Early career (1952–1969) Four years after Jeff Sherman was born in
Seattle, his father an electrical engineer for
Seattle City Light, moved his wife and family to the tiny
Skagit Valley town of
Diablo in the
North Cascades of
Washington. The wilderness town which is mentioned in
Jack Kerouac's 1958 novel
The Dharma Bums was built by Seattle City Light as part of the
Skagit River Hydroelectric Project for their employees. Qualified engineers were needed so as an enticement, free rent and utilities were offered in addition to the opportunity to raise a family in a pristine natural setting. Jeff, his brother Greg and their sister Janis grew up in the wilderness of the
Cascade Range. Jeff began his formal musical training in Diablo in the early ‘60s, taking accordion lessons from a family friend at age eight. When the Sherman family moved to
Port Townsend (on the
Olympic Peninsula) in 1964, Jeff taught himself to play the electric guitar and in the spirit of the times, soon formed the first of many bands. When the bass player in one of these bands quit, Jeff switched to the bass guitar, which eventually became his main composing tool for progressive music. In
Port Townsend High School, Jeff played saxophone in the school concert band and cello in the school orchestra. As a senior he wrote “Euphoria 17,” an experimental
avant-garde classical piece premiered by the school orchestra along with his keyboardist brother Greg, and their childhood friend drummer Jerry Cook. Jeff had just turned 17. Jeff, Greg and Cook were by this time already performing as a
rock and roll cover band called
The Vaguest Notion. On September 6, 1968, they traveled to
Seattle to attend a
Jimi Hendrix concert. One of the opening acts for the concert was a
British band called The
Soft Machine. The Soft Machine was a trio (consisting at the time of
Kevin Ayers,
Robert Wyatt, and
Mike Ratledge) but with an entirely new sound. The band left the concert determined to pursue a new direction.
With Glass (1969–1976) Not long after the concert, Jeff and his bandmates resolved to play original music only. The profound effect that The Soft Machine's September 6 performance had on Jeff and the band can be found on page 145 of Graham Bennett's authorized Soft Machine biography
Out-Bloody-Rageous. In keeping with the spirit of re-invention, The Vaguest Notion changed their name to
Glass. Over the next six years they performed all over
Western Washington, building a loyal
fanbase. In 1971 they relocated to
Olympia, Washington to attend
The Evergreen State College and became favorites on-campus for their spirited performances. They performed the first-ever live concert broadcast on the college's new radio station,
KAOS (FM). In 1975 professional recordings were undertaken in Seattle, which the band shopped around to labels up and down the West Coast, around New York and even in England. Unfortunately the mid-’70s were tough times for rehearsal-intensive progressive rock. Even well-established rock acts were being dropped by their labels. Despite their well-honed musicianship, strong local reputation and enormous efforts to secure a record deal, Glass remained unsigned. Disillusioned, the band elected to break up rather than compromise.
Paying dues (1977–1983) After Glass disbanded, Jeff returned to his roots of ‘60s rock and R&B, fronting a
bar band called
Changer (after a Glass song). The band performed a month-long residency in
Havre, Montana to rowdy
cowboys in a scene straight out of
The Blues Brothers. In 1977 Changer toured Western Canada and became experts in learning the favorite songs of Canadian
fur trappers. Later in the year personnel changes brought a name change to
Straw Dogs (after the
Sam Peckinpah film of the
same name). The band began a 6-week November residency in frozen
Whitehorse, Yukon, followed by more gigs in
British Columbia. By 1978 the band had
morphed once again to become
The Sherman Brothers Band, and began playing regularly back in the States on the comparatively balmy
Olympic Peninsula. When the
Hood Canal Bridge sank during a
windstorm, the band found themselves playing before a wildly appreciative captive audience. For the next two years the band gigged extensively and even professionally recorded a single (with legendary NW producer Don McKinney of
Don and the Goodtimes). The Sherman Brothers Band is considered by those who witnessed their reign, to be one of the most popular bands to come out of Port Townsend, Washington. Their popularity at the peak of their career can be exemplified by a story related by Sherman on their MySpace fan page: ''"I remember one of the most incredible things happened to me and the guitar player, Jack Scott. We were walking up from a little grocery store near the Port Townsend Junior High School which we had both attended as kids. There was a playfield right below the school and across the street from the store. Suddenly some kid yells "Hey Look!! It's the Sherman Brothers!!!", and this huge mob of kids started running towards us! It was something right out of 'A Hard Days Night'"''. Though playing the occasional original The Sherman Brothers Band remained primarily a
covers band, so when the band evolved again in 1980, they took the name
The Drive and concentrated on the large catalog of original songs Jeff had been writing. This band played frequently around Seattle,
Bremerton, Washington,
Kingston, Washington and Port Townsend but did not achieve the acclaim of The Sherman Brothers Band. With the Hood Canal Bridge repaired Sherman contemplated a career move to Los Angeles.
