Eric Robertson (composer)

Last updated

Eric Nathan Robertson (born 6 April 1948) is a Scottish composer, organist, pianist, and record producer who has been primarily active in Canada. A two time Gemini Award winner, he has composed more than 60 film scores and written music for a number of television series in Canada and the United States. He has also written a considerable amount of choral and organ music, sometimes with instrumental or symphonic accompaniment. His works display a strong influence of Ralph Vaughan Williams, Charles Wood, and William O. Minay, the latter of whom he studied with for over 30 years. He has also produced and played on numerous commercial albums by a variety of artists and released several of his own albums of popular songs and film themes under the name Magic Melodies. [1]

Contents

Life and career

Born in Edinburgh, Robertson began his musical training in organ, piano, and music theory in his native city where he was a pupil of E. Francis Thomas, Eric Reid, and William O. Minay. In 1963, at the age of 15, he entered The Royal Conservatory of Music (RCM) in Toronto, Canada, where he was a student of Charles Peaker (organ) and Samuel Dolin (music composition). He graduated with an associate degree from the RCM in 1966. In 1969, he was made a Fellow of the Royal Canadian College of Organists. He also continued his studies with Minay up into the 1990s through annual trips back to Edinburgh. [1]

Robertson began his professional music career as a teenager while a student at the RCM; serving as the music director at St. John's Lutheran Church in Toronto and playing the organ in the Toronto R&B band Majestics. He soon began composing music for both the church and the recording studio, was active as a studio musician, and a frequent recitalist on CBC Radio; pursuits that he has continued in throughout his career. In 1966, he became the organist/choirmaster of Humbercrest United Church, leaving there in 1990 to assume a similar post at St. Paul's, Bloor Street where he remained until 2009. [1]

As a record producer, Robertson has produced and played on recordings by artists like Liona Boyd, Moe Koffman, Nana Mouskouri, and Roger Whittaker among others. He has also recorded several of his own albums of popular songs and movie themes under the name Magic Melodies, the first of which sold 300,000 copies in Canada and more than 1.25 million copies internationally. In 1978, he became music director for the CBC Television program The Tommy Hunter Show . [1]

Robertson began his work as film score composer with the feature film A Quiet Day in Belfast (1974). He next composed the music for the television film The Insurance Man from Ingersoll (1975) and the television series Readalong (1976). He has remained active composing music for both the big screen and television. His feature film credits include Plague (1979), If You Could See What I Hear (1982), Spasms (1983), That's My Baby! (1984), Millennium (1989), Full Disclosure (2001), and Elliot Smelliot (2004), among others. He has composed music for television films like Shocktrauma (1982), A Muppet Family Christmas (1987), The Challengers (1990), Getting Married in Buffalo Jump (1990), and A Holiday to Remember (1995). He wrote the music for the television mini-series Rocket Science (2002) and for television series like Read All About It! (1979-1983), Street Legal (1987-1994), OWL/TV (1989-1994), and Black Harbour (1996-1999); the latter of which he was awarded his first Gemini Award for in 1996. He received his second Gemini Award in 2001 for the music for the documentary film Canada: A People's History and was most recently nominated for a Gemini in 2007 for the documentary Hockey: A People's History . He also composed the music for the animated series of Watership Down (1999-2001) and contributed music to a number of television specials featuring The Muppets . [1]

Outside of television and film, Robertson is best known for his choral and organ compositions. His Four Songs of Remembrance (1983) for choir and orchestra was commissioned and recorded by the Orpheus Choir of Toronto, and his choral work Another Spring (1988) was commissioned by the Guelph Spring Festival. His Jazz Magnificat (1985) was written for Ward Swingle and The Swingle Singers and his Variations on the 'Sussex Carol' was commissioned and recorded by the Elmer Iseler Singers. Also notable among his choral pieces is Prewett in Love (1988), which contains clarinet and piano accompaniment. [1]

Discography

Charting albums

List of albums, with selected details and chart positions
TitleAlbum detailsPeak chart
positions
AUS
[2] [3]
Piano Hits
  • Released: 1983
  • Format: LP, Cassette
  • Label: J&B (JB 131)
6
All New Piano Hits '84
  • Released: 1983
  • Format: LP, cassette
  • Label: J&B (JB 169)
22
Piano Hits of the '80s
  • Released: March 1990
  • Format: LP, cassette
  • Label: J&B (JB 169)
58

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robbie Robertson</span> Canadian singer, songwriter and guitarist (1943–2023)

Jaime Royal "Robbie" Robertson was a Canadian musician. He was lead guitarist for Bob Dylan in the mid-late 1960s and early-mid 1970s, guitarist and songwriter with the Band from their inception until 1978, and a solo artist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ernest MacMillan</span> Canadian conductor

Sir Ernest Alexander Campbell MacMillan, was a Canadian orchestral conductor, composer, organist, and Canada's only "Musical Knight". He is widely regarded as being Canada's pre-eminent musician from the 1920s through the 1950s. His contributions to the development of music in Canada were sustained and varied, as conductor, performer, composer, administrator, lecturer, adjudicator, writer, humourist, and statesman.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Healey Willan</span> Anglo-Canadian composer and organist (1880–1968)

James Healey Willan was an Anglo-Canadian organist and composer. He composed more than 800 works including operas, symphonies, chamber music, a concerto, and pieces for band, orchestra, organ, and piano. He is best known for his church music.

