Vincent Walker

Vincent Walker
Background information
Birth name Vincent Francis Walker
Born (1980-03-02) March 2, 1980
Seattle, Washington, United States
Origin Orange County, California, United States
Genres Third wave ska, funk, disco
Instruments Vocals, trumpet, guitar
Years active 1998–present
Associated acts Suburban Legends
Kids Imagine Nation
The Littlest Man Band
Personal Satisfaction
Notable instruments
Fender Stratocaster

Vincent Francis Walker (born March 2, 1980), better known as Vince Walker, is an American multi-instrumentalist, best known as the lead singer of third-wave ska band Suburban Legends.[1] He was formerly the lead trumpet player, and left sometime after the release of Rump Shaker, but returned to the band in September 2005 for the band's appearance on the Jerry Lewis MDA Telethon, which happened to be lead singer Tim Maurer's last performance. He replaced Maurer as the singer in an odd switching of roles, and continues with the band as frontman.

Walker was born in Seattle, Washington. Although he did not become lead singer of Suburban Legends until 2005, he previously sang on "Brian and Vince Experience (The Rap)" on Origin Edition (on which he was the lead guitarist), "Desperate" from Suburban Legends, "Powerful Game" on Rump Shaker, and "Rose Tint My World." Although he is not the only band member singing on these tracks, as "Brian and Vince Experience" and "Desperate" are performed with Brian Klemm, "Powerful Game" with Brian Klemm and Tim Maurer, and "Rose Tint My World" with Chris Batstone, Aaron Bertram, and Dallas Cook.

As of 2012, Walker, Klemm, drummer Matt Olson, and former Suburban Legends bassist Chris Maurer currently perform in a humorous blues rock side project called Personal Satisfaction. He is also a former member of Scott Klopfenstein's side project, The Littlest Man Band. Vince had played trumpet, but left in 2004 to pursue an education and focus on Suburban Legends. Walker makes an appearance alongside bandmate Brian Klemm in one of Big D and the Kids Table's several music videos for their cover of The Specials' "Little Bitch."

In addition to his work with Suburban Legends, Walker composed the score to 2014 independent British film, What Goes Up.

Discography

As performer

With Suburban Legends

With The Littlest Man Band

With others

As producer

As film composer

References

  1. Apar, Corey. "Biography: Suburban Legends". AMG. Retrieved 19 May 2010.
  2. Suburban Legends (booklet). Suburban Legends. Suburban Legends. 2001. p. liner notes.
  3. Suburban Legends (Tim Remix) (booklet). Suburban Legends. Suburban Legends. 2002. p. liner notes.
  4. Rump Shaker (booklet). Suburban Legends. Suburban Legends/Lobster Girl Music. 2003. p. liner notes.
  5. Dance Like Nobody's Watching (booklet). Suburban Legends. Suburban Legends. 2006. p. liner notes.
  6. Dance Like Nobody's Watching: Tokyo Nights (booklet). Suburban Legends. Subrange Records. 2007. p. liner notes.
  7. Infectious (booklet). Suburban Legends. Suburban Legends. 2007. p. liner notes.
  8. Let's Be Friends... and Slay the Dragon Together (booklet). Suburban Legends. Suburban Legends. 2008. p. liner notes.
  9. Day Job (booklet). Suburban Legends. Suburban Legends. 2012. p. liner notes.
  10. Better Book Ends (booklet). The Littlest Man Band. At the Helm Records. 2004. p. liner notes.
  11. This Gigantic Robot Kills (booklet). MC Lars. Oglio Records. 2008. p. liner notes.
  12. Hooray for Our Side (booklet). Hooray for Our Side. Hooray for Our Side. 2013. p. liner notes.
  13. Day Job (booklet). Suburban Legends. Suburban Legends. 2012. p. liner notes.
  14. Hooray for Our Side (booklet). Hooray for Our Side. Hooray for Our Side. 2013. p. liner notes.
  15. Overture (booklet). Hooray for Our Side. Hooray for Our Side. 2013. p. liner notes.

External links

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