Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Paul Buckmaster

 
Artist: Paul Buckmaster

Worked With:

Peter Robinson, Caleb Quaye, Richard Perry, John Gustafson, Gus Dudgeon, Ray Cooper, Robin Geoffrey Cable, Carly Simon, Shawn Phillips, Elton John
  • Active: '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, 2000s
  • Genres: Rock
  • Instrument: Conductor, Cello, Arranger Representative Album: "12 Monkeys"

Biography

Paul Buckmaster is, along with his contemporary Richard Hewson, one of a relative handful of classically trained musicians who have managed to exert a huge influence on the shape and direction of rock music. As an arranger and conductor, and as a solo cellist, he has made notable contributions to hundreds of albums by dozens of major artists since the late '60s. Born to a musical family in London, Buckmaster showed natural musical aptitude at an early age, taking up the cello at age four. By six he was winning prizes for his musicianship, and at 11 he earned a scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music, from which he graduated at 16. Although his training on the cello was focused on classical music, Buckmaster was open to rock, jazz, and avant-garde music, and during the late '60s began playing with such progressive and experimental groups as the Third Ear Band, Suntreader, and Nucleus. As a serious musician with thorough classical training, he became known in popular music circles for having his feet in both the rock and classical camps, and for being willing to work with the former. As rock music became more ambitious late in the decade, Buckmaster suddenly found his skills in demand, and offers came his way as an arranger and orchestrator.

By 1969, he was working with a struggling yet promising would-be rock star named David Bowie on a track called "Space Oddity." That same year, he also crossed paths with the Bee Gees, playing the solo cello on "Odessa" from the double-LP of that name. And that same year, he made the acquaintance of Miles Davis -- a longtime idol -- and played on as well as contributed to the songwriting on the Big Fun album. Buckmaster was even busier the following year, playing the cello on albums by Chris Farlowe and Mick Farren, but it was in March of 1970 that he made a decisive career move, when he was engaged to play the cello on Elton John's self-titled second album. The latter LP was the artist's first to be released in America and it yielded the first hit of Elton John's career in "Your Song." Buckmaster's collaboration with the pianist/singer proved satisfying to them both, and was expanded to include arranging and orchestrating the subsequent albums Tumbleweed Connection and Madman Across the Water; and by Don't Shoot Me I'm Only the Piano Player, Buckmaster was the arranger, conductor, and general music director for the project. Meanwhile, he also conducted and arranged the strings on the Rolling Stones' Sticky Fingers album and was serving in similar capacities for Carly Simon (No Secrets), Harry Nilsson (Son of Schmilsson, Songwriter), Shawn Phillips (Second Contribution, Faces), and the Grateful Dead (Terrapin Station). He continued to employ his skills on the cello as well, on behalf of Yvonne Elliman, Mott the Hoople, Caravan, and Chris Barber, and played electronic keyboards on records by Blood, Sweat & Tears, Chi Coltrane, and Leo Sayer. In the midst of a career that had him working both sides of the Atlantic, Buckmaster also found time to take Miles Davis up on an invitation to come to New York and study and collaborate with him.

Buckmaster was no less busy in the 1980s, working with Mick Jagger, Belinda Carlisle, Nick Heyward, and John Miles, among others, as well as working in recording gigs with old acquaintances like the Third Ear Band and Elton John. The 1990s saw him working with Celine Dion, John Wetton, and Patti LaBelle. Buckmaster has also worked on numerous movies as a musician, composer, and arranger of their soundtracks, including 12 Monkeys, Midnight Crossing, and The Spy Who Loved Me. ~ Bruce Eder, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Paul Buckmaster
Top

Paul Buckmaster is a Grammy Award-winning English artist, arranger and composer. He is perhaps best known for his orchestral collaborations with Elton John. He has displayed professional mastery as a cellist but he has also worked as an arranger on various hit songs, including David Bowie's "Space Oddity" (1969), and played with Miles Davis on On the Corner. He also plays the cello on Bee Gees's song "Odessa (City on the Black Sea)" (1969).

Contents

Career

Born in London, England, Buckmaster was taught the cello from age 4. At age eleven, he won a cello scholarship to the Royal Academy of Music in London. Buckmaster played and composed in a number of jazz and progressive music groups including the Third Ear Band, Nucleus and Suntreader. He was the principal soloist on the third movement of Neil Ardley's 1976 recording, Kaleidoscope of Rainbows.

Buckmaster met Miles Davis in 1969 and began to study with him in New York City in 1972. He appears on Davis' album On the Corner (1972), for which he wrote arrangements and played electric cello. He began working with Elton John in 1970, helping arrange his second album, Elton John, and initiating a collaborative effort that exists to the present day.

Buckmaster is credited with the idea of the gospel choir that backed The Rolling Stones on "You Can't Always Get What You Want".[1] In addition to the aforementioned artists, Buckmaster has arranged music on albums by The Rolling Stones, the Grateful Dead, Blood, Sweat & Tears, Mott the Hoople, Harry Nilsson, Carly Simon, Shawn Phillips, Belinda Carlisle, Debbie Gibson, Stevie Nicks, Nick Heyward, Faith Hill, Carole Bayer Sager, Backstreet Boys, The Darkness, Keith Urban, Angelo Branduardi, 10,000 Maniacs, Tears For Fears and Celine Dion. He also scored the soundtrack for the film Twelve Monkeys. Buckmaster has frequently worked with artists for performances in the Royal Albert Hall.

More recently, Buckmaster won a Grammy Award as Best Arranger for the sweeping string arrangement of Train's 2001 song "Drops of Jupiter". He was brought back for the band's following album, My Private Nation.

In 2004, it was revealed that he had worked on arrangements for the songs "Madagascar", "The Blues", "There Was a Time", and "Prostitute" as part of the sessions for the Guns N' Roses album Chinese Democracy.

In 2005, Buckmaster arranged and conducted an orchestral accompaniment for the song "Landed", from the Ben Folds album Songs for Silverman. While the song went on to be a hit single, the string arrangement, at the request of Folds, was left out of the single and album versions and is now available on the DualDisc version of the album. In 2006, Buckmaster worked again on two Ben Folds tracks, "Learn to Live With What You Are" and "Still". These songs were already released without strings on EPs, and Buckmaster was asked by Folds to upgrade the tracks for Folds' album release Supersunnyspeedgraphic. Folds also convinced Amanda Palmer to have Buckmaster arrange strings for her album Who Killed Amanda Palmer, which Folds co-produced.

Selected discography

  • Blood, Sweat and Tears
    • No Sweat
  • Bee Gees
    • Odessa ("Plays cello in Odessa (City on the Black Sea)")
  • Shawn Phillips
    • Contribution
    • Collaboration
    • Second Contribution
    • Faces
  • Third Ear Band
    • Music From MacBeth

Notes

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Paul Buckmaster" Read more

 

Mentioned in