Though he was born and spent the first 11 years of his life in California, it was in Australia, his father's native land, that
John Butler picked up the instrument that would later be vital to his career. After having shown interest in the guitar, the young
Butler was given his late grandfather's Dobro, and he quickly began learning to play different styles of music, including Indian, Celtic, bluegrass, and folk. His self-released cassette tape brought him interest in the city of Perth, where he was living, and soon after, in 1998, his first album, John Butler, with drummer
Jason McGann and bassist
Gavin Shoesmith, was released, followed in 2000 by the
JBT EP and
Three -- the first of his albums to also eventually came out in the U.S. -- in 2001 (
Showsmith, at this point, had decided to leave
the John Butler Trio, but he was replaced by
Rory Quirk and then later by
Andrew Fry, who joined the band for its 2002 American tour). By now a bona fide star in Australia, in 2003, shortly after the birth of his daughter Banjo, the guitarist issued the double-disc live set
Living 2001-2002 and the EP
Zebra, with
Sunrise Over Sea (for the latter,
the John Butler Trio had become
Butler with bassist
Shannon Birchall and drummer
Michael Barker) in 2004. This album sold well in Australia, debuting at number one on the ARIA charts, and led
Butler to an opening spot on
Dave Matthews' tour that year. Still with Jarrah, the company that he and fellow Aussies
the Waifs had founded in order to distribute their music overseas, and the same band,
Butler released
Grand National worldwide in March of 2007. ~ Marisa Brown, All Music Guide