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NEW
AGE PIONEER SPENCER BREWER IS BACK WITH A NEW CD, CINEMATIC
SPENCER
BREWER
CINEMATIC
Spencer Brewer is
not only a multi-million-selling composer, pianist and producer, but
also a connoisseur of many of the greatest film scorers of all time.
For his latest contemporary instrumental recording, Cinematic,
Brewer has turned his talents to creating a collection of original
material specifically meant to evoke visual imagery and also serve as
his homage to movie music.
“I have been a fan
of film music since I was a small boy,” explains Brewer, “and as a
tribute to that often over-looked art-form, I decided to make an album
filled with pieces I feel have the same ambience of classic movie and
television scores.” In fact, some of the music has already been used in
films and television. Brewer, who extensively collects recordings by
his favorite film composers, has been most influenced by Bernard
Hermann, John Barry and Ennio Morricone, but also has studied the works
of Erich Korngold, Franz Waxman, Max Steiner, Alfred Newman, Thomas
Newman, Miklos Rozsa, Esquivel, John Williams, Maurice Jarre, Howard
Shore, Mark Isham and Danny Elfman.
Cinematic
is a two-CD set featuring a cover painting by Salvador Dali. The first
CD is subtitled “Black & White” and features Brewer playing solo piano
on a dozen pieces with the addition of guitar and flute on the final
tune. The second CD, subtitled “Technicolor,” contains compositions
played by various artists led by Brewer on piano, synthesizers, Hammond
B-3 and a pump organ built in 1888. “Technicolor” has ensemble
arrangements of ten of the same tunes that appear on “Black & White”
plus four different pieces. The musicians on Cinematic are top
new age, classical and jazz players including acoustic guitar virtuoso
Alex de Grassi, reedman Paul McCandless (Paul Winter, Oregon), flutist
Matt Eakle (David Grisman, Suzanne Ciani), harmonica player Norton
Buffalo (Steve Miller, Kenny Loggins), drummer Mark Walker (Oregon,
Paquito D’Rivera), and bassists Steve Rodby (Pat Metheny, Chuck Mangione),
Todd Phillips (David Grisman, Psychograss) and Cliff Hugo (Rick Braun,
Richard Elliott), plus other percussion, wind and string players
including the renowned Quartet San Francisco led by Jeremy Cohen.
The music on
Cinematic ranges from new versions of a couple of Brewer’s
most-beloved compositions (“Quintessence,” “Dreamgift”) to new material
(“Into The Mirror,” “Satie’s Forgotten Dream,” “Say What!?”). Some of
the music has already been used in the cinema: “Heartwood” was
commissioned for the movie of the same name starring Jason Robards and
Hillary Swank, and Brewer also wrote the title theme for Lee Mun Wah’s
acclaimed documentary film on racism, “Last Chance for Eden.” “Trip to
Glory” has been used in several Olympics’ broadcasts, became the Big
Brothers-Big Sisters theme, was used as Hank Aaron’s theme song and
helped sell Arby’s Roast Beef in television commercials. “Blueberry
Street” has a Porgy & Bess-feel to it and displays Brewer’s early blues
roots, while the rip-roaring “Lupin Swing” displays elements of
vaudeville, Broadway and ragtime. “Caravanserai” would have worked in
Valentino’s “The Sheik” or Sean Connery’s “The Wind and The Lion.”
“Fellini’s Carousel” pays tribute to the Italian film master. “Walls
That Move” was written in George Lucas’ Skywalker Sound huge soundstage
where the walls actually are capable of moving. “Cinematic” is a
soaring tour-de-force of classic film sounds creating several moods,
building tension and then letting the listener down easy at the end as
the lights come up and the credits roll.
“I first got into
movie music when I was watching the classic monster films from the 1930s
– “Frankenstein,” “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” “The Mummy” – and then
“Creature From the Black Lagoon” in the Fifties and “Jason and the
Argonauts” in the early Sixties,” remembers Brewer. “The music was so
powerful, it knocked me out. I realized how important music is to the
mood, storyline and character development in films. So then I started
paying attention to the film composers and found music they did in other
genres.”
