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Lonnie Chance grew up on a farm four mile east and few miles south
of a small town in South Dakota. Lonnie played the cornet in high school
band. By the time he was a senior he was teaching himself guitar. Learning
came easy and he soon started a rock band. As time passed he started
writing songs for the group.
Shortly thereafter, his musical youth and ambition were nipped in the
bud. A war was ragging and unable to afford college he enlisted in the
U.S. Navy. There he was trained as a US Navy Hospital Corpsmen and ended
up serving a tour of duty with the Third Marine Division, Ninth Marines,
Lima Company. His duties were taking care of the sick and wounded Marines
in the dense jungles of Vietnam; and within months, he was decorated
with the Combat Action Ribbon, the Purple Heart, and the Bronze Star
with a Combat V for Valor.
Upon his release from the military Lonnie went to college, he studied
classical guitar and composition. After receiving a degree in Music
and Broadcasting he moved west from Michigan and settled in Phoenix,
Arizona. Not long after his arrival he began teaching private guitar
lesson, playing local gigs, and writing songs. By the middle of the
eighties he was voted the music instructor of the year by his peer musicians
in the valley of the sun.
After managing a small recording studio for a local company, Lonnie
started building his own recording studio. "I started with a Commodore
64 computer and one Prophet 600 synthesizer and a little Cassette 4
track." Over the years his studio grew with his production and writing
skills.
In the early nineties two of his songs "Live With Me Forever"
and "The Eagle and The Dolphin," broke onto the charts.
In addition to the release of his debut CD "The Jungleman,"
Lonnie continues to promote his songwriting, production, and artistic
talents, while enjoying the sunshine of his quiet Arizona lifestyle.
e-mail
lonnie@thejungleman.com
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