Perseverance, passion and adaptability fueled 30-year run of Jump, Little Children.
A cellist, two guitar players and a clarinetist walk into a bar. It sounds like the start of a joke, but it鈥檚 really the beginning of a band, and after three decades, is headed for the exit. The band that formed in 鈥榯he Snack Bar鈥 (now known as the Pickle Jar) at 抖阴短视频 in the early 1990s is dropping its final album this month and getting ready for a farewell tour that includes a performance at Winston-Salem鈥檚 Ramkat in December.
鈥淲e started playing together informally in 1990,鈥 recalls Jay Clifford, who studied classical guitar at 抖阴短视频 from 1988 to 1991. He and Christopher Pollen (B.M. 鈥92, guitar), Ward Williams (B.M. 鈥94, cello) and Matt Bivins (B.M. clarinet), came together and played Irish folk songs and original, high-energy indie-pop tunes. These performances took place on a small wooden stage in a room decorated with silver-foil wallpaper and a grand crystal chandelier, while short-order cooks called out 鈥渃heeseburger and fries鈥 and 鈥淏LT on wheat.鈥 Soon Matt鈥檚 brother Evan (High School 鈥92 Visual Arts) began sitting in on drums, and Jump, Little Children sprang onto the local music scene, performing at dances and in cafes and taverns across town.

Alumni-fueled American indie rock band Jump, Little Children
Over the next three decades, different iterations of the band moved to Boston and then to Charleston, South Carolina. They released nine albums, including Vertigo, which reached No. 44 on Billboard鈥檚 chart of top independent albums. Their music has been featured in television series such as 鈥淪o You Think You Can Dance,鈥 鈥淧arty of Five,鈥 鈥淓verwood,鈥 鈥淪crubs鈥 and Netflix鈥檚 鈥淭he Society,鈥 and in the 2014 Zach Braff feature film 鈥淚 Wish I Was There.鈥
Their final album, Foundering, was released on Sept. 23, with 13 tracks written by Clifford. 鈥淚 feel like this is the strongest group of songs we have ever had the chance to record,鈥 says Williams. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think Jay is capable of writing super fluffy pop songs, but harmonically and melodically, these songs are easy to listen to and fit fully into the confines of what pop and rock music is.鈥
Jonathan Gray, who joined the band playing double bass in 1995 when Pollen left, says the music evokes a visceral feel beyond the content. 鈥淭here鈥檚 some musical nostalgia, not in the actual songs, but just in the feel,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t makes me think of songs from my childhood, teen and preteen years. It still has a very modern feel to it, but there are elements that harken back.鈥
Ward says that with a tenure of 30 years, nostalgia is inevitable. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of weird us making an album today because our band has been around for such a long time. Us putting out anything is going to have a nostalgic feel to those who know us.鈥
Foundering began as an experimental project on , an app that allows content creators to run a subscription service and build close connections with their community. 鈥淚n 2018, we made our last record, Sparrow, by starting a pledge music campaign,鈥 says Clifford. 鈥淭hat went really well and was our introduction into how to make records independently. After that, we decided to take it a step further and opened a Patreon account.鈥
Clifford spent two and half years writing the songs for Foundering. Fans voted on their favorites through Patreon, and the band went into the recording studio in February.
Clifford says he found 鈥渆xpressive ways of saying things I probably would not have said if I think I have to go through some kind of record label hurdle, knowing that other people are going to be involved,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat allowed the songs to be more true, more authentic.鈥
The album was available on Patreon a few days before the official release and then at.
The band adopted its name from a blues song written by Leroy Dallas and covered by Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee.
"The sentiment is 'the parents are gone so let鈥檚 have fun,'" Clifford says.
Though they mostly perform original tunes these days, Jump鈥檚 roots run to Ireland, where original member Pollen was born in a suburb of Dublin. To support the sound, Clifford started playing in an Irish tuning on his guitar and Matt Bivins picked up a penny whistle, beginning his tenure as a multi-instrumentalist with the band as he added accordion, mandolin and melodica, in addition to performing vocals.
