Barb Morrison
Barb Morrison | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Barbara Jean Morrison |
Also known as | Buzz Morrison, 'Super Buddha' |
Born |
Schenectady, New York, US | May 22, 1967
Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, musician, producer, Film Score Composer |
Instruments | Vocals, saxophone, guitar, bass |
Years active | 1984–present |
Associated acts | Deborah Harry, Dito Montiel, Blondie, Rufus Wainwright, LP, Antony and the Johnsons, Pink, Ryan Cassata |
Website | Barb Morrison website |
Notable instruments | |
multi-instrumentalist |
Barb Morrison (born Barbara Jean Morrison on May 22, 1967) is an American recording artist, Top 5 Billboard dance chart songwriter, and Gold record producer, best known as producer for numerous artists such as Blondie, Rufus Wainwright, Franz Ferdinand (band), LP, as an ASCAP-featured film score composer and formerly, as one half of the production duo Super Buddha.
Early life and music
Barb Morrison, the daughter of James and Helen Morrison, was born May 22, 1967 in Schenectady, New York and has two brothers, James Jr. and Shawn. After beginning piano at age 7 and saxophone at age 9, Barb joined her first punk band as a drummer at age 14. She bought her first guitar for $15.00 at the age of 17 and moved to New York City later that year to pursue a career in music.
Career
In 1985, she played her first NYC show at CBGB and became a regular onstage at many East Village venues of the era such as Danceteria, The Ritz, Pyramid Club, and Limelight. While still a teenager Morrison was already playing sax with punk legends Sylvain Sylvain, Johnny Thunders and Cherry Vanilla.
In 1987, she joined the band 'Gutterboy' as a saxophone player, guitarist and back up singer. 'Gutterboy', fronted by writer/director Dito Montiel, toured with Bryan Adams, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Stray Cats and Ramones. They were signed to Mercury Records in 1989, released "St. Stanislaus of E. 7th St." and modeled for photographer Bruce Weber's Gianni Versace catalog.
In 1992, she left Gutterboy to start the band "Itchy Trigger Finger" with longtime friend Harry Nagle. In Itchy Trigger Finger she toured on Lollapalooza along with Sonic Youth, Hole, Sinéad O'Connor, Cypress Hill, Moby, Beck, Mighty Mighty Bosstones, Coolio, yo la tengo, The Roots and Patti Smith. From 1995–1998, she was also the sax player and guitarist for the Squeeze box house band at Don Hill's, sharing that stage with Green Day, Deborah Harry, Joey Arias, Lady Bunny, John Cameron Mitchell, Nina Hagen, The Runaways, Justin Bond and Jayne County.
In 2000, Morrison scored her first film, The Safety of Objects starring Glenn Close. She also wrote a song titled "Kiss It All Goodbye" for the movie with LP, and later that year co-wrote and produced three songs, including the title track, for L.P.'s debut album Heart-Shaped Scar. That same year, Morrison also joined Antony and the Johnsons as a clarinet player and saxophonist. In 2001 Morrison began producing a number of bands who had contributed to the film's soundtrack. Morrison spent 2000–2006 co-producing and scoring films with teams such as Emboznik, 'Sonic & Buzz' and Blizzard Twins. For a detailed film score discography see the Film Scores discography section.
Most notably, from 2000–2012 Morrison made up half of the record production duo Super Buddha. In 2005, Morrison received her first Gold Record for producing the song 'In the Flesh' for Blondie's album Sight & Sound, and also collaborated with Grammy Award winner Pink on the video for the song Hello Bonjour. In 2006, Barb co-wrote the Top 5 Billboard dance chart remix 'Two Times Blue: Debbie Harry vs. Soul Seekerz' and the song If I Had You, which was featured regularly on VH-1. In 2011, Morrison co-wrote three songs on Blondie's Panic of Girls album as well as contributing production to releases by Franz Ferdinand and Lily Allen.
In 2012, Morrison left Super Buddha to pursue a solo career. Her first endeavor was writing and producing 3 songs for Blondie: Dead Air, Bride of Infinity and Practice Makes Perfect. That same year she composed the film score for the movie Concussion, starring Robin Weigert and Maggie Siff, an official selection of the 2013 Sundance Film Festival and winner of the Berlin Film Festival's Teddy Award Jury Prize. Also that year, Barb mixed the album 'Black Tie Elevator' for The Cliks.
In 2013, music that Morrison produced for Rayya Elias' book Harley Loco was presented by author Elizabeth Gilbert at the Detroit Institute of Arts, following the release of the book and accompanying soundtrack by Viking Press. 'Harley Loco' and Blue Microphones also released a mini-documentary about Barb's work as a music producer called 'Harley Loco and Blue Microphones present Barb Morrison'.
In 2014, Morrison produced records for various artists including Rachael Sage, Miranda Di Perno, Princess Superstar, Carrie Ashley Hill and composed scores for the films Sidewalk Traffic, 'FAST' and Ma/ddy. She also spoke on the Gender Amplified panel at Barnard College, and was a featured film score composer on ASCAP's 2014 "Spotlight"
In 2015, Morrison produced records and film scores for various projects such as Sugar on PBS and Paper Mills as well as performed at the Carlyle with Debbie Harry. She was also featured in The NY Timesin an article about producing transgender artists.
Currently
Morrison is currently producing records and film scores in her NYC studio. Recent projects include upcoming releases by Ryan Cassata, Venus DeMars and Laura Jane Grace as well as a number of songs featuring Grammy-nominated mixer Tony Maserati.
