Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Jon Lee (drummer)

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Genres
  
Website
  
www.feederweb.com

Instruments
  
Drums, guitar

Name
  
Jon Lee


Years active
  
1992–2001

Role
  
Drummer

Labels
  
Parents
  
Patricia Lee, Norman Lee

Jon Lee (drummer) Jon Lee Photos 20020109


Born
  
28 March 1968Newport, Monmouthshire, UK (
1968-03-28
)

Associated acts
  
Died
  
January 7, 2002, Miami, Florida, United States

Music groups
  
Feeder (1992 – 2002), The Darling Buds (1992)

Feeder jon lee tribute vid


Jonathan Henry "Jon" Lee (28 March 1968 – 7 January 2002) was a Welsh drummer. He was the original drummer of the British rock band Feeder. He committed suicide in 2002.

Contents

Jon Lee (drummer) Feeder drummer Jon Lee commits suicide On This Day

Feeder and early career

Jon Lee (drummer) BBC News MUSIC Feeder drummer dies

Feeder were formed whilst Grant Nicholas was a producer, before moving to London to gain more experience. He had already met Lee in Newport who moved to London afterwards. They formed a band named Raindancer, who despite winning a TV slot on ITV Central never gained a record deal. Shortly before this, Jon was a member of Newport band The Darling Buds, although only appearing on a couple of b-sides of the "Sure Thing" single. Raindancer's split saw bassist John Canham part ways with the band, before Simon Blight followed soon after when they reformed as Hum, which was changed to Reel, before then changing their name once again to Real when Hirose took over bass duties in 1995. The band signed to The Echo Label in November of that year, before changing their name to Feeder, with their debut single proper "Stereoworld" reaching number 128 in the UK charts in October 1996, while the second single "Tangerine" reached number 60. The first full-length album, Polythene, was released in May 1997. Produced by Chris Sheldon, it charted at number 65 in the UK and was certified Silver for sales over 60,000 copies in 2003 when the band had already broken through. Metal Hammer magazine included it in its Top 20 Albums of 1997 list at number 1.

Jon Lee (drummer) BBC News MUSIC Your tributes Feeders Jon Lee

The follow-up album, Yesterday Went Too Soon, was produced by Nicholas. Released in August 1999, the album was a much quicker commercial success than its predecessor (entering the UK album chart at number 8 and certified Silver in 2001, with this being upgraded to Gold in 2003). The title track was the band's first UK Top 20 hit.

Two years later, the band released their third and also breakthrough album, Echo Park. Produced by Gil Norton (Foo Fighters, The Pixies, Echo & the Bunnymen and James), the album peaked at number 5 in the UK and was also certified Gold, but in its release year, before going Platinum in 2003. It contained their debut Top 10 single "Buck Rogers".

In 2002, when Lee took his own life, the band kept out of the public eye, until the album was nearing its completion. The first play of its lead single "Come Back Around", was the first time since Jon's death that the band made any public appearances and released new material. The single charted at #14, while the follow-up "Just the Way I'm Feeling" made the Top 10, both singles appeared on their fourth album Comfort in Sound, also produced by Norton, which although charting one place lower than Echo Park, became their first Platinum seller. The album featured Mark Richardson of Skunk Anansie on drums; he parted company with Feeder in 2009, to return to a reformed Skunk Anansie. An instrumental demo of "Come Back Around" was recorded before Jon's passing, with lyrics written later on by Nicholas. After Jon died, they were rewritten for the final version which Mark Richardson played on, keeping close to the original instrumental demo recording Jon made with the band.

Death

Lee committed suicide by hanging himself with a metal dog chain in 2002 at his home in Miami, Florida. Four suicide notes were found.

Lee's funeral took place at St. Mary's Church in Newport on 18 January 2002, where thousands of fans showed up alongside family and friends to pay their own respects. Matt Page, Feeder's manager, read "Do Not Stand at My Grave and Weep", as requested by Lee's father. Feeder's 1997 single "High" was also played during the ceremony, during which Grant Nicholas gave the following statement:

Feeder decided to continue, with Nicholas saying, "Jon would have wanted us to carry on." Former Skunk Anansie drummer Mark Richardson helped the band out on drum duties for their album Comfort in Sound and subsequent live performances.

The band's first official live appearances after Lee's death was at the Reading/Leeds Festivals, which saw Grant dedicate "Quick Fade" to "absent friends". The band were invited by Melvin Benn, the owner of the festival to headline the first day of the main stage, before turning down the offer as they did not want to play such a high-placed slot so soon after Lee's death, so requested to play a much more low-key slot headlining the second stage. In 2003, frontman Grant Nicholas dedicated the band's win for "Best British Band" at the Kerrang! Awards to Lee, calling it the award he always wanted the band to win. In 2006 the band released a singles album, entitled The Singles in which Jon features on many of the album's tracks. The album quickly became a platinum seller.

Richardson was made the band's permanent member for their fifth studio album Pushing the Senses in 2005. In 2006, an unreleased and incomplete 1998 recording named "Uptight" was released as a b-side on the "Lost and Found" single, with Grant Nicholas recording the track's final vocals eight years after the initial 1998 recording. The song features Jon Lee on drums.

Richardson left Feeder in 2009 to return to a reformed Skunk Anansie, before Karl Brazil took over the drums. Nicholas later claimed that the chemistry he feels between himself and Brazil is very much the same way that he felt with Jon. Feeder's 2012 album Generation Freakshow features the track "Hey Johnny" which is written in dedication to Lee.

References

Jon Lee (drummer) Wikipedia