Jon Monday

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Jon monday)
Jon Monday
Monday in 2023
Born1947
Occupation(s)Music and Film Producer
Known forMusic and Video Producer
Political partyDemocratic Party
SpouseAnna Monday
ChildrenRachel Monday
Websitewww.mondaymedia.org

Jon Monday (born 1947 in San Jose, California) is an American producer and distributor of CDs and DVDs across an eclectic range of material such as Swami Prabhavananda, Aldous Huxley, Christopher Isherwood, Huston Smith, and Chalmers Johnson.[1] In 1980 Monday filmed what turned out to be the very last live poetry reading Charles Bukowski gave, at the Sweetwater in Redondo Beach, which was released as The Last Straw on DVD.[2] Monday directed and co-produced with Jennifer Douglas the feature-length documentary Save KLSD: Media Consolidation and Local Radio.[3] He is also President of Benchmark Recordings, which owns and distributes the early catalog of The Fabulous Thunderbirds CDs and a live recording of Mike Bloomfield. After retiring, his work with Huston Smith and the Vedanta Society of Southern California has created audio and video commercial releases as well as establishing free online archives of the historic material.

Music Business[edit]

Monday got his start in multimedia through his own psychedelic light-show company in the Bay Area in 1967, providing visuals for concerts by Country Joe and the Fish, Janis Joplin's Big Brother and the Holding Company, Quicksilver Messenger Service, and Steve Miller's Blues Band at local Berkeley, California venues and The Fillmore in San Francisco.

In 1970, Monday was hired by John Fahey at Takoma Records in Santa Monica, as their first full-time employee, becoming promotion director in 1972,[4] and later general manager.[5] working with guitar artists such as Leo Kottke, John Fahey, Mike Bloomfield, and Peter Lang. Eventually, he became Takoma's Vice President and General Manager, and also provided art direction, engineering, and/or produced albums by such artists as George Winston, Norman Blake,[6] Peter Rowan,[7] Jim Kweskin,[8] Loudon Wainwright III,[9] and Joseph Byrd.[10]

In 1979, Fahey sold Takoma Records to a new company formed by music business attorney Bill Coben, veteran producer/manager Denny Bruce, and Chrysalis Records. Monday continued with the new company as General Manager.[11] During that time, Takoma signed and released albums by The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Canned Heat, and T-Bone Burnett. Monday also co-produced a live album, Gospel Nights,[12] by Maria Muldaur. The concert was at McCabes Guitar Shop in Santa Monica and recorded at Takoma Studios, two doors down from McCabes.

In 1982, Monday was appointed sales manager for Chrysalis Visual Programming Division, headquartered in Los Angeles[13]. Eventually Monday was brought into Chrysalis Records as its Director of Marketing,[14] working with Blondie, Jethro Tull, Huey Lewis, Pat Benatar, Billy Idol, and Toni Basil.[15]

Silicon Valley[edit]

In 1984, Monday relocated to Silicon Valley and had a 2nd career as an executive in various software and high-tech companies. He also held senior management positions or consulted with major 3rd party video game publishers, such as Epyx, Eidos Interactive, and Capcom. He was also Vice President of PlayNet, working directly with Atari founder Nolan Bushnell.

Monday's first role in the emerging video game business was with Romox, a company that has developed a kiosk-based video game distribution system.[16] Originally, Monday was hired as Sales Director of Special Markets to provide distribution through the "Rack Jobbers" who got records into Sears, ToysRUs, KMart and other major retailers. Then he was promoted to VP Product Marketing, to help introduce their kiosk. A gamer could buy a blank video game cartridge and download a game from a vast library into the cartridge (for Atari 2600, Atari Computers, TI-99, Commodore, etc.) and play the game for a few weeks. IF they got tired of the game, they could bring the cartridge back to the kiosk, erase it, and program a new game into it. The system answered the biggest problem plaguing the industry - the high cost of the cartridges.

One of the game publishers who licensed their titles to Romox was Epyx, headed by Michael Katz. After the cartridge-based video game industry collapsed (due to the overproduction of the Atari game ET, which failed upon release) Monday was originally hired by Epyx as a consultant overseeing IT, manufacturing, and customer service and eventually was promoted to Vice President of IT and Operations.

In 1989. Monday left Epyx to establish MusicWriter Inc., with music research pioneer Larry Heller. During Monday's term as president, the Californian company developed the NoteStation, a point-of-sale kiosk for printing sheet music, in any key, for sale to customers in music stores.[17][18][19] In addition to printing sheet music, the NoteStation was able to produce MIDI disks containing selected music. In 1994, NoteStation kiosks were in 175 stores in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.[20][17]

Monday was hired as Vice President of PlayNet, working directly with Atari founder Nolan Bushnell, to develop an online jukebox, that was connected to a vast library of songs licensed from the major record companies.

