This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page . (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Shawn Patterson | |
---|---|
Born | Shawn Michael Patterson September 14, 1965 |
Occupation(s) | Composer, songwriter, music producer |
Website | www |
Shawn Michael Patterson (born September 14, 1965) is an American composer and songwriter. He wrote the song "Everything Is Awesome" for the Warner Brothers feature film The Lego Movie (2014).
Shawn Patterson was born in the small rural town of Athol, Massachusetts, to working-class parents Ronald and Joan Patterson. His father was a musician who played several instruments, including saxophone, guitar, trumpet, and pedal steel. However, Patterson's first draw to music came from watching comedian Steve Martin play the banjo on television during his Let's Get Small Tour.
Martin believed his banjo playing had potential, so Patterson begged his parents to purchase a 5-string banjo. He began taking lessons, studying Bluegrass and Dixieland styles of music. Although he enjoyed playing with his father, Patterson grew bored with the instrument after a year and began tampering with the banjo, attempting to attach a pickup to the head and run it through a guitar amplifier owned by a friend from school. Eventually, he switched to electric guitars.
In June 1977, Patterson and his father attended a screening of Star Wars . This was the first time film music caught his attention and contributed to his passion for music as a career. Patterson was also influenced by John Williams' 1978 Superman score, a movie he watched multiple times to try and absorb the music.
On June 2, 1979, Patterson's father died after suffering a brain aneurysm, leaving him, his two brothers, and mother, Joan Patterson. Patterson devoted himself to music and playing guitar. He was soon exposed to rock bands such as Van Halen, AC/DC, Queen, and The Who.
With the release of the Blues Brothers film in 1980, Patterson was heavily drawn to the influences of the film's soundtrack and band: Elmore James, Sam and Dave, and Booker T. & the M.G.'s. For the next four years, he was consumed by practicing and began writing songs. He played in and out of local bands until he graduated from Athol High School in 1983 and attended Berklee College of Music on scholarship at the age 17.
At Berklee, Patterson was exposed to great and talented musicians from around the world, often befriending and playing with the most skilled musicians he found. However, he experienced tremendous discomfort in his left hand, most likely due to a broken left collarbone as a child, and began experimenting with composition while at Berklee.
Upon leaving Berklee at the end of summer 1983, Patterson resumed playing around Massachusetts, teaching guitar lessons in local music stores and privately. He began studying with local legend jazz educator and pianist Mark Marquis, who steered him to the Fitchburg Public Library with the instructions to explore their jazz record collection.
Patterson's musical voyage took a serious turn as he discovered a wide range of jazz styles that would forever alter his musical course: Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Joe Pass, Miles Davis, Art Blakey, Charlie Christian, Jim Hall, and Wes Montgomery were beacons of inspiration which resulted in his dedication to studying with Marquis on guitar. Many times, he would study for 12 hours a day.
At this time, Patterson began experimenting with a broad range of songwriting material, having also been heavily influenced by Count Basie, Duke Ellington, and the Benny Goodman Sextet.
In 1986, Patterson left for Los Angeles to attend the Grove School of Music. While there, Patterson worked full-time during the night shift as security guard on Sunset Boulevard and would attend college in the daytime. Upon completion at Grove, he returned to Massachusetts, he continued his private studies with Marquis and began playing around the state in various jazz ensembles he led.
In 1988, Patterson accepted a scholarship to attend the prestigious Jazz in the July program of University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Patterson was hand selected out of many students to study privately and perform with the featured legendary educators and musicians, Dr. Billy Taylor and Max Roach. However, he never lost sight of his dream to compose music to picture and he wrote music for a few independent documentaries.
With $400 in his pocket and a few guitars in his backseat, Patterson drove to Los Angeles in 1990 to relocate permanently. He played some live gigs occasionally with friends he had met through Grove, but his priority was to build a small studio and begin producing his own music to get composing work.
He landed a job as a production assistant at the animated television show, Alvin and the Chipmunks , where in 1991, he sold his very first song for one of the albums of the series. The song was a rap song titled "Rock the House", of which he wrote the music and lyrics. At this time, Patterson was renting various people's small project studios to produce his own compositions and began writing for trailer houses, writing the music for large international advertisement campaigns such as The Fisher King , My Girl , and several others.
Patterson moved on to The Ren & Stimpy Show as Operations Manager in search of better pay. Soon, however, he moved into the audio/post production department and began working as a music editor. Here on the show, Patterson spent 8-10 hours a day cutting music to picture and experimenting with various classical styles to not only continue to the show's tradition of music but to push it into new territory stylistically.
Patterson continued selling his own music where he could and soon was being asked to write original songs and bits of score for the show. [1] Among several things, Patterson wrote a series of featured big band songs in the style of Frank Sinatra for the episode, "Ol' Blue Nose" directed by Steve Loter and sung by Billy West.
