Jason Thornberry

Jason Thornberry is an American writer and reporter who was once actively involved in music, playing the drums in a number of punk alternative rock bands in Southern California. His tenure with the band Mulch saw them perform 200 times in two years, a feat for an unsigned band. Mulch performed with everyone from No Doubt to NOFX in the early 1990s. Thornberry founded The Pressure, who went from complete obscurity to the cover of OC Weekly less than a year after their first concert. In 1999, The Pressure was readying the release of their debut album Things Move Fast, when Thornberry was discovered in a coma after being beaten nearly to death.[1][2] Four months later, he was released in a wheelchair. Within a year he was walking again, and Thornberry had begun to document the experience. He continued to see therapists for a long time, having also temporarily lost the ability to speak, or to use the left side of his body, as a result of the assault.[3]

He returned to school and edited his college newspaper, The Coast Report, along with contributions to The OC Weekly, URB, Mean Street, and more than two dozen print and online music magazines around the world.[4]

Thornberry lives in Seattle with his wife.

Discography

(This list includes musical artists with whom Thornberry appeared.)

Mulch

  • Nowhere to Climb (1994).
  • 13 Dayz (1995).
  • Aces and Spaces (2008).
  • Organic Recordings from Wrightwood's Mulch (2015)

The Pressure

  • My Heart Was Lost (1996).
  • The Pressure (1997).
  • I Wanna Call Someone (1998).
  • v/a Brother Can You Spare Some Ska Vol. 4 (1998).
  • v/a Al's Bar Compilation, Vol. 2 (1998).
  • v/a Styzine Compilation (1998).
  • v/a The Buddy List (1999).
  • Things Move Fast (1999).
  • v/a Orange County Weekly compilation'’ (1999).
  • v/a Sampler WE 20.0'’ (year?).

Bibliography

Newspapers, Magazines, and Journals:

  • Adirondack Review
  • ALAN Review
  • American Music Press
  • Antonym
  • The Blacklist
  • Broadkill Review
  • Capable Magazine
  • Central Circuit
  • Coast Report
  • Dillydoun Review
  • Dissident Voice
  • Entropy
  • Flipside
  • Harbor Review
  • Hash Journal
  • In Parentheses Literary Magazine
  • Litro Magazine
  • Los Angeles Review of Books
  • Mean Street
  • Mic Stand Magazine
  • North Dakota Quarterly
  • OC Weekly
  • Olivetree Review
  • Open: Journal of Arts & Letters
  • Poet's Choice
  • Poor Yorick Literary Magazine
  • Praxis Magazine for Arts and Literature
  • Response
  • Resurrection Magazine
  • Route 7 Review
  • 60 Seconds Magazine
  • Skratch
  • Sledgehammer Literary Journal
  • Sleet Magazine
  • Soundings East
  • The Stranger
  • TAB: The Journal of Poetry & Poetics
  • Thimble Literary Magazine
  • Uncomfortable Revolution
  • URB Magazine

Online:

  • Alternative Zine (Israel)
  • Americore
  • AMZ Music Zine
  • Aversion
  • Beat The Blizzard (UK)
  • Bendies
  • Bite Me!
  • Blistering (Canada)
  • Buzzine
  • California Pop
  • CanEHdian (Canada)
  • Chaos Control Digizine
  • Chaotic Critiques
  • Cosmik Debris
  • Crud (UK)
  • Daily Vault
  • Dissident Voice
  • Entropy
  • Geek America
  • Gepetto
  • Global Hip Hop
  • Hybrid Magazine
  • Inkblot
  • Legion (Russia)
  • Maelstrom
  • Mavis's Dream
  • Metal Crypt
  • Metal UK (UK)
  • Mic Stand Online
  • Misfit City (UK)
  • Open Up & Say
  • Pandomag
  • Punk News
  • Rockezine
  • 60 Seconds
  • Sweet Tea (UK)
  • 2Walls
  • Vivid Hues

References

  1. "Ska Parade Homepage News". Skaparade.com. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
  2. "Orange County". Ocweekly.com. 6 June 2002. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
  3. Rich Kane (2 September 1999). "Life Moves Fast – Page 2 – Music – Orange County". Ocweekly.com. Retrieved 15 May 2011.
  4. Archived 2 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine
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