Greg O'Connor
Greg O'Connor | |
---|---|
Born | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US |
Education | |
Occupation | Composer, songwriter, producer |
Years active | 1990–present |
Awards | 2006 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Original Music and Lyrics, for "A Wonderfully Normal Day" - MAD TV |
Website | www |
Greg O'Connor is a composer and songwriter who has composed scores for over 30 television series and has written numerous featured songs for TV, films and commercials. He is a Primetime Emmy winner and a four-time Emmy nominee. He has scored projects including variety, single camera comedy, multi camera comedy, animation, one hour drama, game show, sketch comedy, award show, stand up, reality, hidden camera, documentary, commercials and virtual reality.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
Early life[]
O'Connor was born in Philadelphia. O'Connor is a graduate of The University of Notre Dame’s Music School as well as the Scoring for Motion Pictures and Television Program at USC.[10][11] He began studying music at age six, taking piano lessons at the Bryn Mawr Conservatory of Music in Bryn Mawr PA, a suburb of Philadelphia. O'Connor also played alto saxophone for eight years. His education included performing in various ensembles, either as a pianist, saxophonist or vocalist, including concert band, jazz band, glee club and various top 40 bands throughout high school and college.[12][13]
Career[]
Early in his career, O'Connor wrote the score for the Emmy Award-winning Ben Stiller Show and The Sunday Comics on FOX. He also composed the underscore for all three seasons of the hidden camera series The Jamie Kennedy Experiment and the ABC Aaron Spelling cop drama 10-8, starring Ernie Hudson and Danny Nucci.[14][15]
He has written two Billboard Top 20 songs with collaborator James Pankow for the band Chicago, as well as the song "Here With Me" for the Chicago album Stone of Sisyphus.[16][17] He produced five songs for the Barry Manilow album The Greatest Songs of the Eighties, as well as Manilow's hit Christmas single "Christmas is Just Around the Corner."[18][19][20][21][22]
O'Connor was the composer, songwriter and musical director for all 14 seasons of the hit sketch comedy show Mad TV,[23] David Allen Grier’s comedy series Chocolate News, Jeff Foxworthy’s variety show Blue Collar TV and Bob Einstein’s series Super Dave Spike-Tacular. Additionally, he was the musical director and composer for the ABC reality competition series The Next Best Thing.[24]
O'Connor wrote and produced two songs for the film The Greening of Whitney Brown, starring Kris Kristofferson, Aiden Quinn and Brooke Shields, one of which was performed by Shields. He wrote and produced three featured songs for Lori Petty’s directorial feature film debut, The Poker House, as well as two featured songs in the Lego movie Clutch Powers. O'Connor produced and wrote songs for the animated Lionsgate movie Foodfight and produced two songs for Curb Records artist Kimberley Locke on the Camille soundtrack for Oscar-winning producer Al Ruddy.[25][26]
O'Connor wrote all the opening songs for the ABC summer series Greatest Hits, produced by Grammy producer Kenneth Ehrlich. He also composed all the music for a reboot of Mad TV on the CW. He wrote the theme song for the series Gay Skit Happens with two members of the Grammy winning vocal group Pentatonix. In the science fiction thriller genre, O'Connor also scored the virtual reality series Defrost, directed by Randal Kleiser, which is one of the first long form dramatic series in this new groundbreaking genre. O'Connor co-wrote the theme song with actor Will Sasso for his Ten Minute Podcast starring Will, Chris D’Elia and Bryan Callan.[27][28]
Greg scored the animated feature film Bobbleheads The Movie for Universal Pictures and co-wrote 4 songs for the film. Greg wrote the featured “Laura Dern” song for the 2020 Film Independent Spirit Awards that instantly went viral, and was featured in every major publication and news outlet. [29] He composed the main title theme for the newly released Disney+ series Prop Culture. In 2020, Greg composed the company logo music for House of Paine Entertainment for Academy Awards producer Rob Paine as well as the logo for Threshold Entertainment for producer Lawrence Kasanoff. Greg composed the theme song for The Caliendo Cast for actor comedian Frank Caliendo.
Awards[]
Year | Award | Project | Category | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Mad TV - "Sad Fitty Cent" | Outstanding Music and Lyrics | Nominated[30] |
2007 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Mad TV - "Merry Ex-Mas" | Outstanding Music and Lyrics | Nominated[31] |
2007 | BMI Film & TV Awards | Mad TV | BMI Film & TV Awards | Won[32] |
2006 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Mad TV - "A Wonderfully Normal Day" | Outstanding Music and Lyrics | Won[33] |
2001 | Primetime Emmy Awards | Mad TV - "Mole Folks Song" | Outstanding Music and Lyrics | Nominated[34] |
References[]
- ^ "Artist Biography". cdbaby.
