Jason Frederick

Jason Frederick
Born 29 November 1970 (1970-11-29) (age 41)
Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
Occupations Composer, Musician
Years active 1987–present

Jason Frederick (born November 29, 1970) is a Canadian multi-instrumentalist and composer of music for films and television.

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Biography

Born in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada, Frederick was educated in Canada and the United States. He studied under composers Christopher Young, David Raksin, and Elmer Bernstein at the USC Thornton School of Music, as well as receiving private study with Leonard Rosenman and Joe Harnell.

He was in alternative rock band The Walk from 1987 to 1996, and continues to record under the name Lomax![1] .

Work

His film work includes Dawg, starring Denis Leary and Elizabeth Hurley, and 2B Perfectly Honest, starring John Turturro and Robert Vaughn, as well as contributions to Richard Gibbs' scores for the films Big Momma's House, 28 Days, and Like Mike.

He composed the music for the television show Darcy's Wild Life, starring Sara Paxton. Other television credits include Disney’s The Replacements, and the ABC Family network's Slacker Cats.

Frederick also provided additional score for Disney’s 101 Dalmatians II: Patch's London Adventure, which won the 2003 DVDX award for best musical score.[2]

His music can be heard in such programmes as How Clean Is Your House?, Good Girls Don't, Dirty Jobs, America's Got Talent, Oprah's Big Give, Property Ladder, Ace Of Cakes, Survival of the Richest, The Amazing Race, Lassie's Pet Vet, I Didn't Know I Was Pregnant, and Wedding Central.

In addition to film and television, Frederick has also scored television advertisements, promotional trailers, and documentary subjects. He also composed and performed the wraparound segments for Showtime’s On The Edge, and the opening theme for psychic Sylvia Browne’s live stadium appearances.[3]

He has played on recordings with artists such as Billy Preston,[4] Peter Thomas,[1] and Death By Chocolate, and has played on soundtrack sessions for film and television such as SyFy’s Battlestar Galactica, Warner Bros. Queen Of The Damned, and the WB Network's Summerland.

References

External links