Langford was born in
Newport, Wales, the youngest son of Kit Langford and Denis Langford, a Registered Chartered Accountant for Lloyd's Brewery.[4][5] Langford's older brother is science-fiction author and critic
David Langford, who lives in
Reading, England.[4]
When he was young, Langford would visit his grandparents in
Croesyceiliog, whose family friend ran two pubs, the Cambrian Arms and The Six in Hand.[4] He attended Gaer Infants School and Gaer Junior School, then Brynglas Primary School, the
Newport High School middle school on Queen's Hill.[4] In 1972–1973, after playing rugby and football, at the age of 15 Langford decided he liked playing music better. He played a lot of
David Bowie and was listening to a lot of
Man.[4]
Langford attended art school at
University of Leeds as a painter.[6] He left school temporarily when The Mekons were founded, but later went back to college and finished his degree.[4]The Sisters of Mercy
Music
Since the mid-1980s, Langford has been one of the leaders in incorporating
folk and
country music into punk rock The Sisters of Mercy. He has released a number of solo recordings as well as recordings with other bands outside of
The Mekons, most notably the
Waco Brothers, which he co-founded after moving to Chicago in the early 1990s.
Langford is known for being very funny, and politically left, in his remarks and antics during live musical performances, and in his frequent interviews with journalists.[citation needed]
Langford was originally the drummer for the
punk band
The Mekons when it formed at the
University of Leeds in 1977, but he later took up the guitar as other band members left.[8] The Mekons were signed to
Virgin Records but according to Langford they "got fired."[4] They played their first United States appearance on New Year's Eve in 1980, gave up live performances for a while, and released 1982's The Mekons Story. They began performing again in public in 1984, playing their first shows as benefits for the British miners' union.[9] After being signed by major American label
A&M Records in the late 1980s, label shuffling resulted in the band trying to leave the label. In response, they recorded Curse of the Mekons, which the label refused to release, becoming available in the U.S. only as an import.[10] A documentary called The Revenge of the Mekons was released in 2014 by director Joe Angio.[11] The Mekons continue to record and perform live, as of 2019.[citation needed]
With John Hyatt and Phillip Brennan, Langford released several albums of drum-machine-fueled punk between 1982 and 1987. A retrospective box set was released in August 2015.[12]
Dim Subooteyo
As Dim Subooteyo,
Brendan Croker and Langford released the album Lakeside (1990, SNAT Records).[13]
The Killer Shrews
The Killer Shrews were a group composed of Langford (lead vocals),
Gary Lucas, and
Tony Maimone. They released one self-titled album on Enemy Records in 1993.[14]
The Waco Brothers make country-punk music, and are a Chicago-based amalgam of players from the
Pine Valley Cosmonauts family and others, who have been recording since 1995, as of 2021. For their first albums, they included Dean Schlabowske (guitar/vocal), Tracey Dear (mandolin/vocal),
Alan Doughty (bass/vocal),
Mark Durante (pedal steel guitar), and Mekons drummer
Steve Goulding). By 2015, Goulding, now based in New York City, had been replaced by Joe Camarillo (drums), and Durante had left. Camarillo died in January 2021, and was replaced by Dan Massey.
Langford initiated another project, the
Pine Valley Cosmonauts, which performs the music of other country music groups. Several alternative country musicians have guested alongside a revolving assortment of Chicago musicians who have backed both Langford and other musicians such as
Kelly Hogan.
The Wee Hairy Beasties were a children's music group based in Chicago, composed of Jon Langford,
Sally Timms,
Kelly Hogan, and
Devil in a Woodpile. They played their first gig together at the
Brookfield Zoo near Chicago, and released two albums in 2006 and 2008.[15][16]
Men of Gwent
The Men of
Gwent are mainly Newport-based musicians, including members of Give Me Memphis and
The Darling Buds. Previously known as LL, the group have written and recorded intermittently for over 20 years[when?], and have been playing live since 2007.[17][18] As LL, their only release was a demo track ("Rechem") on the 1999 compilation Fear of a Red Planet.[19] Their debut album The Legend of LL was released on Country Mile Records in 2015 and included reworkings of several songs from the same LL demos, as well as a new version of "
Pill Sailor", first released on Skull Orchard in 1998.[20] Their second album President of Wales was released in November 2019, also on Country Mile.[21]
Solo, Skull Orchard, etc.
Langford's first official solo album, Skull Orchard, a look back at his hometown of Newport, Wales, was released in 1998. He followed it with All the Fame of Lofty Deeds, in 2004, and Gold Brick in 2006.