California (1983–1999) When he was offered the opportunity to come to Los Angeles and sleep on the couch of legendary songwriter
Ron Davies a friend who had mentored him as a teenager, he jumped at the chance. Soon thereafter he was pounding the pavements of that city taking demo tapes around to record companies by day and writing songs with Ron late into the early morning hours. Southern California afforded Sherman not only closer proximity to the music industry, but also a view of poverty and homelessness he had not previously experienced. He lived near LA’s famous
Skid Row and even for a time in the
Glendale YMCA as he struggled to find performance opportunities. It was at this point he met and befriended novelist-to-be
John O'Brien and formed a close bond. O'Brien encouraged Sherman in the pursuit of his songwriting goals and Sherman returned the favor by encouraging O'Brien in his nascent writing endeavors. He soon formed another band, called
Alan Rench & The ViceGrips, and began playing venues up and down The
Valley including The FM Station,
The Palomino,
The Roxy,
The Whisky,
The Troubadour and others. These clubs participated with event promoters in a
pay-to-play arrangement known as “showcasing.” Bands are offered the chance to play these prestigious venues, but their contract
fine print stipulates that the bands are liable for costs if the ticket sales fall below a certain minimum. He also founded along with singer/songwriter Sue Logg, a short-lived '60s retro band called
The Chimes Of Freedom which specialized in original melodic rock songs in the musical vein of the great L.A. band
The Byrds. Over the next couple of years Sherman managed to play regularly, but found himself losing money as often as he made it. Eventually he was lobbied by his brother Greg who had moved to Southern California in part to play with him to forgo the pay-to-play schemes offered by these promoters. Always a major trusted influence, Sherman heeded his brothers advice. Living near the
poverty line and rubbing shoulders with the area's vast homeless community stirred political activist feelings in Sherman, and his songwriting turned activist. He created a fictional
alter ego named
Jeff Joad (after the family in
Steinbeck’s
The Grapes of Wrath). Taking
Woody Guthrie and
Pete Seeger as models, Sherman began playing his
folk protest songs at
soup kitchens and
homeless encampments, just himself and an acoustic guitar. Appalled at the disparity between rich and poor in
Ronald Reagan’s America and the intentional dismantling of
social safety nets, he started working with the
Frontline Foundation and Xela-Aid distributing food and other necessities to those in need. In 1990 he released
Time for a Change as
Jeff Joad on his own Relentless Pursuit Records, with profits donated to charity. He traveled to
Guatemala in 1991 and 1992 as part of Xela-Aid's in-country effort, providing music for the crowds waiting in line to see the volunteer doctors and nurses. In 1999 he released a second
Jeff Joad album entitled
Judgment of the Flame with several of his ex-bandmates. A video from this album, entitled
Shine On, won a 1995 music video award from INTERCOM, the INTERnational COMmunications program of the
Chicago International Film Festival.
With Glass again (1999–present) In 1999 Glass came back together again, and Jeff put aside his Jeff Joad persona to devote all his energies to Glass. In 2001 Glass released a double CD of archival recordings called
No Stranger To The Skies which earned uniformly positive reviews.
No Stranger to the Skies was re-released by Musea worldwide in 2004. Glass released a new album in 2005
Illuminations and a live album
Glass Live At Progman Cometh in 2007. At the
Progman Cometh festivals in 2002 and 2003 Sherman met and befriended fellow bassist
Hugh Hopper, and the two began working together via
remote file sharing. Glass's next release, again on the Musea Label, was entitled "Spectrum Principle”. The music of Glass can also be purchased at
iTunes and
Bandcamp.
Solo (2002–present) In addition to his work with Glass, Jeff has continued to compose both as a singer/songwriter (material outside the scope of Glass) and as an electronic musician. He has four solo albums recorded but has delayed release of the latter two to avoid conflicting with the Glass releases. His first,
Above & Beyond, was issued in a limited edition by Relentless Pursuit Records in 2002. The second,
Home, features
Soft Machine bassist
Hugh Hopper and was also a limited edition (2003). The other two have been slated for release on Musea's sub-label Gazul sometime in the near future. Meanwhile, Jeff continues to compose and record, when he's not busy with Glass, and even create some videos for his pieces. On the July 23, 2010, Jeff and his brother Greg signed licensing agreements with
Muzak which will allow Muzak to use their original recordings in their programs worldwide. This will include not only Glass music but music from all their solo projects as well. After the resurgence of "
trickle-down economics" and the
2008 financial crisis under the
George W. Bush Administration, the Jeff Joad persona was reactivated and Jeff has been performing around Southern California with a blend of older material and new compositions which focus on open tunings and
slide guitar blues played on
National steel resonator guitar. A new Jeff Joad album was released in 2016, and a possible tour of several European cities was contemplated, where he planned to street busk. In 2022 the Jeff Joad and Jeff Sherman catalogs were made available on
Bandcamp. ==Discography==