As The Ren & Stimpy Show came to an end, Patterson was already working as a freelance composer and songwriter. Billy West handed Patterson's demo CD out around Los Angeles and it soon found its way into the hands of Doug Langdale and Audu Paden, who hired him as composer for the animated series, Project G.e.e.K.e.R. in 1995.
Patterson was the score composer [2] and songwriter for three seasons on the Emmy Award-winning series Robot Chicken and series score composer for the award-winning TV series, El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny Rivera , created by The Book of Life's Jorge R. Gutierrez. He also scored the 1995 horror film The Demolitionist , and composed music for Disney Channel's Dave the Barbarian .
Patterson is also the score composer and songwriter on DreamWorks Animation's The Adventures of Puss in Boots , a Netflix original series about the character Puss from the Shrek franchise.
He has worked alongside a variety of directors in his career including Chris McKay, Henry Selick, Tom McGrath, Conrad Vernon, and Phil Lord and Chris Miller.
Patterson has also written and produced a number of songs for artists including Seth MacFarlane, Zac Efron, 50 Cent, Matthew Morrison, RZA, Ke$ha, Patrick Stump, Steven Tyler of Aerosmith, and many more.
Patterson himself guest starred as a pubescent Theodore in the Robot Chicken episode "Crushed by a Steamroller on My 53rd Birthday" on Adult Swim.
Patterson's most notable contribution was his song "Everything Is Awesome" for The Lego Movie (2014), which spent six consecutive weeks on the UK Singles and thirty-one on the UK Indie, peaking on both charts in early March 2014 at No. 17 and No. 2, respectively. In the US Billboard Hot 100, the song charted No. 57. The single had sold 418,000 copies in the United States by the end of June 2014, and became Gold certified at the end of that year. On July 14, 2017, it was certified Platinum, having sold more than 1,000,000 units since its release. It was nominated for Best Original Song by a number of organizations including the Motion Picture Academy and was performed live on-stage at the 2015 Academy Awards. The song was also remixed for the sequel, The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part (2019).
He is trained in martial arts under the instruction of Sifu Ed Monaghan and Sifu JoAnn Wabisca at Ekata Training Center in Valencia, California.
Patterson has promoted the conspiracy theory that the assassination attempt of former President Donald Trump was staged. [14]
Year | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1996 | Project G.e.e.K.e.R. | |
KaBlam! | Segment: "The Louie and Louie Show" | |
1998–2002 | Oh Yeah! Cartoons | Episodes: "Pete Patrick and Persian Puss: What About Lunch?", "Max" segments, "Tales from the Goose Lady" segments, "Hubbykins and Sweetiepie", "The Youngstar 3" |
2004–2005 | Dave the Barbarian | |
2005–2007 | The X's | |
2007–2008 | El Tigre: The Adventures of Manny Rivera | |
2008 | Tak and the Power of Juju | |
2009 | Titan Maximum | |
2010–2014 | Robot Chicken | Seasons 5–7 |
2012–2013 | The High Fructose Adventures of Annoying Orange | |
2014 | Max Steel | Season 2 |
2015–2018 | The Adventures of Puss in Boots | |
2016 | Victor and Valentino | Pilot episode |
Béla Anton Leoš Fleck is an American banjo player. An acclaimed virtuoso, he is an innovative and technically proficient pioneer and ambassador of the banjo, playing music from bluegrass, jazz, classical, rock and various world music genres. He is best known for his work with the bands New Grass Revival and Béla Fleck and the Flecktones. Fleck has won 17 Grammy Awards and been nominated 39 times.
John Scofield is an American guitarist and composer. His music over a long career has blended jazz, jazz fusion, funk, blues, soul and rock. He first came to mainstream attention as part of the band of Miles Davis; he has toured and recorded with many prominent jazz artists including saxophonists Eddie Harris, Dave Liebman, Joe Henderson, and Joe Lovano; keyboardists George Duke, Joey DeFrancesco, Herbie Hancock, Larry Goldings, and Robert Glasper; fellow guitarists Pat Metheny, John Abercrombie, Pat Martino, and Bill Frisell; bassists Marc Johnson and Jaco Pastorius; and drummers Billy Cobham and Dennis Chambers. Outside the world of jazz, he has collaborated with Phil Lesh, Mavis Staples, John Mayer, Medeski Martin & Wood, and Gov't Mule.
Antonio Sánchez is a Mexican drummer and composer. He is best known for his work with jazz guitarist Pat Metheny and as a composer of the film score for the 2014 film Birdman. The score earned him a nomination for the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score and BAFTA Award for Best Film Music; he won a Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media, the Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Score, and the Satellite Award for Best Original Score.
