Jonn Serrie

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Jonn Serrie
Jonn Serrie 20110312.jpg
Background information
Birth nameJohn A. Serrie
Born27 January 1951
Waterford, Connecticut, United States
Origin Atlanta, Georgia, United States
Genres Space music, new-age, ambient
Occupation(s)composer
Years active1980s–present
Labels Miramar, New World Music, Valley Entertainment, Narada Productions
Website www.thousandstar.com

Jonn Serrie is an American composer of space music, a genre of ambient electronic music, and New Age music. He has recorded at least 18 albums and worked on projects for Lucasfilm, IMAX Corporation, NASA, the United States Navy, Hayden Planetarium, Expo Seville, and CNN.

Contents

Musical career

Serrie has been composing and performing music for planetariums since the early 1980s. His first widely available album, And the Stars Go With You, was in memory of the astronauts lost in the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster in 1986. The following album, Flightpath, contains six songs that commemorate the pre-space-age test pilots of Edwards Air Force Base in the 1950s. Jonn is a pilot with advanced instrument and commercial ratings and flies for the Civil Air Patrol as a search-and-rescue pilot.

Serrie's next album, Tingri, was based on a remote village in Tibet. It was his way of infusing more spiritual and romantic emotion into his music. In so doing, he strayed a bit from his space music roots but without sacrificing his trademark sound. In 1992 and 1994, he made two albums in which he put his earlier planetarium work from the 1980s on CD, on Planetary Chronicles, Volume 1 and Planetary Chronicles, Volume 2. In between, in 1993 and 1995, Serrie composed his own musical science fiction story based on a fictional Century Princess in Midsummer Century and Ixlandia. In 1993, he submitted a song from his planetarium collection called "Soft Landing" to a Various Artists album sponsored largely by Steve Roach, a prominent electronic musician. This song is only available on this recording. In 1997, Serrie's first Christmas album Upon a Midnight Clear was released; he rearranged known and less-known Christmas songs from around the world in his unique style. Due to its popularity, Serrie released two more Christmas albums, Yuletides in 2001 and Merrily on High in 2004.

In 1998, Serrie collaborated with David Carradine on his tai chi video series and released a CD soundtrack based on the videos, called "Dream Journeys". Also in 1998, he took a trip to shamanic America, which resulted in his musical collaboration with several Native American elders on "Spirit Keepers".

In 1999, Serrie appeared as a special guest of honor at the 30th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Moon landing mission, which was held in Cape Canaveral. As the final act of the after-dinner entertainment, he played a specially composed song "Out of the Blue", which has not been officially released.

The year 2000 brought Serrie's "best of" space music compilation, Century Seasons. On this album two new songs appeared, although "Deep Mystery" reappeared on "Lumia Nights" two years later in a slightly shorter version. The other bonus track, "Andromeda Dream", appeared on this album. In 2000 Serrie collaborated with flutist Gary Stroutsos on the Narada label, on an album called Hidden World.

Since 2000, several of Serrie's albums have appeared on independent labels. 2002 brought Lumia Nights, a space romance release on Valley Entertainment, composed in the style of Ixlandia and Midsummer Century. In 2003, he signed a contract with New World Music, a major label in England, which included the reissue of his earlier Miramar releases. 2003 also brought The Stargazer's Journey with liner notes from famed astronomer David H. Levy. This was a return to form in Serrie's more traditional space music style.

Serrie took an interesting musical turn in 2005 with Epiphany, Meditations on Sacred Hymns, featuring his arrangement of traditional hymns and psalms, which he dedicated to his grandmother, his primary childhood church organ and piano teacher. He followed this up in 2006 with Sunday Morning, an independent release for autistic children and their parents. A portion of the profits from this CD goes to support for autism organizations in the United States.

Also in 2006, music from one of his albums was used in the hit Hollywood movie What the Bleep Do We Know!? Serrie scored the award-winning IMAX short film Hubble: Galaxies Across Space and Time as well as the popular astronomy software program Starry Nights and Space.com's Eyes on Mars DVD.

In 2009, Serrie released the album Thousand Star. [1]

In 2011 the album Sunday Morning was expected be released, available worldwide. In 2014 the album "Day Star" was released available worldwide on New World Music In 2017 the album "The Sentinel" was released available worldwide on New World Music

Jonn Serrie founded the Galaxy Music Scholarship in 2001, a US$1000 annual scholarship for graduating high school seniors desiring a career in new age and space music composition. He lives in Atlanta, Georgia.

Discography

Studio albums

Compilation albums

Collaboration albums

See also

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References

  1. "Jonn Serrie Thousand Star". www.newworldmusic.us. Archived from the original on 1 November 2009. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  2. "Dr. Jerry Alan Johnson* / Jonn Serrie - Tai Chi Meditation, Vol. 1: Life Force Breathing (1994, CD)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2020-03-10.
  3. "Dr. Jerry Alan Johnson* / Jonn Serrie - Tai Chi Meditation, Vol. 2: Eight Direction Perception (1994, CD)". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2020-03-10.
  4. "Lumia Nights". Valley Entertainment. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  5. "Epiphany: Meditations on Sacred Hymns". Valley Entertainment. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  6. "Hidden World Beyond". Valley Entertainment. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  7. "Christmas Prayers". Valley Entertainment. Retrieved 29 July 2010.
  8. "Jonn Serrie - Sunday Morning | Releases". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2020-03-10.
  9. "Century Seasons The Space Music of Jonn Serrie". Discogs.com. 2002-01-01. Retrieved 2020-03-10.
  10. "Music for Accelerated-Consciousness Love-Making | Iasos". Iasos.bandcamp.com. Retrieved 2020-03-10.