Peter_Robinson_(musician)

J. Peter Robinson

J. Peter Robinson

English film and television score composer


John Peter Robinson (born 16 September 1945) is an English composer, musician, and arranger known for his film and television scores.[1]

Quick Facts Birth name, Born ...

Early years and pop music career

He studied piano and composition at the Royal Academy of Music and enjoyed a successful career as a session keyboardist throughout the 1970s, working with artists such as Brand X, Phil Collins, Mike Rutherford, Shawn Phillips, Quatermass, Sun Treader/Morris Pert, Carly Simon, Bryan Ferry, Stealers Wheel, Andrew Lloyd Webber, The Hollies and others. As a successful pop arranger, he has also collaborated in later years with Eric Clapton, Manhattan Transfer, Al Jarreau and Melissa Etheridge, among others.[2][3]

Film music career

He made his film music debut as a solo composer in 1985, scoring a number of successful films including The Believers (1987), The Kiss (1988), Cocktail (1988), Blind Fury (1989), Wayne's World (1992), Wes Craven's New Nightmare (1994), Highlander III: The Sorcerer (1994), Vampire in Brooklyn (1995, also directed by Wes Craven), Firestorm (1998), The World's Fastest Indian (2005) and The Bank Job (2008). He also composed for numerous television films and series including The Wonder Years, Eerie, Indiana, Tales from the Crypt, Todd McFarlane's Spawn, The Outer Limits, and Charmed.[4][5]

In addition he scored the horror films The Wraith (1986) and The Gate (1987) with Michael Hoenig, and scored the English-language version of Godzilla 2000. He also composed music for the 1989 movie The Wizard, as well as two songs from the film Shelter (2007), and music in dozens of episodes of the TV series Charmed.[6][7][8]

Discography

Quatermass

Singles:

  • 1970: "Black sheep of the family/Good Lord Knows"
  • 1971: "Gemini/Black sheep of the family"
  • 1971: "One Blind Mice/Punting"

Album:

Jesus Christ Superstar

Shawn Phillips

  • 1970: Contribution
  • 1970: Second Contribution
  • 1971: Collaboration: Piano, organ, bass on "Moonshine" and orchestral arrangements on "The Only Logical Conclusion"
  • 1973: Bright White: Keyboards and orchestral arrangements on "All The Kings and Castles"
  • 1974: Furthermore
  • 1974: Do you wonder
  • 1976: Rumplestiltskin's Resolve
  • 1977: Spaced
  • 1978: Transcendance: Piano on "Implication"

Carly Simon

  • 1972: No Secrets: Piano on "Embrace Me, You Child"

Yvonne Elliman

Sun Treader

  • 1973: Zin Zin
  • 2001: The Voyage

Stomu Yamashta's Red Buddha Theater

  • 1973: The Man From The East - Original Score - Robinson on Fender Rhodes on 4 songs
  • 2007: Two Originals - The Man From The East & Red Buddha Theater - Compilation

Bryan Ferry

Ablution

  • 1974: Ablution - With John Gustafson, Barry De Souza, Jayson Lindh, Jan Schaffer, Malando Gassama, Ola Brunkert

Lenny White

  • 1975: Venusian Summer

David Bowie

Stomu Yamashta's Go

  • 1977 : Go Too - Keyboards

Brand X

  • 1978: Masques
  • 1979: Product - With Phil Collins
  • 1980: Do They Hurt? - With Phil Collins
  • 1982: Is There Anything About? - With Phil Collins
  • 1992: The Plot Thins: A History of Brand X - Compilation: On "The Poke", "Dance of the Illegal Aliens" and "Triumphant Limp"

Phil Collins

Anni-Frid Lyngstad (Frida)

  • 1982: Something's Going On - Robinson on keyboards, string and horn arrangements. With Phil Collins, Daryl Stuermer, Mo Foster, The Phenix Horns from Earth, Wind & Fire and The Martyn Ford Orchestra. Album produced by Phil Collins

Mike Rutherford

Eric Clapton

Joan Armatrading

Partial filmography

Film

Television

Television films

Television series

Awards and nominations


References

  1. "J. Peter Robinson | Movies and Filmography". AllMovie. Retrieved 7 May 2021.
  2. "J. Peter Robinson | Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  3. "J. Peter Robinson Makes His Greatest "Catch" with Genelec 5.1 Active Monitoring". ProSoundNetwork.com. 24 February 2012. Retrieved 6 April 2021.
  4. "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  5. "J. Peter Robinson". BFI. Archived from the original on 3 April 2019. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  6. Morris, Chris (25 June 2010). "ASCAP honors for film, TV". Variety. Retrieved 29 April 2021.
  7. "Jay Gruska's Unreal Music for Supernatural". Ascap.com. Retrieved 29 April 2021.

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