In 1998, Monday was hired by Capcom, a leading video game publisher, to design and implement an entire IT overhaul, including replacing an aging mainframe with a Windows based hardware and enterprise reporting and accounting software. After completing the project he was given the assignment to make their arcade division, Nickel City, profitable by shutting down the unprofitable stores, and beefing up the existing ones. Eventually, Monday oversaw selling the division piece by piece. He was then put in charge of all online business, including developing and implementing the company's first website.

Retirement[edit]

Monday retired and moved to the San Diego area in 2004 and launched two labels:[21] mondayMEDIA and GemsTone; producing, directing, and distributing original and archival material.

In 2006 Monday brought together many notable recording artists and produced The Revenge of Blind Joe Death: The John Fahey Tribute Album, which was released on the Takoma Records label, distributed by Fantasy Records. Participating artists included, George Winston, Michael Gulezian, Alex de Grassi, Country Joe McDonald, Peter Lang, Stefan Grossman, Rick Ruskin, and Canned Fish (a one-time collaboration between Canned Heat members Adolfo de la Parra ("Fito") and Larry Taylor, and Country Joe and the Fish member Barry "The Fish" Melton).[22]

In 2008 Monday was asked by Bill Coben and Denny Bruce, founders of Benchmark Recordings, to join as President and run the label. The company has titles by The Fabulous Thunderbirds and Mike Bloomfield

In 2012 mondayMEDIA released the feature-length documentary Save KLSD: Media Consolidation and Radio[23], that documented about the history and effects of media consolidation on democracy in the United States. Filmed over several years, interviews included, Bill Moyers, Robert Reich, Van Jones, Phil Donahue, radio talkshow host Ed Schultz, Cenk Uygur, Amy Goodman, Thom Hartmann, radio talkshow host Stacy Taylor, John Nichols, Richard Wolffe, Randi Rhodes, Congressman Bob Filner, Jon Adelstein, Robert McChesney, Bob Edgar, Mike Aguirre, Marjorie Cohn, Michael Krasny, and author Eric Klinenberg.[24][25][26][27] It is produced by Jennifer Douglas and Jon Monday, and directed by Monday for distribution by mondayMEDIA. It was released on DVD in April 2012.[28][29]

Work with Huston Smith[edit]

Monday's work with Huston Smith yielded 2 DVDs, The Roots of Fundamentalism, in 2006 with Phil Cousineau interviewing Huston about the genesis of modern Christian Fundamentalism, which came into existence around 1900 in reaction to modern scholarship into the origin of the biblical scriptures, which raised questions about who really wrote them and when they were written. The 2nd DVD was from 2012, The Arc of Life: Huston Smith on Life, Death & Beyond, was Huston being interviewed by noted American gerontologist and psychologist, Ken Dychtwald. In 2015, Monday released a biographical documentary video about Smith's association with Vedanta and how it impacted his life and career.[30]

In tribute to Huston Smith, Monday received donations to research and restore the original 16mm films of Huston Smith's TV series from the 1950s that ran on National Educational Television (NET), the precursor of PBS.[31] Most of the episodes of The Religions of Man, were located in the archive of the Washington University in St. Louis. A few missing episodes were found in the Library of Congress. Most of the episodes of Smith's second NET series, Search for America, were also found and digitized. Permission for public viewing was granted by all the original stakeholders: KETC, Washington University, NET (via WNET the successor), and the Smith family.[32] The archive includes both NET television series: Religions of Man[33] and Search for America[34]

Political activism[edit]

Jon Monday enlisted in the army in March 1965. After completing his basic training and courses in advanced electronics, he volunteered to become a paratrooper and was assigned to the 82nd Airborne Division.[35][36]

As the Vietnam war escalated, Monday turned his attention to becoming a Conscientious Objector, feeling that the war did not reflect the high ideals of America and America's democracy. He refused to participate in the war and eventually he was given a court martial, at which he pointed out that the Nuremberg Trials of Nazi war criminals, had established the right and duty of soldiers to object to wars they felt to be illegal and immoral. Monday spent a year in jail and was given a Bad Conduct Discharge.[35] In 1975 Monday was given a full pardon by President Ford,[37][38] his discharge was changed to a Clemency Discharge, and was awarded a Certificate of Completion[39] by the Selective Service, showing he had fulfilled his duty to his country.

After the start of the Iraq War, Monday joined Veterans For Peace and became active in the San Diego Chapter, giving talks to local colleges,[40] organizing Arlington West memorials,[41][42][43][44] and speaking at anti-war rallies.[45][46]

In 2004 Monday also became involved with the Fallbrook Democratic Club,[44] becoming a board member and in 2008 was its President.[47] In 2011 he was reelected to the FDC's board as Vice President for the 2012 term[48]].

