Paul O'Duffy

Date de naissance 31.12.1963 à London, England, Grande-Bretagne

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Paul Staveley O'Duffy

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Paul Staveley O'Duffy

Paul ODuffy (born 1963, London) is a British record producer, composer, mixer. He is best known for producing Swing Out Sister's Grammy-nominated multi-platinum debut album, for his BMI nomination as 'Producer of the Year' in 1987, and work with John Barry and other film score producing. More recently he worked with Amy Winehouse, co-writing one of the tracks on her multi-platinum album Back to Black.

Professional life

Mixer / engineer

ODuffy started out his music career at Marcus Music Studios London, and by the age of 17 was engineering sessions for War, Yes and Marvin Gaye. He moved to New York in 1984, establishing himself as a club remixer working on remixes for artists such as KC and The Sunshine Band, Man Parrish, Stephanie Mills, The System, Animotion, The Bar-Kays, Patti Labelle, Ian Dury and the Blockheads and Freeze.[1]

Production

O'Duffy returned to London in the late eighties where his remixing successes took him into record production. His first production success was the debut album by Scottish group Hipsway which included the top twenty hit on both sides of the Atlantic, "Honeythief". He followed this up with production on the number one platinum selling debut album by Curiosity Killed the Cat Keep Your Distance.

His BMI nomination for Producer of the Year in 1987 came from his work on the multi-platinum debut album It's Better To Travel by Manchester group Swing Out Sister, which included the worldwide hit "Breakout". The album was also nominated in the US for a Grammy Award and led to more work for him and his distinctive retro sound with US acts.

One of these was eccentric Pop R&B group Was Not Was with the resulting worldwide hits "Walk The Dinosaur", "Spy In The House Of Love" and platinum selling album What Up, Dog?.[2] At the other end of the spectrum ODuffy produced one of Barry Manilows last chart hits "Keep Each Other Warm" from his eponymous album Barry Manilow, in which he recorded other artists songs using a variety of top producers.[3]

ODuffy additionally produced and mixed Tom Verlaines (Television) critically acclaimed solo album Flash Light in 1987.[4]

Starting in 2009, he is producing John Barry's orchestral album, "The Seasons".[5]

Writer/producer

In the Nineties ODuffy increased his songwriting credits, producing and writing on four subsequent albums for Swing Out Sister (including 1992's Get in Touch with Yourself) as well as production for Dusty Springfield on her album Reputation, which became Springfield's best-selling new album since her '60s-era peak. He produced the Pretenders' "If There Was a Man" and "Where Has Everybody Gone?", as well as Necros, Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Jeff Beck, Lisa Stansfield, Danny Wilson, The Beloved, John Barry, the eponymous debut album by Lewis Taylor, Joe Meek and Pigeonhead.[6]

Hiatus and recovery

An amateur racer of both off-road and on-road motorcycles, ODuffy was riding a road bike in London when a car cut across his lane and ran him down. His back was broken in two places, and he spent many months in traction and several years in recovery. His motorcycle, a Ducati 888 SP5 limited edition which had been given to him by his then management team, was repaired and presented back to him after a chance meeting with Federico Minoli then-head of Ducati worldwide at the Houses of Parliament. Now fully recovered after further surgery to fuse his back, ODuffy is back racing in Seniors races.

During the first three years after the accident, ODuffy worked almost exclusively out of the substantial studio he had built at his home in North London. It was here that Amy Winehouse came to spend a month in 2006 to work on tracks for what became the Back to Black album, which features the ODuffy/Winehouse song "Wake up Alone".

Film and television

ODuffy produced the John Barry score for 007 film The Living Daylights (winner, 1988 BMI Film Music Award).[7]

Further work with Barry continued, including in 1992 the movie Chaplin starring Robert Downey Jr, for which Barry was nominated for an Oscar and a Golden Globe. Recently ODuffy worked with John Barry on his UK concerts at the Albert Hall.

ODuffy produced the Hans Zimmer score for the film Days of Thunder (winner, 1991 BMI Film Music Award), and is infamous for his unique treatment of the version of "All By Myself" used in the film Bridget Jones Diary. He also produced the Dr Calculus track "Full of Love" for the 1988 Kevin Bacon film Shes Having a Baby.

ODuffy is also a well-known composer for television, having composed the themes and incidental music for: The Team - A Season With Mclaren (BBC2 series) The Great Outdoors (Channel 4 series) The Big Elsewhere (with Swing Out Sister, NHK Japan series) London Bridge (Carlton TV drama series).

References

External links

Dernière modification de cette page 18.02.2014 23:14:43

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