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Al Kasha

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Name
  
Al Kasha

Siblings
  
Lawrence Kasha

Albums
  
Spouse
  
Ceil Kasha (m. 1967)

Role
  
Songwriter ยท alkasha.com


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Awards
  
Academy Award for Best Original Song

Similar People
  
Joel Hirschhorn, Lawrence Kasha, Gene de Paul, Johnny Mercer, Al Hoffman

Al kasha i ll string along with pearl


Alfred "Al" Kasha (Brooklyn, January 22, 1937) is an American songwriter. He is best known for "The Morning After" from The Poseidon Adventure.

Contents

Al Kasha Al Kasha Biography amp History AllMusic

Al Kasha's Lifetime Achievement Award at the MovieGuide Awards 2011


Life

Al Kasha Al Kasha Discography at Discogs

Kasha started songwriting and producing at a young age and was hired as a producer at Columbia Records aged 22. He worked at the Brill Building in 1959 alongside writers and artists like Carole King, Neil Sedaka, Barry Mann, Cynthia Weil, Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller, Burt Bacharach, Hal David, and Neil Diamond. He has worked with many great artists such as Aretha Franklin ("Operation Heartbreak" and "Rock-a-Bye Your Baby with a Dixie Melody"), Neil Diamond, Donna Summer ("I'm A Fire"), Charles Aznavour ("Dance In The Old Fashioned Way"), Bobby Darin ("Irresistible You"), and Jackie Wilson ("I'm Coming on Back To You," "My Empty Arms," "Forever And A Day," "Each Night I Dream Of You," "Lonely Life," and "Sing And Tell The Blues So Long"). Kasha is most noted for his years of collaboration with songwriter Joel Hirschhorn. The two wrote and collaborated on many nominated and award-winning songs for many music groups, movies, and musicals. The Peppermint Rainbow's "Will You Be Staying After Sunday" is just one example of the many songs they wrote for groups during their time.

The songwriting duo won two Oscars for Best Song, "The Morning After" from The Poseidon Adventure in 1973 and "We May Never Love Like This Again" from The Towering Inferno in 1975. They also received two more Academy Award Nominations for their work in the 1977 Walt Disney live action animated classic Pete's Dragon where they were nominated for Best Song Score and Best Song ("Candle On The Water," sung by Helen Reddy).

Along with Hirschhorn, Kasha also received two Tony nominations for Seven Brides for Seven Brothers and Copperfield, two Grammy nominations and an Emmy, as well as four Golden Globe nominations and a People's Choice award. They also composed the theme song to the short-lived 1990s game show The Challengers.

Amongst Al's many family scoring credits, he received an Angel Award for his score to China Cry for the Trinity Broadcasting Network. Additionally Mr. Kasha has a running television series entitled Beyond Belief, which is currently airing around the world.

Kasha has written three books: If They Ask You Can Write A Song, Notes On Broadway, and his autobiography, Reaching The Morning After. He is also in the process of finishing a fourth book that is the definitive book on songwriting entitled, The Ultimate Book on Songwriting.

Kasha's more recent work has included two musicals, The Real Love and Loving The Silent Tears, that he conceived and created with Vietnamese poet Supreme Master Ching Hai.

Kasha is married to Ceil Kasha and has a daughter, Dana Kasha-Cohen.

Singles

  • "Sing (And Tell The Blues "So Long")" Sid Wyche, Al Kasha / "One Of Them" Al Kasha, Hank Hunter 1960
  • References

    Al Kasha Wikipedia