Credits[edit]

Published articles[edit]

  • Elizabeth Cotton: Folk Guitar Legend, Guitar Player, March 1975[50]
  • A Personal Lesson About the End of Time, The Vedanta Kesari, India, December 1993[51]
  • A Personal Lesson About the End of Time, Vedanta for East and West, UK, January / February 1994[52]
  • For the Historic Record, American Vedantist, US Vol. 3, no. 3, Fall 1997.[53]
  • I Saw Swamiji on TV Last Night, American Vedantist, US, Summer 1998[54]
  • The Limitations of Mental Models Vedanta, UK, November / December 2002[55]
  • The Limitations of Mental Models The Vedanta Kesari, India, April 2003[56]
  • The Gospel of Chomsky, Vedanta, UK, January / February 2005 [57]
  • Broken Pot, a Haiku Poem, American Vedantist, US, October 2013 [58]
  • J.D. Salinger & Vedanta, American Vedantist, US, January 2014 - co-written with Anna Monday [59]
  • Christopher Isherwood and Vedanta, American Vedantist, US, Winter 2014/2015 - co-written with Anna Monday [60]
  • The History and Impact of the Swami Prabhavananda – Christopher Isherwood Bhagavad Gita Translation, American Vedantist, US, Spring 2018 [61]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Listing in IMDB [1]
  2. ^ IMDB The Last Straw[2]
  3. ^ a b IMDB Entry for Save KLSD
  4. ^ "Executive Turntable". Billboard. May 20, 1972. p. 10.
  5. ^ "Takoma Treats Artists Like Royalty". Billboard. August 9, 1975. p. 78.
  6. ^ AllMusic.com Norman Blake
  7. ^ Allmusic.com Peter Rowan
  8. ^ AllMusic.com Jim Kwesken
  9. ^ AllMusic.com Laudon Wainwright
  10. ^ AllMusic.com Joseph Byrd
  11. ^ Billboard Magazine June 2, 1979
  12. ^ AllMusic.com Maria Muldaur
  13. ^ "Executive Turntable". Billboard. Jan 30, 1982. p. 4.
  14. ^ Billboard Magazine Dec. 11, 1982
  15. ^ Allmusic.com Bio
  16. ^ New York Times review of online videogame distribution systems [3]
  17. ^ a b "Increasing the Tempo". CIO. May 1, 1994. p. 52.
  18. ^ "Facts and information about Manufacture music in your store? MusicWriter hopes to revolutionize sheet music with computer production facilities". Music Trades. April 1, 1990.
  19. ^ Billboard Magazine May 7, 1994
  20. ^ "Don't Stop The Presses: Cutting-Edge Methods Allow Consumers Access To All The Music Fit To Print". Billboard. May 7, 1994. p. 78.
  21. ^ Fallbrook Village News, June 2, 2005, Page B-13
  22. ^ Allmusic.com Fahey Tribute Album
  23. ^ "Official website of Save KLSD documentary".
  24. ^ Review in the San Diego Free Press.[4]
  25. ^ Article on KLSD in the San Diego Union Tribune.[5]
  26. ^ East County Magazine Article
  27. ^ IMDB Entry for Save KLSD
  28. ^ East County Magazine Article
  29. ^ IMDB Entry for Save KLSD
  30. ^ [6]|Huston Smith and Vedanta
  31. ^ Huston Smith Archive [7]
  32. ^ [8]Official Huston Smith Archive Website
  33. ^ [9] Official Religions of Man Archive Website
  34. ^ [10] Official Search for America Archive Website
  35. ^ a b Interview with Monday in Daily Kos
  36. ^ Listing of Army experience
  37. ^ Presidential Proclamation 4313
  38. ^ President Ford's Pardon Program
  39. ^ Regulations for Alternative Service
  40. ^ Talk at Palomar College
  41. ^ Arlington West in Fallbrook, CA
  42. ^ Pictures from Arlington West in Fallbrook Archived 2010-07-16 at the Wayback Machine
  43. ^ "Article in North County Times about Veterans For Peace Activities". Archived from the original on 2012-09-08. Retrieved 2012-01-08.
  44. ^ a b Listing on FDC Website
  45. ^ ABC Channel 10 News video coverage of anti-war rally in San Diego on YouTube
  46. ^ Anti-war Rally in San Diego
  47. ^ Listing of five past presidents on FDC's website Archived 2011-05-02 at the Wayback Machine
  48. ^ FDC Website Archived 2011-05-01 at the Wayback Machine
  49. ^ IMDB Entry for Arc of Life
  50. ^ Guitar Player Magazine, USA, March 1975 - Page 14
  51. ^ The Vedanta Kesari, India, December 1993 - Page 492
  52. ^ Vedanta for East and West, UK, January / February 1994 - Page 16
  53. ^ American Vedantist, US - quoted in American Veda by Phil Goldberg
  54. ^ American Vedantist, US, Summer 1998 - Page 26
  55. ^ Vedanta, UK, November / December 2002 - Page 274
  56. ^ The Vedanta Kesari, India, April 2003 - Page 153
  57. ^ Vedanta, UK, January / February 2005
  58. ^ American Vedantist, US, 2013
  59. ^ American Vedantist, US, 2014
  60. ^ American Vedantist, US, 2014
  61. ^ American Vedantist, US, 2018}

External links[edit]