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Jonathan Goldsmith (musician)

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Nationality
  
Canadian

Name
  
Jonathan Goldsmith


Role
  
Musician

Music group
  
Nick Buzz

Occupation
  
film and television composer, musician, record producer

Albums
  
Take This Waltz, Such a Long Journey, Casino Jack: Music From the Motion Picture, Circo

Awards
  
British Academy Television Craft Award for Best Original Television Music

Known for
  
Nick Buzz, Art of Time Ensemble

Nominations
  
Jack Richardson Producer of the Year Award

Similar
  
Hugh Marsh, Sturla Gunnarsson, Sarah Polley, Sarah Slean, Gary Yates

Jonathan (Jon) Goldsmith is a Canadian musician, arranger, producer and composer. Best known as a composer of film and television scores, he has also been associated with various projects as a musician, including Nick Buzz and the Art of Time Ensemble, and production of albums by artists including Bruce Cockburn, Jane Siberry, Martin Tielli, Hugh Marsh, Bourbon Tabernacle Choir and Sarah Slean.

Career

In 1992, Goldsmith, along with Hugh Marsh, Martin Tielli and Rob Piltch, provided backup for a track on the album Back to the Garden; these four later formed the band Nick Buzz and produced two albums and an EP. Goldsmith played piano in the group.

For his work as a composer he Goldstone won four Gemini Awards, for his work on Pit Pony, Dead Silence, Trudeau II: Maverick in the Making and The Nativity, a Canadian Screen Award for Titanic, and a BAFTA Award for Sex Traffic. He has also received nine other Gemini Award nominations, and four Genie Award nominations for Best Original Score.

His other film and television credits include Global Heresy, Such a Long Journey, Away from Her, October 1970, Take This Waltz, Rare Birds, Visiting Hours, Casino Jack, Compulsion, Above and Beyond, Jewel, Cell 213, High Life, Score: A Hockey Musical, Diplomatic Immunity and Wiebo's War.

As a record producer, he has garnered three Juno Award nominations for Producer of the Year, for Bob & Doug McKenzie's comedy single "Take Off" in 1982, Bruce Cockburn's album Stealing Fire in 1984 and Hugh Marsh's album Shaking the Pumpkin in 1989.

References

Jonathan Goldsmith (musician) Wikipedia