Joey Carbone

Joey Carbone
Born Brooklyn, New York
Occupation Music composer and producer

Joey Carbone is a composer, music producer,[1] arranger, keyboardist, vocalist, advisor and educator. He was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York.

Early life

When he was 16, Carbone was signed as a singer in a band to Atlantic Records by one of Atlantic's founders, Jerry Wexler. Carbone took a summer job working at Atlantic, where he watched recording sessions by Aretha Franklin, The Rascals, Cream, and The Rolling Stones.

Career overview

Carbone moved to Los Angeles and became a keyboardist and vocalist for recording sessions and concerts. He played keyboards for Kiki Dee & Elton John, Rick James, The Righteous Brothers, Eric Carmen, Rod Stewart, Cher, Air Supply, Andy Gibb, Bette Midler and others.

Carbone was the music director and theme composer for nine years for the television series Star Search,[2] and arranged, produced, conducted and played piano for then-budding performers Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Beyoncé, Alanis Morissette, LeAnn Rimes, Justin Timberlake and others. He won a Cable ACE Award for composing and producing the theme song for the series It's Garry Shandling's Show,[3] on which he served as music director.

He composed and arranged music for China Beach, Falcon Crest, Entertainment Tonight, and others. He has also produced and/or composed albums for Japan-based record companies for American singers including Little Richard, Alyssa Milano,[4] Joseph Williams and Bobby Kimball of Toto, Bill Champlin and Jason Scheff of the group Chicago, John O'Banion, Edward Furlong, Irene Cara, Mylin,[5] Neil Sedaka, Tiffany, Warren DeMartini Ratt, The Righteous Brothers, and Sam Moore of Sam & Dave. He has created more than 1000 songs for the Japanese market[6] including songs for KAT-TUN,[7] Matsuura Aya, Smap, Wada Akiko, Crystal Kay, Akanishi Jin, Sexy Zone, Kanjani8, Tsuchiya Anna, Tackey & Tsubasa, N.E.W.S., Hey! Say! JUMP, Van Tomiko, Nakamori Akina, Nakayama Miho, Wink, Shonentai, Shibugakitai, Arashi, Aikawa Nanase, Mari Hamada, Lindberg, Inagaki Junichi, Koyanagi Yuki, Naomi Tamura, Infix, Julia Mazda, Eriko Tamura, and Masatoshi Ono. He has more than 80 top 10 hits in Japan.[8] He has composed hundreds of songs for Japanese television commercials, movies and television programs including the film Satomi Hakken Den.

Carbone is a contracted advisor to both Sony Records and Avex entertainment, Japan.[9] He is a lecturer and International Advisor at Jikei Gakuen (Tokyo School of Music & Dance).[10] He has given lectures at colleges and universities in the United States, Japan, and Taiwan.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/17/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.