Spencer, who was
born and raised in Dallas, Texas, began playing piano at age seven, and
although he took lessons for several years, he learned the most from his
grandmother, who taught him Southern blues and boogie-woogie. He played
in rock’n’roll bands throughout high school and then moved to Austin for
its thriving music scene. Brewer became the accompanist for modern
dance troupes (Deborah Hay, Martha Graham, Daniel Llanes and Suzanne
Grace), which “pushed my envelope as to the possibilities of spontaneous
and interpretive music.” Brewer also wrote the music for “Once Upon A
Time” and “Willowmancifoot the Dragon,” two musicals written in New York
City. His first recording, Stellar Notion, was done in 1980 and
was vocal music from those musicals.
After moving to
Northern California at the beginning of the Eighties, Brewer began
recording original instrumental music, became a leader in the forefront
of the burgeoning new age music movement and sold more than a million
albums under his own name. He also was involved in producing,
arranging, engineering and contributing tunes to albums that sold an
additional several million units. It began with his albums Where
Angels Dance, Shadow Dancer, Emerald, Portraits (a Gold Album
with sales over half a million), Dorian’s Legacy (Top 10 on
Billboard’s New Age sales chart and #1 on the R&R’s NAC
airplay chart with sales of more than a quarter-million), Piper’s
Rhythm (#1 on both of those same charts), Romantic Interludes
and a half-dozen more. He created the music for several dozen
NorthSound concept albums in which he often went uncredited, but
stretched beyond new age music by exploring pop, jazz, bluegrass, big
band and world music. Spencer also recorded several projects with other
musicians who shared credits on the album covers – one with Tingstad &
Rumbel, another with electronic music pioneer Craig Anderton and a jazz
CD with Paul McCandless.
Brewer opened his
own studio, Laughing Coyote, near Ukiah, California, nestled in the
redwoods, and from the mid-Nineties to the mid-00s, he spent most of his
time recording many other artists (plus some time out recuperating from
a head-on car collision). He produced, engineered or performed on
recordings by artists such as Alex de Grassi, Holly Near, Gene Parsons,
Darol Anger, Steve Erquiaga, Kostia, Joe Craven, Barbara Higbie, Michael
Manring, Phil Aaberg, Fred Simon, Georgia Kelly, Kirtana and many
others; and oversaw productions that featured acts from John Bucchino to
the Duke Ellington Band.
Spencer also
contributed music to the films “Home Alone 2,” “The Gifts of Grief”
(starring Isabel Allende and Rev. Cecil Williams) and “Color of Fear”
(another ground-breaking movie on racism from Lee Mun Wah). Brewer
wrote the national theme songs for the YMCA and the Japanese Postal
Service. His music has been used on more than 2,000 television shows
all over the world including “Sex and the City,” “The Oprah Winfrey
Show,” “L.A. Law,” “Sixty Minutes,” “Thirty Something” and broadcasts of
the last five Olympics.
In addition to
creating music, Brewer has run a record company owns a music store,
rebuilds pianos, collects vintage microphones and gramophones, had his
own radio show and produced hundreds of concerts in Mendocino County.
He contributes to his community in many ways including helping found the
Redwood Valley Outdoor Educational Facility for children and the Ukiah
Educational Foundation which helps fund students and schools. He also
has founded and created patents with the high-tech company HighWired
Inc. which allows voicemail or email users to add music, sounds and
visual content to their messages.
“Part of what
makes movies magical and deeply moving is the music soundtrack married
to the mood of what we are watching,” explains Brewer. “In our own
lives, we generally pick music to listen to because of how we are
feeling or want to feel that day. I hope the music on Cinematic
can serve as a soundtrack for people’s lives.”
Many of Brewer’s
recordings are available at his website (spencerbrewer.com).
Cinematic also can be purchased online at Cdbaby.com and Amazon.com,
as well as numerous digital download locations such as iTunes and
Rhapsody. Check him out on YouTube as well.
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