John_Lissauer

John Lissauer

John Lissauer

American musician and actor


John Lissauer is an American composer, producer, and performer. At the age of 19, he arranged the first recordings of Al Jarreau.[1] Lissauer went on to produce and arrange a pair of Leonard Cohen albums, including the song "Hallelujah" which was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2019.[2][3] He has been a composer or music producer for record albums, films, and radio and TV commercials. Lissauer received a Clio "Campaign of the Decade" award for his work for Polaroid.[4]

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Early life and education

Lissauer was raised in Hauppauge, New York. From age 11 until he graduated from Yale College, Lissauer studied with Joseph Allard at the Juilliard School. Lissauer attended Yale University and graduated with honors in music.[4]

Career

Lissauer plays piano, flute, oboe, clarinet, bassoon, and saxophone. He began arranging music for Al Jarreau while still at Yale. He taught at Yale for a year, and then became a session piano player.[4]

As a composer and music producer, he has worked with Al Jarreau, Bette Midler, Whitney Houston, and Luther Vandross.[4]

In Canada to produce a record for Lewis Furey, Lissauer was approached by Cohen at a Furey concert. The two met again several weeks later in New York to produce the New Skin for the Old Ceremony album.[5] John Miller, who played bass on the album, described Lissauer's approach to music as "very particular, European, simple but complex, highly imaginative".[6]:118 New Skin for the Old Ceremony would make the Top Thirty in the United Kingdom.[7]

After the album was completed, Cohen appointed Lissauer as the musical director for his next two tours; Lissauer played piano, organ, saxophone, and percussion on the tours.[6]:124

In 1983, Lissauer again worked with Cohen to produce the album Various Positions, including the arrangement of "Hallelujah", which would go on to become one of the most recorded songs of its time. Disappointed when Columbia Records decided against a U.S. release of the album, Lissauer decided to focus his efforts on composing for films and TV.[lower-alpha 1][6]:184–195

Although he had given up record producing, in 2006 Lissauer arranged several songs on Blue Alert by Anjani as a favor for Cohen.[6]:279

In 2022, Lissauer appeared in the documentary Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, A Journey, A Song, and composed the score.[8]

Personal life

Lissauer was married to Erin Dickins, with whom he restored an overgrown 35-acre property an hour north of New York City that had been owned previously by composer Frederick Loewe.[1][4] In 1984, he married Lilian, with whom he had one son.[4]

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Films

Short films/documentaries

  • Leonard Cohen: Dance Me to the End of Love (A-Acme Film Works)
  • The Truce (Independent, NYU)
  • Gone into the Clearing (Veech Productions)
  • Remember (Colassalvision)
  • På danske læber live (Auditorium)
  • Susanna (Hidden Layers)
  • Rooster (Jamison Newlander Productions)
  • Mickey Lee (Lawnrunner Films)
  • Crackshot Stu (Lawnrunner Films)
  • Clever Grete (Tabularassa Productions)
  • Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, A Journey, A Song (Sony)

Television

  • Pokémon (TV Series) (Pokémon USA)
  • Supernova (Hallmark Entertainment)
  • Flood: A River’s Rampage (Hallmark Entertainment)
  • An American Girl on the Home Front (American Girl)
  • No Big Deal (Cinétudes Films)
  • Shinchan (JPS Producties; Shin Ei Animation; TV Asahi)

Self

  • Marianne & Leonard: Words of Love (Sundance)
  • Leonard Cohen: Under Review 1934–1977 (Chrome Dreams Media)
  • Hallelujah: It Goes Like This (Geller/Goldfine Productions)
  • Hallelujah: Leonard Cohen, A Journey, A Song (Sony)

Notes

  1. Various Positions was released a year later by an independent label.

References

  1. Livingston, Barbara N. (9 Aug 2014). "It's Loverly -- 'My Fair Lady' Estate for Sale". The Journal News, White Plains NY.
  2. Hertweck, Nate. "Nina Simone, Tom Petty Recordings Among 2019 GRAMMY Hall Of Fame Inductions". grammy.com. Retrieved 24 January 2019.
  3. Yarnell, Laurie (26 August 2019). "This Local Musician Has Worked With Leonard Cohen, Whitney Houston, and Bette Midler". Westchester Magazine. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  4. Leibovitz, Liel (2014). A Broken Hallelujah : Rock and Roll, Redemption, and the Life of Leonard Cohen. New York. pp. 188–190. ISBN 978-0-393-08205-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. Reynolds, Anthony (2010). Leonard Cohen: A Remarkable Life. Omnibus Press. ISBN 9781849381383.
  6. Evans, Mike (2018). Leonard Cohen: An Illustrated Record. Plexus. p. 67. ISBN 9780859658690.
  7. Biese, Alex (August 14, 2022). "NJ producer helped make Cohen's 'Hallelujah' a song everyone knows". Daily Record. pp. C1, C3.

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