|
Multi-award
winning composer, producer, and musician, Brian Keane has always
taken the road less traveled; From his early days as a guitarist's
guitarist in duo with Larry Coryell, to his pioneering records
as a Grammy-winning producer and innovator in world music, or to becoming the foremost composer
in the world of documentaries, he has always carved out a unique
niche for himself. Keane's career has consistently been centered
around a timeless sense of quality, rather than the convention
and hype that so pervades the entertainment industry today.
A
career path such as this should read like the epitaph for a suffering
artist, but the remarkable thing is that Keane has been one of
the most successful and in-demand composer/producers in the entertainment
business, having scored over 350 films
that have won an impressive collection of awards
and producing over 100 CDs with
29 Billboard Top Tens, five of which went to #1. In 2002 Brian
Keane became the first composer in the history of the Emmys to
sweep all the Emmy nominations for Outstanding Music Composition
in a single year. In all, Brian has received 23 Emmy nominations, winning 10, along with many other awards. One would think that with
such a prolific career, Brian would be a Hollywood insider, but
he has accomplished all of this while rarely straying from his
home in the woods of Connecticut.
Brian
Keane made his name as a musician's musician, capable of writing
cutting edge symphonic music for orchestra or trading bebop lines
with the biggest names in jazz, while never losing sight of a
vision of music as, first and foremost, a medium for expressing
emotion and spirituality – in fact Keane's reputation as a composer
is built on his soaring melodies and moving scores. His best known
work as a producer is in the ethnic and New Age worlds, where
he has produced landmark spiritual and ethnic records with musicians
from all over the world.
Brian
was born in Philadelphia in 1953 to a musical family (his mother
Winifred is an avant garde composer and singer, his father George
is an Irish tenor, his grandfather Al was a Vaudeville entertainer,
his brother Geof plays cello, sings, and owns Merit Music in New
Canaan CT, and his sister Sheila has also sung professionally).
Although he spent some early years in the Berkshires, he grew
up primarily in Westport Connecticut, where he studied privately
with Julliard professor, jazz pianist, and "Rhythmic and Tonal
Principles" author John Mehegan. He graduated Staples High School
in Westport in 1971 and went on to attend Cornell University and
Ithaca College, where he graduated with honors in 3 years. While
there, he studied privately with Czech composer Karel Husa. Upon
graduation, Keane moved back to the New York area and found work
as a session guitarist, working with (among others) the late disco
star Vicky Sue Robinson, a jazz trio with Eddie Gomez and Jeremy
Steig, and a stint as musical director for Eartha Kitt. It was
his work with Gomez and Steig that caught the attention of Larry
Coryell. Coryell hired Brian, and the two toured in a duo for
several years, additionally performing in a trios with flamenco
great Paco De Lucia, and Polish violinist Michael Urbaniak. Keane
and Coryell recorded 3 records together. During the mid 80s, Brian
continued to tour with other jazz greats such as Bobby McFerrin,
the Brubecks, and Spyro Gyra.
In
1981, while he was still mid-stride in his career as a jazz guitarist,
Brian scored his first film, "Against Wind And Tide: A Cuban Odyssey"
(a documentary about the Mariel boat-lift), for film makers Jim
Burroughs and Suzanne Baugman. The film went on to be nominated
for an Academy Award. Starting out slowly, Keane's career as a
film composer gained steam by word of mouth throughout the early
80's as he continued touring and recording as a jazz guitarist.
In 1986 Suzanne Baugman asked him to score a film about the Ottoman
Empire called "Suleyman The Magnificent".
Not being familiar with any Turkish musicians, Brian asked famed
producer Arif Mardin, with whom he had worked earlier as a session
guitarist, to recommend some musicians for the score. While initially
stumped, Arif called back a few days later, and said that his
cook frequented a belly-dancing club in the "Hell's Kitchen" section
of New York City called "Fazil's". It was at "Fazil's" that Brian
discovered the talented multi-instrumentalist Faruk Tekbilek.