Leroy Robertson was an American composer and music educator.

William Patrick Gowers was an English composer, mainly known for his film scores.

Gerald Albert Bales, was a Canadian organist and composer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arthur Benjamin</span> Australian composer, pianist, conductor and teacher

Arthur Leslie Benjamin was an Australian composer, pianist, conductor and teacher. He is best known as the composer of Jamaican Rumba (1938) and of the Storm Clouds Cantata, featured in both versions of the Alfred Hitchcock film The Man who Knew Too Much, in 1934 and 1956.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frederick C. Silvester</span> British organist and composer

Frederick C. Silvester was a British organist and composer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jeff Danna</span> Canadian film composer

Jeff Danna is a Canadian film composer. He has composed or co-composed scores for a wide range of films and television, including The Boondock Saints (1999), Resident Evil: Apocalypse (2004), Silent Hill (2006), The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus (2009), The Good Dinosaur (2015), Storks (2016), The Breadwinner (2017), The Addams Family (2019), Onward (2020), Guillermo Del Toro’s Tales of Arcadia (2019-2021), Nora Twomey’s My Father’s Dragon (2022) and Julia (2022).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Harvey (composer)</span> British composer and musician

Richard Allen Harvey is an English composer and musician. Originally of the mediaevalist progressive rock group Gryphon, he is best known now for his film and television soundtracks. He is also known for his guitar concerto Concerto Antico, which was composed for the guitarist John Williams and the London Symphony Orchestra.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frederick Swann</span> American organist and choral conductor (1931–2022)

Frederick Lewis Swann was an American church and concert organist, choral conductor, composer, and president of the American Guild of Organists. His extensive discography includes both solo organ works and choral ensembles he has conducted.

Robert Ashfield was an English cathedral organist, choirmaster and composer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Royal Canadian College of Organists</span>

The Royal Canadian College of Organists (RCCO), founded in 1909, is a national association of organists and church musicians in Canada, with 28 centres from Victoria, British Columbia to Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. The National Office is in Toronto.

Donald Quan is a Canadian composer of film and world music, best known for writing the scores to television shows Relic Hunter and Mutant X.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Melville Cook</span> British musician

Alfred Melville Cook was a British organist, conductor, composer and teacher.

Stanley Drummond Wolff was an English organist, choirmaster, composer, and music educator who was primarily active in North America. His compositional output primarily consists of anthems for choir and works for solo organ. In the 1980s he completed and published four volumes of hymns. Many of his compositions have been published by Concordia Publishing House and MorningStar Music Publishers.

Roman Toi was an Estonian-Canadian composer, choir conductor, and organist. Influenced by Ralph Vaughan Williams, Toi's music is melodic, lyrical, and melancholic in style. His compositional output includes nine cantatas, three symphonies, and more than 80 choral works. Many of his compositions have become part of the standard Estonian choral repertoire.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Organist</span> Musician who plays any type of organ

An organist is a musician who plays any type of organ. An organist may play solo organ works, play with an ensemble or orchestra, or accompany one or more singers or instrumental soloists. In addition, an organist may accompany congregational hymn-singing and play liturgical music.

The Donald Brittain Award is a Canadian television award, presented by the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television to honour the year's best television documentary on a social or political topic. Formerly presented as part of the Gemini Awards, since 2013 it has been presented as part of the Canadian Screen Awards. The award may be presented to either a standalone broadcast of a documentary film, or to an individual full-length episode of a news or documentary series; documentary films which originally premiered theatrically, but were not already submitted for consideration in a CSA film category before being broadcast on television, are also considered television films for the purposes of the award.

Lee Orville Erwin was an American theatre organist who played an important part in a revival of interest in the silent film era. His career began as an organist accompanying first-run silent films in the 1920s. He received classical training in Cincinnati and France, and then began a career as organist and arranger for radio, significantly at WLW and CBS Radio, the latter in association with Arthur Godfrey, that lasted through the mid-1960s. When his radio career ended he was commissioned to provide complete new scores for silent films exceeding seventy in number, and in this capacity and as an organist for silent film tours and exhibitions he received widespread critical acclaim. Erwin was active into his early 90s.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Kate Daller. "Eric Robertson". The Canadian Encyclopedia . Archived from the original on 7 June 2011.
  2. Kent, David (1993). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992 (illustrated ed.). St Ives, N.S.W.: Australian Chart Book. p. 154. ISBN   0-646-11917-6.
  3. Ryan, Gavin (2011). Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010 (PDF ed.). Mt Martha, Victoria, Australia: Moonlight Publishing. p. 237.