American Music Artist
Joey Carbone is a composer, music producer, arranger and keyboardist.[ 1] After a period as a session musician for, among other Elton John, Carbone became a music director for television programmes, such as Star Search . Since the 1980s he has worked as a prolific producer for Japanese pop acts.[ 2] [ 3]
Early life
Carbone was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York . When he was 16, Carbone was signed as a singer in a band with Richie Zito 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 .[ 2]
Career overview
Carbone moved to Los Angeles and became a keyboardist and vocalist for recording sessions and concerts. He played keyboards for Kiki Dee and Elton John , Rick James , the Righteous Brothers , Eric Carmen , Rod Stewart , Cher , Air Supply , Andy Gibb , Bette Midler and others.[ 2]
Carbone was the music director and theme composer for nine years for the television series Star Search .[ 4] He arranged, produced, conducted, and played piano for performers including 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 ,[ 5] 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 ,[ 6] Joseph Williams and Bobby Kimball of Toto , Bill Champlin and Jason Scheff of the group Chicago , John O'Banion , Edward Furlong , Irene Cara , Zoom, Mylin,[ 7] Neil Sedaka , Tiffany , Warren DeMartini (Ratt ), the Righteous Brothers , and Sam Moore of Sam & Dave .
He has produced mostly songs for the Japanese market, and has written an estimated thousand songs for artist.[ 8] [ 9] These include songs for KAT-TUN ,[ 10] Matsuura Aya , Smap , Wada Akiko , Crystal Kay , Akanishi Jin , Diana & the Treasures, 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 , Eriko Tamura , and Masatoshi Ono . He has more than 80 Top 10 hits in Japan,[ 11] and has composed hundreds of songs for Japanese television commercials, movies, and television programs, including the score for the film Satomi Hakken Den (Legend of the Eight Samurai ) .[ 12]
Carbone is a contracted advisor to both Sony Records and Avex .[ 13] He is a lecturer and international advisor at Jikei Gakuen (Tokyo School of Music and Dance).[ 14] He has given lectures at colleges and universities in the United States, Japan, and Taiwan.
References
^ McClure, Steve (January 28, 2011). "Local, foreign songwriters camp it up" . The Japan Times . Retrieved April 28, 2012 .
^ a b c Betros, Chris (2012-05-05). "Joey Carbone keeps the hits coming" . Japan Today . Retrieved 2024-08-14 .
^ Varcoe, Fred (2008-08-23). Looking West . Billboard . p. 12.
^ Joey Carbone | May Pang's Asian Media Internet News
^ "It's Garry Shandling's Show Lyrics - Theme Song Lyrics" . Lyrics On Demand . Retrieved 2024-08-14 .
^ Markman, Jon D. (April 26, 1995). "Made in the U.S.A. : Joey Carbone Packages Acts the Japanese Love. His Secret? Think Cute" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved April 28, 2012 .
^ JOEY CARBONE WEB on Adult Contemporary Music In Japan
^ "Music: Inside Tracks" . Metropolis Magazine. Retrieved April 28, 2012 .
^ McClure, Steve (2006-09-23). Turning Japanese . Billboard .
^ Whyte, Wilson (March 14, 2009). "From the New York streets to the king of Japanese pop" . The Japan Times . Retrieved April 28, 2012 .
^ "The Rafu Shimpo - L.A. Japanese Daily News" . Archived from the original on 2012-02-14. Retrieved 2012-04-24 .
^ Whyte, Wilson (2009-03-14). "From the New York streets to the king of Japanese pop" . The Japan Times . Retrieved 2022-11-06 .
^ Speakers | ALLTHATMATTERS
^ 業界特別ゼミ・特別講義 Tokyo School of Music & Dance