- ^ "SCL gathers notable songwriters for musicale". filmmusicsociety.
- ^ "2006 Emmy nominations list – part 2". Variety.
- ^ "Greg O'Connor". hollywood.
- ^ "Composer Bio". emmys.
- ^ "Greg O'Connor: 'MAD TV' Fox 'JKX: the Jamie Kennedy Experiment' the WB.(who scores primetime)". Business Highbeam. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
- ^ "Greg O'Connor". IMDb.
- ^ "Emmy Winning Composer Greg O'Connor Scores Big". The Hollywood 360.
- ^ "Defrost A Virtual Reality Movie Thawing the Audience's Point of View 360 Degrees". The Hollywood 360.
- ^ "BMI Composers Score at 2006 Creative Emmys". BMI.
- ^ Burlingame, Jon. "Callery Wins Second Emmy". film music society.
- ^ "Emmy Winning Composer Greg O'Connor Scores Big - The Hollywood 360". The Hollywood 360.
- ^ "PrepNews Winter 2012 by St. Joseph's Preparatory School - Issuu". PrepNews Winter 2012.
- ^ "Greg O'Connor – Composer/Songwriter". gregoconnor.
- ^ "XXXII: Stone Of Sisyphus". allpines.
- ^ "Chicago (2) – The Only One". discogs.
- ^ "AllMusic Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine". allmusic.
- ^ "Barry Manilow – The Greatest Songs Of The Eighties". discogs.
- ^ "Zanelli, Shearmur Among First-time Honorees". filmmusicsociety.
- ^ "Heartwarming Sitcom Theme". hamfatter. Archived from the original on 2011-05-24. Retrieved 2016-01-14.
- ^ "Greg O'Connor". artistdirect.
- ^ "Filmography". soundtrack.
- ^ "Mad TV Cast Reunion". patkilbane.
- ^ "BMI Salutes Emmy Nominees". BMI.
- ^ "2006 Creative Arts Awards". zimbio.
- ^ "Greg O'Connor". ebscohost. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
- ^ "TMP – We Are Friends by Ten Minute Podcast - Free Listening on SoundCloud". SoundCloud.
- ^ "TMP - Not That New by Ten Minute Podcast - Free Listening on SoundCloud". SoundCloud.
- ^ "James Cordon on Twitter". James Cordon on Twitter. "Film Independent on Twitter". Film Independent on Twitter. "Spirit Awards: Gay Men's Chorus of Los Angeles Sings Praises of LGBTQ Moments in Film — and Laura Dern". Hollywood Reporter. "Entertainment Tonight Canada Laura Dern Reacts To Gay Choir Tribute At Spirit Awards". Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15. "Laura Dern's best awards moment didn't even happen at the Oscars". New York Post. "Spirit Awards Laura Dern". Billboard. "Laura Dern enjoying a musical tribute to her will lift your spirits". CNN. "Laura Dern Wins Best Supporting Actress at the Oscars. The #Dernaissance Is Complete". Vogue. "Independent Spirit Awards Song". Yahoo News. "What Happened on the 2020 Oscars Red Carpet". The New York Times. "Laura Dern Gushes Over Having Her Mom At The Oscars 45 Years After Walking The Carpet With Her". Access. "The Spirit Awards Sang Laura Dern's Praises with Choir Tribute". Vulture. "The Spirit Awards Hilariously Recognized Laura Dern As The Best Part Of The Movies". Buzzfeed. "Gay Men's Chorus at Indie Spirits Confirms What We Knew All Along: Laura Dern Is a Gay Icon". IndieWire. "Gay Men's Choir". Billboard. "GMCLA Releases Dance Version Of Viral Song and Presents THE CALIFORNIA SOUND". Broadway World.
- ^ "Music Emmy Nominations Announced". filmmusicmag.
- ^ "Greg O'Connor". Emmys.
- ^ "BMI Film & Television Awards Salute Composers of Top Movie, TV Music". BusinessWire.
- ^ "2006 Creative Arts Emmys Press Room photo". Zimbio.
- ^ "BMI Salutes Emmy Nominees". BMI.
External links[]
- American male composers
- 21st-century American composers
- Living people
- 21st-century American male musicians