Patrick Gleeson

(1934-11-09) November 9, 1934

musician

synthesizer

1960's to present

Career[edit]

Gleeson moved to San Francisco in the 1960s to teach in the English Department at San Francisco State.[1] Gleeson began experimenting with electronic music in the mid-'60s at the San Francisco Tape Music Center using a Buchla synth and other devices. He resigned his teaching position to become a full-time musician. In 1968, "upon hearing Wendy Carlos' Switched-On Bach", he bought a Moog synthesizer and opened the Different Fur recording studio in San Francisco.[2]


He worked with Herbie Hancock in the early 1970s on two albums (Crossings and Sextant) and subsequent tours, pioneering synthesizers as a live instrument.[2][3] Hancock initially hired Gleeson as a synthesizer technician and instructor, but ended up asking him to become a full-time band member, expanding the ensemble from six to seven musicians.[4] Hancock has credited Gleeson with introducing him to synthesizers and teaching him technique.[3] Sextant and Headhunters were both recorded in part at Different Fur studios. Gleeson has subsequently worked with many other Jazz musicians, including Julian Priester, Lenny White, Freddie Hubbard, Charles Earland, Eddie Henderson and Joe Henderson.


Gleeson recorded a number of solo albums, starting with Beyond the Sun - An Electronic Portrait of Holst's "The Planets" in 1976, to which Carlos contributed the sleeve notes. The album was nominated for a "best engineered recording-classical" Grammy in 1976.[2] Beyond the Sun was followed in 1977 by a more commercial album, Patrick Gleeson's Star Wars.


He worked as a producer and engineer on the 1978 Devo album Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!, part of which was recorded at Different Fur. He sold his interest in Different Fur in 1985.[5]


Gleeson has been involved in the scoring of a number of film soundtracks, including The Plague Dogs, Apocalypse Now, Crossroads and The Bedroom Window. He has scored nine television series, including Knots Landing.[6]


In 2017 Gleeson retired from film and television scoring and returned to live performance, both as a solo artist and with a trio (Michael Shrieve, drums, and Sam Morrison, reeds).

1976 - Beyond the Sun - An Electronic Portrait of Holst's "The Planets" ()

Mercury

1977 - (Mercury), reissued on

Patrick Gleeson's Star Wars

1980 - Rainbow Delta (, reissued on Anthology, 2007)

Passport

1982 - (Original Soundtrack) (CBS)

The Plague Dogs

1982 - Patrick Gleeson's Computer Realization of Vivaldi's The Four Seasons()

Varèse Sarabande

1986 - Ewoks (1985-1987)

1998 - with Bennie Maupin (Intuition)

Driving While Black

2007 - Slide, a chamber music album of jazz influenced minimalism

2008 - Jazz Criminal with Jim Lang and featuring Bennie Maupin and

Wallace Roney

2019- Moogfest Live 2019

Synapse (magazine)

Patrick Gleeson MySpace page

at discogs.com

Patrick Gleeson

at AllMusic

Patrick Gleeson

at IMDb

Patrick Gleeson