The Voluntary Butler Scheme

Rob Jones

The Voluntary Butler Scheme
Background information
Born (1985-05-28) 28 May 1985
Stourbridge, United Kingdom
Genres Indie pop, one man band
Occupation(s) Singer, songwriter
Instruments Vocals, guitar, bass, percussion, drums, kazoo, ukulele, keyboard, synthesizer
Labels Split Records
Website

The Voluntary Butler Scheme is the stage name for one-man band Rob Jones, based in Stourbridge near Birmingham. Jones records and produces the majority of his material by himself in the home studio in his bedroom. The VBS (Voluntary Butler Scheme) uses the technique of live looping at gigs, playing in parts on various instruments such as guitar, guitar synthesizer, drums, kazoo and ukulele.

The debut album At Breakfast, Dinner, Tea was released on 7 September 2009 on Split Records. Singles from the album have been championed by the NME, BBC Radio 1, BBC Radio 2, BBC Radio 6, and XFM, and The VBS has played sessions for Huw Stephens, Marc Riley, Dermot O'Leary and Jon Kennedy. Declared "one to watch" in publications as diverse as Q magazine and The Sun, even Suggs has stepped out and declared himself a fan, stating in an interview that "they are a very good band".[1]

Biography

The Voluntary Butler Scheme came about in 2008, when a chance spotting on MySpace led to Rob Jones being asked to play a gig in Birmingham. He went ahead, playing 6 songs to a crowd of about 12, and subsequently decided that he no longer wanted to play with bands and that The VBS was the path he wished to follow.[2]

Since 2008, The Voluntary Butler Scheme has toured with Duke Special, Joe Lean & the Jing Jang Jong, Brakes, Jason Lytle (Grandaddy) & Adam Green.

In July 2008 The Voluntary Butler Scheme did a session on the Dermot O'Leary Radio 2 show - performing 'Trading Things In' & a cover of 'Build Me Up Buttercup'.

Debut Album

The Voluntary Butler Scheme’s debut album At Breakfast, Dinner, Tea was recorded in a month-long stint at a studio in Stockwell with producer Charlie Francis (known for his work with REM and the High Llamas) and a handful of guest musicians.

‘At Breakfast, Dinner, Tea’ has gained much attention with regard to the unusual and quirky lyrics. Q Magazine says "The lyrics of longing about running shoes, coffee, MP3 players and turning vegetarian are clearly quite daft but utterly endearing".[3] A BBC Music Review states that Jones "has a wicked line in witty lyrics",[4] and The Daily Growl commends his "quaintly observational everyday lyrics".[5] The line ‘wear a De La Soul t-shirt once in a while to make you feel more hip hop than you are’ has even been put onto VBS merchandise T-shirts.

Rob states of his lyrics, "I think it's about not trying too hard…You know, I read something Phil Spector said in some sound magazine, about the recording of 'Be My Baby', and asking, 'Is it dumb enough? Are people gonna get it?' I'm not trying to make it dumb, but there's something in that - stuff feels so much more honest when it's simple." The single ‘Trading Things In’ contains the lyric "yes we can listen to La Bamba on your mp3 player”. Mexican folk song ‘La Bamba’ is one of Rob’s all time favourites, though he states “I don't even know what the guy's singing about…it really doesn't matter. The way he sings it – it just breaks your heart. And I remember thinking, oh, I can probably just talk about whatever I've been up to that day and it'll work." [2]

The song 'Trading Things In' was used on Grey's Anatomy in 9 October.

Discography

Singles

Albums

External links

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References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 26, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.