Andrew Hollander

Andrew Hollander
Birth name Andrew Hollander
Born West Orange, New Jersey, United States
Occupation(s) Composer, songwriter, record producer
Associated acts Celine Dion, Babyface, Jacquie Lee, Dave Sitek, The Chevin, C. Gibbs, Vassy, G.E.M., David Johansen, White Rabbits, Yusef Lateef, Dana Parish, Mike Birbiglia, Adrienne Shelly, Keri Russell, Andreas Carlsson
Website www.andrewhollandermusic.com

Andrew Hollander is a songwriter, record producer, and film composer. Hollander contributed "Thankful" and "Always Be Your Girl" to Celine Dion's November 2013 album Loved Me Back to Life. In 2014, he co-wrote and co-produced Jacquie Lee's debut single "Broken Ones". Hollander's has collaborated with the Chevin, C. Gibbs, and G.E.M., for whom Hollander co-penned the number 1 single in China, "Someday I'll Fly." Hollander has worked with David Johansen, Vassy, Babyface, and White Rabbits. He played on three albums by his mentor Yusef Lateef.

Named one of Hollywood Reporter '​s "Composers on the Verge of the A List,"[1] Hollander has composed scores and written songs for feature films, including 2012's Mike Birbiglia film Sleepwalk with Me.[2] He also scored the film Waitress, for which he also co-wrote with Adrienne Shelly "Baby Don't You Cry (The Pie Song)." After hearing his music in "Waitress," director Amy Schatz tapped Hollander to score the HBO series, A Child's Garden of Poetry, as well as Don't Divorce Me, an HBO original documentary produced by Rosie O'Donnell and Sheila Nevins, featuring music by Hollander and the Roots. Hollander has been featured in Variety '​s Music For Screens issue alongside Hans Zimmer and Michael Giacchino,[3] sat on the Sundance BMI Composers Panel with George S. Clinton, Edward Shearmur, and Don Davis, and appeared as a panelist at the Hollywood Reporter/Billboard Film & TV Music Conference.

References

  1. "Cued Up". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 10, 2012.
  2. "Sleepwalk With Me: Sundance Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 13, 2012.
  3. "Composing: a collaborative process". Variety. Retrieved August 13, 2012.

External links