Joe Sumner

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Joe Sumner
Joe Sumner opening for The Police in 2007
Sumner with Fiction Plane opening for The Police at Madison Square Garden, New York, 1 August 2007 (photo Lionel Urman)
Background information
Birth name Joe Sumner
Origin London, England
Genres
Occupation(s) Musician, singer-songwriter, app developer
Instruments Vocals, bass
Years active 1999-present
Labels
Associated acts
Website fictionplane.com

Joe Sumner is the lead singer, songwriter, and bassist for the rock band Fiction Plane, and co-founder of the company Vyclone, which makes an app for recording video from multiple angles.[1]

Musician

Sumner, a native of England, learned to play guitar and drums when he was a teenager and was inspired to write songs when he heard Nirvana's album Nevermind. He formed a band with a school friend, bassist Dan Brown, which eventually became Fiction Plane when it was joined by British guitarist Seton Daunt.[2]

Fiction Plane recorded its first album, Everything Will Never Be OK (2003), without a full-time drummer, relying instead on session musician Abe Laboriel Jr. Soon after, during an audition, Fiction Plane found its drummer, Pete Wilhoit, an Indiana native who drove from Bloomington to Manhattan to try out for the band, a boldness that impressed Sumner as much as his superior percussive skills.[3]

After that album, Fiction Plane released Bitter Forces and Lame Race Horses (2005), Left Side of the Brain (2007), Paradiso (2009), Sparks (2010), and Mondo Lumina (2015). The band received much attention when it was the opening act for The Police's reunion tour in 2007. Joe Sumner is the son of Sting, The Police's lead singer and bassist.[4]

Entrepreneur

In 2010, the day after performing a concert, Sumner found videos of the show on YouTube that fans had filmed with their smartphones. Speculating that fans' clips could be linked into an interesting compilation, he co-founded the company Vyclone with David King Lassman to create a product of the same name.

The app unites social media with individual video recording. Several people can film an event simultaneously with their smartphones, then upload their clips with Vyclone software, which assembles the clips into a movie shown from multiple angles. The app invites a variety of uses beyond filming concerts.[5][6]

References

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