Jebediah

Jebediah
A man is on the left, singing into a microphone while playing a guitar. His right-side is mostly obscured by a shadow. On the right is a woman, she is partly turned to her left and playing a bass guitar. Band equipment and stage lights are behind and between them.
Jebediah performing live, July 2005. Left to right: Kevin Mitchell and Vanessa Thornton
Background information
OriginPerth, Western Australia, Australia
GenresAlternative rock[1]
Years active1994 (1994)–2005 (2005), 2010 (2010)–present
LabelsMurmur, Redline, Dew Process, Cooking Vinyl Australia
Members
Past membersAlmin Fulurija
Websitejebediah.net

Jebediah are an Australian alternative rock band formed in 1994 in Perth, Western Australia.[2] They were formed by Chris Daymond on lead guitar, Kevin Mitchell (aka Bob Evans) on lead vocals and rhythm guitar, and Vanessa Thornton on bass guitar. They were joined a year later by Kevin's older brother, Brett Mitchell, on drums. After winning the National Campus Band Competition, the group were brought to national attention when their 1996 single "Jerks of Attention" received heavy airplay on Australian alternative radio station Triple J – which was followed by their breakthrough debut album, Slightly Odway (8 September 1997).

The band released four studio albums by 2004: three entered the top ten on the ARIA Albums Chart; their second album, Of Someday Shambles (3 October 2000), is the highest charting at number two. After touring to celebrate their tenth anniversary, the band went on hiatus in 2005. Kevin Mitchell continued solo work under his pseudonym, Bob Evans. Kevin also appeared on a self-titled album in July 2010 by the Basement Birds, a supergroup which he formed with fellow musicians, Kavyen Temperley, Josh Pyke and Steve Parkin. Jebediah reconvened in 2010 and released their fifth studio album, Kosciuszko, in the following year, which charted in the ARIA top ten.

  1. ^ "Jebediah | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards | AllMusic". AllMusic. Retrieved 12 July 2015.
  2. ^ Shedden, Ian (15 April 2011). "Jebediah five years later". The Australian. Retrieved 18 September 2023.(subscription required)