Morrison is endorsed by TubeTech, Sugar Bytes, Blue Microphones, Namba Gear, DrumCore, Earthquaker Devices, D'Angelico Guitars and Gibson Guitars.
Personal Life
Morrison lives in Frenchtown, New Jersey[1] with her wife Clayre.
Discography
Albums
- Gutterboy, Geffen Records. (1989, 1992) (Saxophone, vocals)
- Gutterboy, St. Stanislaus of East Seventh, Mercury Records. (1991) (Saxophone, vocals, guitar)
- Antony and the Johnsons: Immortal Bird / Cripple and the Starfish, Durtro. (2000) (Clarinet, Saxophone)
- Rufus Wainwright: Wig in a Box, Off Records. (2003) (Producer)
- Blondie: Greatest Hits: Sight & Sound, EMI. (2005) (Producer)
- Scissor Sisters: Filthy/Gorgeous (ATOC vs. Superbuddha remix), A Touch of Class. (2005) (Remixer)
- Deborah Harry: Necessary Evil, Eleven Seven. (2007) (Producer/Songwriter)
- Blondie: Panic of Girls, Eleven Seven/EMI. (2011) (Songwriter)
- The Cliks: Black Tie Elevator. (2013) (Mixer)
- Ryan Cassata: Shine. (2016) (Producer)
Film scores
- NY77: The Coolest Year in Hell- Scored this 2007 Emmy-nominated documentary for VH-1. (Credited as Emboznik)
- Joan of arcadia- Source music for episode #114 of this CBS primetime series' 2004 season. (Credited as Sean Demis & Buzz Morrison)
- 'Til Death Do Us Part: Carmen and Dave- Sound chip for promotional ad, Cannes Film Festival 2004 for MTV Networks and International Agency: Kidvertisers. (Credited as Barb Morrison)
- The safety of objects- Full score, all source music, incidentals and trailer for this feature film starring Glenn Close, Dermot Mulroney, Patricia Clarkson, Joshua Jackson and directed by Rose Troche. Released in March 2003. (Credited as Emboznik, Bullet, Super Buddha, Itchy Trigger Finger)
- Rosa negra 2: Como corre el amor- Score (2004) (Credited as Emboznik, Blizzard Twins, Sonic & Buzz)
- The l word – Full musical score for the creation of the pilot of this Showtime original series starring Jennifer Beals and Pam Grier. Directed by Rose Troche. (Credited as Emboznik)
- Raising Victor Vargas – Hip hop source cue for this feature film directed by Peter Sollett. Sundance Film Festival choice award, one of IFC's 'Top 10 to Watch For in 2003.' Released March 30, 2003. (Credited as Sonic & Buzz)
- Choices: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly- Full musical score of this short film directed by Tamara Jenkins (writer/director, Slums of Beverly Hills) and Scenarios USA. Released on Showtime in December 2003. (Credited as Sonic & Buzz)
- G- Hip Hop source cue. A feature film by Andrew Lauren, starring Blair Underwood (Sex & the City) and released in September 2004 (Credited as Sonic & Buzz)
- A-List- Full musical score for this feature film directed by Shira Lee Shalit starring Sally Kirkland (Bruce Almighty), Daphne Zuniga (Melrose Place) and David Carradine. Release for spring 2005 (Credited as Emboznik & Sean Semis and Buzz Morrison)
- David Searching- Opening credits & source cue for this feature film starring Anthony Rapp (Rent). Directed by Leslie Smith, released in 1999. (Credited as Itchy Trigger Finger)
- Rufus Wainwright- Produced song 'The Origin of Love' for tribute cd for the movie Hedwig and the Angry Inch, released in September 2003. Featured in Rainlake Production's documentary of the making of 'Wig in a box' (Credited as Barb Morrison)
- Toothpaste (film) (Scenarios USA)- Full musical score for this short film directed by Ben Younger (Boiler Room), shot by Guillermo Navarro (Hellboy) and produced by Michael Waxman (Collateral). Released for Showtime Spring 2005 (Credited as Emboznik)
- The Buddy Baker ASCAP Film Scoring Workshop.- Composed for and conducted a 20-piece orchestra including members of the New York Philharmonic and Metropolitan Opera. Moderated by Mark Snow (The X-Files) and Marco Beltrami (Blade II and Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines). (Credited as Emboznik)
- Concussion – Full musical score for this feature film directed by Stacie Passon and produced by Rose Troche, starring Robin Weigert and Maggie Siff. (Credited as Barb Morrison)
- Elliot King is Third – Full musical score for this short film directed by Rose Troche and produced by Stacie Passon. (Credited as Barb Morrison)
- Sidewalk Traffic - Full musical score for this film directed by Anthony Fisher and starring Heather Matarazzo and Kurt Loder
- FAST - Full musical score for this short film directed by Melanie Vesey.
- Ma/ddy - Full musical score for this film directed by Devon Kirkpatrick starring Clea DuVall and Mel Shimkovitz
- Sugar - Full musical score and source music for this series on PBS, directed by Rose Troche
References
- ↑ Staff. "Transgender Today: barb morrison", The New York Times. Accessed April 25, 2016. "record producer from Frenchtown, N.J."
External links
- super buddha Web Site
- New York Times Debbie Harry Article
- Debbie Harry Concert Review
- Sweaty Bitches of Rock and Roll Interview
- Rachael Sage Interview
- Interview with Debbie Harry, 'Necessary Evil'
- Gender Amplified Mix Sessions