Boys' Endless Summer (1974).[6]

Jellyfish

Manning attended Amador Valley High School in Pleasanton in the 1970s.[7] There, he met drummer Andy Sturmer.[8] After graduating, Manning moved to Los Angeles and enrolled at USC to study musical composition. He involved himself with the local scene and began auditioning for various bands.[9] He later joined Sturmer in the San Francisco band Beatnik Beatch.[9] Sturmer was the group's drummer, singer, and songwriter, while Manning was keyboardist. The duo soon began collaborating with one another, writing compositions that were stylistically different from the songs the band was producing at the time..[10] In August 1989, a year after Atlantic Records released Beatnik Beatch's eponymous debut album,[10] Manning and Sturmer left the group to continue songwriting with one another and formed the band Jellyfish.[9]

Jellyfish released two albums: Bellybutton (1990) and Spilt Milk (1993), whose combined sales totaled over 269,000 copies.[11] During this era, Sturmer and Manning worked with Ringo Starr, for his 1992 solo album Time Takes Time, and Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys. Wilson and Jellyfish had one songwriting session and it was unproductive; Manning described the experience as "utterly surreal".[9] By 1994, Manning and Sturmer were drifting apart musically,[12] and in May, the San Francisco Chronicle reported that Jellyfish had disintegrated due to "creative differences".[13] Afterward, Manning formed the short-lived glam outfit Imperial Drag with ex-Jellyfish guitarist Eric Dover.[9]

The Moog Cookbook

Manning formed the Moog Cookbook with sound engineer Brian Kehew shortly after the demise of Jellyfish.[14][15] It was conceived as both a parody of and tribute to the novelty Moog records of the late 1960s and early 1970s, which featured cover versions of popular songs using the then-new Moog synthesizer. Manning recalled that "When Brian and I finally met, we knew we had to do this, because we knew we could do it right, and we knew we had the resources — before someone else did it, and did it wrong."[16] On stage and in their promotional materials, the band donned space-suit disguises that were similar to outfits worn by another emerging electronic duo, Daft Punk. This was reportedly only a coincidence.[15]

Moog Cookbook released two records, The Moog Cookbook (1996) and Ye Olde Space Bande (1997), before disbanding in 1998. According to Manning: "As creatively fulfilling as it was, Moog Cookbook was not financially viable. We weren't coming out of rave culture and house music like Daft Punk."[15] Music journalist Brian Chidester commented that the band "yielded solid overseas sales amidst the retro-obsessed landscape of Pulp Fiction, the Swing revival and thrift shop mania. The duo even ... found a small domestic audience attuned to similar electronic psych-pop coming out of Europe by bands like Stereolab, Mouse on Mars and the High Llamas."[15]

Solo career

In early 2006, Manning released his first solo album in Japan only: Solid State Warrior. He credited it under his full name to avoid confusion with the folk musician Roger Manning.[17] It was subsequently issued in the U.S. under a different title, The Land of Pure Imagination, along with an altered song content.[18][19] The album included one of the songs Manning wrote with Brian Wilson, "Wish it Would Rain",[20] albeit with Wilson's contributions omitted.[21]

In March 2008, Manning released his second solo album, Catnip Dynamite, in Japan only. It was released in the U.S. on February 3, 2009 with the addition of three bonus tracks that were recorded during a live performance at Fujifest in Japan.[22]

In 2019 Manning co-wrote and performed background vocals on the song "You'll Never Guess What Happened Today" with internet pioneer Jaye Muller, aka "Count Jaye" for his 2019 album release.[23]

Discography

Solo and collaborative

With bands

Beatnik Beatch

  • Beatnik Beatch (1988)

TV Eyes

The Lickerish Quartet

  • Threesome Vol. 1 (2020)
  • Threesome Vol. 2 (2021)

References

  1. Whitmire, Margot (October 30, 2004). "Expansion Team". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc.: 44. ISSN 0006-2510.
  2. Dorfman 2016, pp. 16–17.
  3. Dorfman 2016, p. 17.
  4. Dorfman 2016, pp. 16–18.
  5. Dorfman 2016, pp. 14–15.
  6. Catlin, Roger (April 20, 2020). "Roger Joseph Manning Jr., The TVD Interview". The Vinyl District.
  7. Dorfman 2016, p. 18.
  8. Mendelssohn, John (June 1993). "Just for the Jell of It". Creem.
  9. Rees, Paul (October 8, 2014). "Squids in: are Jellyfish the great lost band of the 90s?". Louder Sound. Retrieved August 2, 2017.
  10. Lanham, Tom (October 20, 1998). "Jellyfish Jams to a '70s Beat - Bay Area Bell-Bottomed Rockers". San Francisco Chronicle.
  11. Orshoshki, Wes (December 29, 2002). "Music, Myths of Cult Faves Jellyfish Feted By 4-CD Boxed Set On Not Lame/EMI". Billboard.
  12. Everley, Dave (May 22, 2015). "The Outer Limits: Jellyfish". Louder Sound.
  13. Snyder, Michael (May 15, 1994). "Jellyfish All Washed Up". San Francisco Chronicle.
  14. Prato, Greg (n.d.). "The Moog Cookbook". AllMusic.
  15. Chidester, Brian (October 15, 2013). "Moog Cookbook Were Daft Punk Before Daft Punk". LA Weekly.
  16. Parker, Lyndsey (May 17, 2018). "The Moog Cookbook talk '90s synth spoofs: 'We sank our teeth into songs we wanted to destroy and make gross'". Yahoo.
  17. McCombs, Joseph. "Roger Manning, Solid State Warrior". AllMusic. Retrieved 2016-02-25.
  18. Carpenter, Troy (September 25, 2006). "ROGER JOSEPH MANNING JR., "The Land of Pure Imagination"". Billboard. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  19. Prefix Mag. Review of The Land of Pure Imagination. Retrieved on 13 February 2016.
  20. Mitchell, Justin (July 9, 1993). "Rocky Mountain News". Rocky Mountain News. Retrieved June 30, 2013.
  21. Gatta, John Patrick (February 28, 2016). "Jellyfish Revisited with Roger Joseph Manning Jr". Jam Bands.
  22. Ragget, Ned. "Roger Manning, Catnip Dynamite". AllMusic. Retrieved 2016-02-25.
  23. Count Jaye, and the Hard Beats. "You'll Never Guess What Happened Today". Spotify. Retrieved 2020-04-16.

Bibliography

  • Dorfman, Craig (2016). Brighter Day A Jellyfish Story. Not Lame. ISBN 0979771463.
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