Ever since releasing the original 2008 album, Langford continued to intermittently use the "Skull Orchard" band name, usually when recording or performing live with accompanying electric instruments. "Skull Orchard" has almost always included bassist
Alan Doughty, also of the Waco Brothers.[22] In 2010 and 2011 for example, frequent members also included Joe Camarillo (of the Waco Brothers), Jim Elkington, and
Tawny Newsome.[23][24] Recordings credited to Jon Langford and the Skull Orchard include his 2010 Old Devils album, his 2014 Here Be Monsters album, and, starting in 2020, some of the songs in his Jon Langford's Lucky Seven Series of singles.[25][26]
In the late 2000s Langford met the
Burlington [Ontario, Canada] Welsh Male Chorus, who are based near
Toronto. He invited them first to accompany him at a CeltFest in Chicago in 2007, and then to re-record the whole of the Skull Orchard. The album Skull Orchard Revisited (credited to Jon Langford and the Burlington Welsh Male Chorus) was released on 3 June 2011 by Bloodshot Records.[27] Langford continued to intermittently perform live with the chorus.[28]
Circa 2003, Langford started the band "Ship & Pilot", to perform his songs, especially in and near
New York City. It continued to perform into 2006, and very occasionally since, including in 2022. Ship & Pilot also included
Tony Maimone,
Jean Cook, usually Sally Timms, and on drums variously
Steve Goulding or Dan Massey.[29][30][31][32][33]
Aside from the above-mentioned bands, Langford has performed with many different musicians over the years, but his most constant live collaborator has been singer and fellow Mekon
Sally Timms, ever since they both moved to Chicago. As of 2022, they continue to collaborate on various recording and performance projects.[42][43]
Langford, with and without Timms, has often performed his own and others' songs accompanied by a lead guitar player. Circa 2000, session guitarist John Rice, formerly of Chicago country music band the Sundowners, often joined Langford live around Chicago.[44][45] From 2015 into 2023, John Szymanski has regularly been Langford's lead guitarist.[43][26] For louder performances in and near Chicago in the 21st century, Langford has often added bassist
Alan Doughty and drummer Dan Massey, calling this aggregation first "Jon Langford & 3 Blokes" (2018-2021)[46] and then "Jon Langford and His Fancy Men" (2021+).[47] Langford has sometimes graced various other ad hoc groups with particular names, such as "Jon Langford & The Bright Shiners" (circa 2022 through at least 2023, in
Northern California),[48][49][50] "Jon Langford and the Sturdy Nelsons" (2018);[51] "Jon Langford & the Far Forlorn" (circa 2015 through at least 2023, in
Austin, Texas),[52][53] "Jon Langford and the Six Proud Walkers" (2000-2001),[45] "Lost in America Tour Band" (2003),[54] "The One Day Band" (2002),[55] and "Jon Langford’s Hillbilly Lovechild" (2019, 1994).[56]
Jon Langford is also a painter and graphic designer.
Langford has painted portraits of famous and forgotten figures from the dawn of country music, such as
Hank Williams,
Johnny Cash,
Elvis Presley, and "
The Cuckoo", many based on classic photographs. Many of his paintings and prints are available from the Yard Dog Art Gallery in Austin, TX, and LeMieux Galleries in New Orleans, LA, and
Hatch Show Print Gallery in Nashville, TN as of 2021.[57][58]Nashville Radio, a collection of his artwork and writings, was published in 2006.[59]
Langford has designed and painted the covers for many music recordings. These include, but are not limited to, most of the recordings on which he has been the musical leader, and many recordings of his other bands.[2] Other examples include the cover art of The Sandinista! Project – A Tribute to The Clash[60] and "Commercial Suicide Man" (2018),[61] a collaborative single by
the Nightingales and
Vic Godard.
For over 10 years, Langford illustrated the pop-music parody comic strip Great Pop Things under the pseudonym Chuck Death with a friend from his hometown, Newport, Wales, Colin B. Morton, who wrote the text.[70] The cartoon strip was published in music and alternative weekly newspapers in
London,
Los Angeles, and Chicago, and was a pen-and-ink history of rock-and-roll.[70] An anthology of the best strips was published in a book of the same name.[71]
Radio
For several years starting in 2005, Langford co-hosted, with
Nicholas Tremulis, and occasionally
Kelly Hogan, "The Eclectic Company", a weekly radio program, which was broadcast on
WXRT 93.1 FM in Chicago.[72]
In 2005, Langford's multimedia music/spoken-word/video performance, The Executioner's Last Songs, premiered at
Alverno College, and has been performed in several other cities.