Employing Faruk's masterful musicianship over his own orchestration,
Brian created a soundtrack that was one of the first to use Western
and Middle Eastern instrumentation together. The highly successful
film was subsequently seen by German record company president
Eckart Rahn, who decided he had to have the soundtrack for his
Celestial Harmonies label. The soundtrack from "Suleyman
The Magnificent" became the first of a series of critically
acclaimed recordings made by Keane and Tekbilek, culminating in
the now-classic 1992 release "Beyond
The Sky". Brian also recorded two more solo records as a jazz
artist: 1987's "Snowfalls"
and 1992's "Common Planet" (for Blue Note). Although he had the
number one Jazz record on the radio in 1992, Brian chose not to
continue his solo career, as the labels at that time were trying
to push him into a "smooth jazz" format, which he refused to be
limited to. He shocked Blue Note by walking away from his recording
deal after his highly successful debut release. Finding the world
of a recording artist too limiting artistically, he has yet to
make a CD as a featured artist since.
In
the early 90's, Brian Keane was continuing to steadily develop
his career as a producer. Keane's steady stream of successes were
noticed by other musicians and labels, and Brian, again by word
of mouth inside the industry, began to receive offers for more
and more record projects.
Meanwhile,
in 1989, Brian scored a film for Simon and Goodman Films about
Jane Goodall's crusade for chimpanzees. The HBO film "Chimps:
So Like Us", won an Emmy Award, and was nominated for an Academy
Award as well. Working one floor up from Simon and Goodman was
Ric Burns, who had co-written and produced the landmark documentary
"The Civil War" with his brother, Ken. Ric hired Brian to score
his classic film "Coney Island". Brian has continued to score
all of Ric's films to date, including "The Donner Party", considered
one of the most influential documentaries of all time and named
as the best film of the year by the National Board of Review,
as well as the epic Emmy and Peabody winning documentaries "The
Way West" and, most recently, "New
York" (which is the biggest selling video in PBS history).
In 2002, Brian became the first composer in history to sweep all
of the Emmy nominations for "Outstanding Musical Score"
in a single year. Click
here to read the article in "Pro Sound News Online Daily".
Through
the 1990s, Keane's reputation steadily grew, still by word of
mouth, in the film and record communities. The critical success
of the "Way West" soundtrack,
along with the enormously successful "Celtic
Twilight" and "Song
of the Irish Whistle" series that Brian had produced
for the Hearts of Space label and which had sold in the millions
of copies, had gotten him noticed by Windham Hill records when
Native American musician Spotted Eagle asked Brian to produce
his 1996 debut for the label, "Closer
to Far Away". Brian was then given the opportunity to produce
the 1996 "Carols of Christmas"
which went to the top of the Billboard New Age charts selling
over 400,000 units. He has gone on to produce many records for
Windham Hill and BMG (who subsequently bought Windham Hill) ever
since, including the very successful "Winter's
Solstice" series, the "Summer
Solstice" series, and the "Thanksgiving"
collection. In the film world, while all this was going on, Keane
scored two mini-series for the late, great documentary film maker
Henry Hampton ("Eyes On The Prize" and "The Great Depression"),
as well as some classic documentaries for director Tom Lennon,
"The Battle Over ‘Citizen Kane'" ( Emmy and Peabody winner and
Academy Award Nominee ), and the celebrated Disney/PBS documentary
series "Long Journey Home: The
Irish In America" (for which he collaborated with Cheiftain's
leader Paddy Moloney and won a Grammy in 1998). He also scored
successful TV series for HBO and ABC, and scored several feature
films. In the record world, Keane continued expanding his client
base producing many top-selling records, and by now has been the
producer behind literally millions of record sales.
Today,
Brian still enjoys a full and diverse schedule, while living with
his wife and three children in Connecticut on a 12 acre estate
which adjoins a sizeable nature preserve, approximately 1 hour
by car from Manhattan. He has a state of the art studio
complex, a full time staff, and continues to be a major force
in music, and a major employer for New York area and world musicians.
|