At the arts conservatory of the 1990s, the classically-trained musicians got some resistance from instructors, but they also took heat from the Irish music community.
鈥淲e got resistance from both sides 鈥 from our professors just a little bit, but in the traditional Irish community as well when we were playing non-traditional songs,鈥 Clifford says. 鈥淚 remember playing a song I had written for John Cunningham, a renowned Celtic fiddle player, and that was one of the few moments where he really embraced it. He appreciated that I was adding a new song to the long tradition. But a lot of times we would play new stuff and really great Irish players were not into it,鈥 he recalls.
鈥淣o, lads, no,鈥 Williams mimics with a bit of brogue. 鈥淣o lads.鈥
Jump starts its farewell tour on Dec. 9 at the Cat鈥檚 Cradle in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, with additional stops in Raleigh, Charlotte, Atlanta, Brooklyn, Nashville and other East Coast cities before hitting its home stretch on Dec. 23 at the in Winston-Salem. Its final concert on Dec. 30 at the Charleston Music Hall in South Carolina sold out within minutes.
The band announced the tour on its website and social media in 2021. 鈥淭he past 30-plus years have been an incredible adventure 鈥 a mosaic of indescribable events, emotions and connections that have shaped who we are as people. It鈥檚 a story of highs and lows, of successes and failures, creativity, imagination and brotherhood, a story of a deep sense of awe and love for the art of songwriting and a story of the greatest fans a band could ever want. A story that will live within us forever.鈥
The band鈥檚 lows might include a 10-year hiatus that ended with a reunion concert in Charleston on the last night of 2015, when it announced it would release a new album. A successful crowdfunding campaign resulted in the release of Sparrow in 2018.
Us putting out anything is going to have a nostalgic feel to those who know us.
Ward Williams
Most recently, original members of the Bivins brothers bowed out before recording Foundering. 鈥淢aking this decision, of course, has been tough,鈥 Matt told a Charleston newspaper last fall. 鈥淗eartbreaking, soul-searching, and, in the end, necessary.鈥
Guest artists sat in for the final recording and will accompany the band on tour, Jump announced while acknowledging the Bivins鈥 departure. 鈥淲e continue to wish them all the success in the world,鈥 the remaining members said.
The December concert in Winston-Salem will feature Josh Kaler, producer and drummer of Foundering, and Christina Cone of the Nashville-based band Frances Cone.
Moving on, Clifford looks forward to working on a new record and perhaps a new podcast.
Williams is rebuilding a small teaching studio in Ohio, and Gray plans to explore the new frontier of Appalachian music from his home in the North Carolina mountains 鈥 perhaps learning to play the fiddle and the gamba, a string instrument in the viol family. 鈥淢aybe I鈥檒l become the preeminent mountain gambist,鈥 he says.
As they transition to new projects, the three remaining members of Jump offer advice for musicians hoping to find success in independent music.
Williams says patience and perseverance go a long way. 鈥淎rtists almost back themselves into a corner where they have to make it work. If you have a fallback plan, you鈥檒l probably take it.鈥
鈥淭he number one thing across the board, not just in music, is adaptability and being able to switch context and skills,鈥 says Clifford. 鈥淭he only way the Patreon page worked was to pivot into different creative fields -- podcast mastering and mixing live shows and a whole bunch of different things that aren鈥檛 directly associated with writing songs."
Gray says artists should follow their passion. 鈥淚t鈥檚 cheesy, but what do you have to lose by going for it? Do it as passionately as you can. It鈥檚 not up to you whether you make it. It鈥檚 up to the world,鈥 he says.
Clifford agrees. 鈥淵ou have to believe that what you want to do has value and that you can express yourself in a way that you want to,鈥 he says. 鈥淟ove what you are doing.鈥
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October 21, 2022