In January and February 2009, Chicago's Walkabout Theater Company and Collaboraction premiered a stage adaptation of Langford's Goldbrick that featured a live band, two actors and video projections.[74]
In November and December 2009,
The House Theatre of Chicago staged a production of All the Fame of Lofty Deeds, written by rock journalist Mark Guarino and based on Langford's art and 2004 solo album of the same name.[75]
In November 2018, scored Mark Guarino's play Take Me, produced at
Straw Dog Theater Company.
Chris Jones, theatre critic for The
Chicago Tribune stated "if you’re a fan of Langford’s work, you’ll find plenty here to merit a trip to Strawdog: At times, I was tempted to close my eyes, getting lost in the
Bowie-esque longing you can find in these lush and potent melodies, true and vital feeling hidden in pastiche."[76]
Langford also contributed to and worked with
Doorika, a defunct performance arts collective based in Chicago and New York City.
Langford was Castee #00039 in
Cynthia Plaster Caster's plaster castings.[79] The piece was named Long Dong Jon Langford.[80]
Politics and service
Langford considers himself "working class socialist."[4] Langford has said he became politicised against the
death penalty after the execution of
John Wayne Gacy.[4]
Langford produced The Executioner's Last Songs, Vols. 1,[85] 2, & 3[86] record compilations of 2002 and 2003, by various singers backed by the
Pine Valley Cosmonauts, to benefit charitable organisations working to end the death penalty (
Artists Against the Death Penalty, the Illinois Death Penalty Moratorium Project,[87] and the National Coalition To Abolish the Death Penalty). In 2006, Langford was commissioned to develop a performance[88] based on the compilations for the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago; the show was also performed at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis.
As mentioned above, Langford has designed and contributed graphics to a variety of organisations. Langford was an honorary board member of the Chicago-based nonprofit organisation
Rock for Kids.
Personal life
Langford is married to architect and jewellery designer, Helen Tsatsos, as of 2021. Tsatsos' jewellery was awarded
Macy's "Designer of Distinction" award in 2010 and has a line of pieces that incorporate Langford's artwork.[89] Langford and Tsatsos were introduced in 1986 at a party after a Three Johns gig in her home town of Chicago.[4] They currently live in Chicago and have two children, James and Tommy.[90] James Langford is a clothing designer and, while in high school, was in the band The Ungnomes; Tommy Langford, as of 2021, is a songwriter and lead singer in the band Mock Nine.[4][91]
2020: Jon Langford's Lucky Seven Series, part 1 (Tiny Global Productions, via bandcamp) - package of 6 songs on 3 vinyl singles; also digital[25]
2021: Jon Langford's Lucky Seven Series, part 2 (Tiny Global Productions, via bandcamp) - package of 6 songs on 3 vinyl singles; also digital[26]
Compilation contributions (partial list)
1994: "Over the Cliff" – For a Life of Sin: A Compilation of Insurgent Chicago Country – as Jon Langford’s Hillbilly Lovechild (w/
Tony Maimone,
Brian Doherty, & Tracy Dear; Bloodshot Records)
2000: "Brixton" – Down to the Promised Land: 5 Years of Bloodshot Records –
Chip Taylor w/ Jon Langford (Bloodshot Records)
2002: "Nashville Radio" – Making Singles, Drinking Doubles (Bloodshot Records)
2019: "I Am a Big Town" – Too Late to Pray: Defiant Chicago Roots – as Jon Langford’s Hillbilly Lovechild (w/
Tony Maimone,
Steve Albini, & John Szymanski; Bloodshot Records)[56][96]
Works or publications
Morton, Colin B., Chuck Death, and Greil Marcus. Great Pop Things. Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin, 1992.
ISBN978-0-140-17156-3OCLC441310470
Morton, Colin B., and Chuck Death. The Real History of Rock and Roll from Elvis to Oasis. Portland, OR: Verse Chorus Press, 1998.
ISBN978-1-891-24108-6OCLC41108753
^Kot, Greg (13 January 1994). "Tempo Recordings". Chicago Tribune.
^Melzer, Ashley (5 June 2012).
"Interview: Kelly Hogan". eMusic.com. eMusic.com Inc. Archived from
the original on 26 November 2022. Retrieved 8 November 2023.