Jay Mumford (born Jarrett A. Mumford; February 26, 1977),[2] better known by his stage name J-Zone,[3] is an American record producer, drummer, multi-instrumentalist, rapper, and writer from
New York City.[4][5]
Career
Known for his quirky lyrics and trash talk style of
rapping, J-Zone released a string of idiosyncratic and critically acclaimed albums in the late 1990s and early 2000s that acquired a cult following.[6][7] Of these, the 2001 release Pimps Don't Pay Taxes, was particularly noted; it featured rappers Huggy Bear and Al-Shid,[4] for whom he would subsequently produce a number of 12" releases.[8] In 2003, The New York Times cited his J-Zone,
S.A. Smash concert in
Brooklyn, New York as a noteworthy pop and jazz concert in the New York metropolitan region.[9]
Not finding commercial success, J-Zone eventually walked away from rap, and in 2011 published the book Root for the Villain: Rap, Bullshit and a Celebration of Failure.[4][7] The book has been well received; the Los Angeles Times Music Blog stated that "Like his albums, it's equal parts hilarious, self-effacing and sharp. He's the sarcastic older brother putting you up on game. It's a love letter to rap laced with sulfur, the flip side of
Dan Charnas' similarly excellent The Big Payback."[3]The Washington Post Going Out Gurus blog called it "a must for every curmudgeonly grown-up hip-hop head",[7] while Nathan Rabin writing for The A.V. Club called it "one of the funniest and most honest books ever written about the modern music industry and its luckless casualties."[4]
In 2013, J-Zone returned to music with the release of the album, Peter Pan Syndrome,[10] which was listed as the 17th best album of 2013 by Spin.[11] After learning to play drums seriously during his hiatus from music, J-Zone released the drum break album, Lunch Breaks, in 2014.[12]
In 2016 J-Zone landed a spot playing drums on new tunes from the 1970s funk band
Manzel, his band The Du-Rites with
Tom Tom Club guitarist Pablo Martin, and for personal drum break kits for
Danger Mouse and others.[13]
J-Zone has continued working as a session drummer in recent years, appearing on
Lord Finesse's Motown State of Mind album in 2020,[14] in addition to his drums being sampled on the 2020
Madlib single, "Road of The Lonely Ones".[15]
In 2022, J-Zone was the drummer for live shows and select recordings for The Black Pumas guitarist Adrian Quesada's Boleros Psicodelicos album.[16]
Discography
Albums
Music for Tu Madre (1998)
Pimps Don't Pay Taxes (2001)
$ick of Bein' Rich (2003)
A Job Ain't Nuthin but Work (2004)
Gimme Dat Beat Fool: The J-Zone Remix Project (2005)
Every Hog Has Its Day (2006) (with
Celph Titled, as The Boss Hog Barbarians)
Experienced! (2006)
To Love a Hooker: The Motion Picture Soundtrack (2007)