David Darling

(1941-03-04)March 4, 1941[1]
Elkhart, Indiana, U.S.[1]

January 8, 2021(2021-01-08) (aged 79)

Musician

Cello

1980s–2021

Music career[edit]

Darling was born on March 4, 1941, in Elkhart, Indiana. He was interested in music from an early age, beginning piano when he was four, cello at ten, and string bass in high school. He studied classical cello at Indiana State University and after graduating remained there another four years as a teacher.[1]


He worked as a studio musician in Nashville, Tennessee and was a member of the Paul Winter Consort until 1978. During the following year, he was part of the chamber jazz group Gallery with Ralph Towner and released his first solo album, Journal October.[1]


Darling's performance and composition draw on a wide range of styles, including classical, jazz, Brazilian, African, and Indian music.


He wrote and performed music for more than a dozen major motion pictures, the horror film Child's Play (1988), Heat (1995), and Until the End of the World (1991). He contributed music to Nouvelle Vague (1990), Éloge de l'amour (2001), and Notre musique (2004).


In 2000, he recorded a collaboration with the Wulu Bunun, a group of Taiwanese aborigines.[3]


In 2007 he recorded The Darling Conversations, with Julie Weber discussing his music philosophy. It was issued by Manifest Spirit Records. In January 2009, Darling released the Grammy-winning Prayer for Compassion, a follow-up of his earlier 8-String Religion, both on the Curve Blue label.

Other activities[edit]

In 1986, Darling joined Young Audiences, an organization that seeks to educate children about music and the arts through school programs. In the same year, he founded Music for People, which seeks to encourage self-expression through musical improvisation. His teaching methods are the subject of a book, Return to Child (2008).


In May 2008, he became part of a collaboration of music teacher and performers offering a training program in holistic and intercultural approaches to healing with sound and music at the New York Open Center Sound and Music School. David Darling died in his sleep, January 8, 2021.[4]

Grammy Award, Best New Age Album, Prayer for Compassion, 2010

[5]

(ECM, 1979)

Journal October

(ECM, 1981)

Cycles

(ECM, 1992)

Cello

, (ECM, 1993)

Dark Wood

, (Curve Blue,1993)

Eight String Religion

The Tao of Cello (Relaxation, 1993)

Musical Massage: Balance (Relaxation, 2000)

Cello Blue, (Hearts of Space/Valley Entertainment, 2001)

Musical Massage: In Tune (Relaxation, 2001)

River Notes, (Curve Blue, 2002)

Open Window (Relaxation, 2003)

Mudanin (Kata World Music Network/Riverboat, 2004)

Balance (Gaiam, 2006)

Musical Massage: Blissful Relaxation (Relaxation, 2007)

The Darling Conversations, Vol. 1 (Manifest Spirit, 2007)

(Curve Blue, 2009)

Prayer for Compassion

Where Did the Time Go (CD Baby, 2013)

Gratitude (Curve Blue, 2016)

[6]

Homage to Kindness (2019)

List of ambient music artists

Official site

The Darling Conversations, music philosophy

Musicolog

discography at Discogs

David Darling

at IMDb

David Darling