William Richard Frisell is an American jazz guitarist. He first came to prominence at ECM Records in the 1980s, as both a session player and a leader. He went on to work in a variety of contexts, notably as a participant in the Downtown Scene in New York City, where he formed a long working relationship with composer and saxophonist John Zorn. He was also a longtime member of veteran drummer Paul Motian's groups from the early 1980s until Motian's death in 2011. Since the late 1990s, Frisell's output as a bandleader has also integrated prominent elements of folk, country, rock ‘n’ roll and Americana. He has six Grammy nominations and one win.
John Patitucci is an American jazz bassist and composer.
Jesse Arnaud Cook is a Canadian guitarist. He is a Juno Award winner, Acoustic Guitar Player's Choice Award silver winner in the Flamenco Category, and a three-time winner of the Canadian Smooth Jazz award for Guitarist of the Year. He has recorded on the EMI, E1 Music and Narada labels and has sold over 1.5 million records worldwide.
Alf Faye Heiberg Clausen is an American film and television composer. He is best known for his work scoring many episodes of The Simpsons, for which he was the sole composer between 1990 and 2017. Clausen has scored or orchestrated music for more than 30 films and television shows, including Moonlighting, The Naked Gun, ALF and Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Clausen received an Honorary Doctorate of Music from Berklee College of Music in 1996.
Grant Kirkhope is a Scottish composer and voice actor for video games and film. Some of his notable works include GoldenEye 007, Banjo-Kazooie, Donkey Kong 64, and Perfect Dark, among many others. He has won an Ivor Novello Award for Mario + Rabbids Sparks of Hope and a World Soundtrack Award for The King's Daughter as well as being nominated for various BAFTA, ASCAP, and IFMCA awards.
Luciana Souza is a Brazilian jazz singer and composer who also works in bossa nova, pop, classical and chamber music. She won a Grammy Award in 2007, and has been nominated for seven others, most recently in 2024. Souza is considered to be one of jazz's leading singers and interpreters. The New York Times called her voice "smooth-surfaced, coolly sensuous and dartingly agile."
Joshua Bartholomew, known mononymously as Bartholomew, is a Canadian singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and producer. He writes and records music with his wife Lisa Harriton under the moniker JoLi. Bartholomew is a co-writer and producer of the Grammy and Oscar nominated song "Everything Is Awesome" from The Lego Movie.
Benoît Charest is a Canadian guitarist and film score composer from Quebec. He is best known for the soundtrack of the animated film The Triplets of Belleville (2003), for which he won a César Award for Best Music Written for a Film as well as a Los Angeles Film Critics Association Award for Best Music. The song "Belleville Rendez-vous", in particular, earned him an Academy Award nomination as well as a Grammy Award nomination.
Larry Klein is an American musician, songwriter, and record producer. He is based in Los Angeles.
Lisa Rae Harriton is an American singer-songwriter, keyboardist and sound designer. She writes and records music with her husband Joshua Bartholomew under the moniker JoLi. Harriton is a co-writer of the Grammy and Oscar nominated song "Everything Is Awesome" from The Lego Movie. She teaches Keyboard Performance at the Los Angeles College of Music.
Otis Taylor is an American blues musician. He is a multi-instrumentalist whose talents include the guitar, banjo, mandolin, harmonica, and vocals. In 2001, he was awarded a fellowship to the Sundance Film Composers Laboratory.
Bob Thiele Jr. is an American composer, musician and music producer of German descent who has contributed to many artists and TV shows. He is the son of producer Bob Thiele and singer Jane Harvey.
Shawn Pierce is a television and film score composer. He has resided in Vancouver, Los Angeles and Winnipeg.
Carlo Siliotto is an Italian film composer.
"Everything Is Awesome" is a song by Canadian indie pop duo Tegan and Sara featuring American comedy trio the Lonely Island. The theme song to the 2014 Warner Bros. Pictures film The Lego Movie, it was written by Shawn Patterson, Joshua Bartholomew, Lisa Harriton, and the Lonely Island. The single and pop version featured in the end credits of the movie were produced by Mark Mothersbaugh.
Daniel James Platzman is an American musician, songwriter, record producer and composer. He is best known as the former drummer for the pop rock band Imagine Dragons.
The Lego Movie (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack to the 2014 animated film The Lego Movie. It was released by WaterTower Music on February 4, 2014. The album features original score composed by Mark Mothersbaugh, containing of about 23 tracks in the album. He recorded two scores for the film: an electronic and a 40-piece orchestral music, with more than 100 players working on the score. He arranged few synthesisers and circuit bent to make use of the electronic music created for the film, which consisted of "bright, popping, almost frenetic music with an underpinning of emotional swells".