Rob Mounsey
Rob Mounsey | |
---|---|
Born |
Berea, Ohio, U.S. | December 2, 1952
Genres | Pop, rock, R&B |
Occupation(s) | Musician, composer, arranger, producer |
Instruments | Piano, keyboards |
Years active | 1976 – present |
Associated acts | Steely Dan, James Taylor, Donald Fagen, Paul Simon, Idina Menzel, Joe Cool, Chromeo, Gregory Porter, Billy Porter |
Website |
robmounsey |
Rob Mounsey (born December 2, 1952) is an American musician, composer, and arranger.[1]
Music career
Mounsey was born in Berea, Ohio, and grew up in Seattle, Washington, spending a few years each in Findlay and Granville, Ohio. At the age of 17, he was awarded a 1970 BMI Student Composer Award for his orchestral work Ilium, New York, Is Divided into Three Parts. He attended Berklee College of Music in Boston from 1971 to 1975.
In 1976, he moved to New York City to become a studio musician, arranger, and producer for a wide range of well-known artists, including Aaron Neville, Aztec Camera, Brian Wilson, Carly Simon, Chaka Khan, Chromeo, Diana Krall, Diana Ross, Donald Fagen, Eric Clapton, James Taylor, Karen Carpenter, Madonna, Michael Franks, Natalie Cole, Paul Simon, Rihanna, Steely Dan, and others. He performed on keyboards in 1981 for Simon and Garfunkel's Concert in the Park.
In 1985, he played keyboards in a New-York-based group called Joe Cool with Will Lee, Jeff Mironov and Christopher Parker. They released one album, Party Animals, on the Pony Canyon label in Japan, followed by a Japanese tour.
Mounsey released three solo albums as a recording artist: Dig (Sona Gaia, 1990), and two self-released albums on his own Monkeyville label, Back in the Pool and Mango Theory.
He toured as musical director and pianist for Idina Menzel in her Pops Symphony tour, for which he created nearly all of the arrangements.
He has composed for film and television, including the 1988 Mike Nichols film Working Girl (with Carly Simon), the film Bright Lights, Big City (with Donald Fagen) and the HBO hit series Sex and the City.[1] Mounsey wrote two long-running Emmy-winning themes for the television show Guiding Light. He is a six-time Grammy Award nominee, and a winner of two Emmy Awards.[1] He is a Zen Buddhist who resides in Brooklyn, New York.
Selected credits
- Brett Eldredge, "Glow" (arranger, conductor, pianist, co-producer)
- James Taylor, "Before This World" (arranger; number one album)
- Billy Porter, "Billy's Back on Broadway" (producer-arranger)
- Rihanna, string arrangements (including her hit "Unfaithful").
- Mary J. Blige, string arrangements, "Growing Pains"
- Usher, string arrangements, "Here I Stand"
- Leslie Mendelson, "Swan Feathers" (producer) (Grammy nomination)
- Deborah Cox, "Destination Moon" (producer-arranger)
- Steely Dan, "Gaucho" (arranger-pianist)
- Donald Fagen, "The Nightfly" (arranger-keyboards) (Grammy nomination)
- Paul Simon, "Graceland" (including uncredited horn arrangement on "You Can Call Me Al")
- Phil Collins, "Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)" (piano and all keyboards)
- Madonna, "Crazy for You" (arranger)
- Michael Franks, Passionfruit, Skin Dive, The Camera Never Lies (producer)
- Aretha Franklin, "Nessun Dorma" (arranger) (Grammy nomination)
- Idina Menzel, Pops orchestra arrangements for tours, "When You Wish upon a Star" from Holiday Wishes (producer)
References
- 1 2 3 "Robmounseymusic". Robmounsey.com. Retrieved 2013-06-28.