Alan Elliott was signed to a recording contract by Warner Bros. Records president Lenny Waronker shortly upon graduation from Northwestern University in 1986. After two years recording for Warner Bros., Elliott was the first musical writer hired by Steven Bochco (the creator of New York Police Blues (1993)) for the now infamous television musical s...
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Alan Elliott was signed to a recording contract by Warner Bros. Records president Lenny Waronker shortly upon graduation from Northwestern University in 1986. After two years recording for Warner Bros., Elliott was the first musical writer hired by Steven Bochco (the creator of New York Police Blues (1993)) for the now infamous television musical series Cop Rock (1990). Shortly after Cop Rock (1990), Elliott was hired by President Doug Morris and Jason Flom to work at Atlantic Records' West Coast office as a staff producer/Artists and Repertoire representative. At Atlantic, he worked with a diverse slate of acts ranging from En Vogue, Phil Collins, 'Gerald LeVert', Debbie Gibson and Tori Amos as well as producing the first "alternative" music album for the label by the Snapdragons. Elliott also discovered and produced the rap act Mr. Nice Guy. In addition, he was responsible for the idea of mining Atlantic's existing back catalog, which resulted in a deal between Atlantic and Rhino Records.Following Atlantic, Elliott worked in the Artists and Repertoire division at Warner Brothers Records where he served as a creative liaison ("A & R man") for Prince, Miles Davis, George Clinton and Paul Simon. In 1994, Elliott and his then partner Ari Emanuel started Matter Inc., one of the first companies to focus on entertainment programming for the Internet. Revolutionary in its foresight, the company produced the first celebrity "chat show" on line for America Online in 1995 with "The Oldsmobile Hour" which featured a different celebrity answering and interacting with America Online subscribers five nights a week.In 1995, he composed, orchestrated and arranged scores for such television shows as Here and Now (1992) and Une fille à scandales (1995) for NBC, "The NFL on Fox" for FBC, in addition to composing the opening and closing themes for the Grammy Awards in 1997 and 1998. His production of Carl Hancock Rux's 1999 Sony album "Rux Revue" earned him praise from the New Yorker, Interview and Spin magazine as well as being featured on National Public Radio's "Morning Edition". Elliott's production of the band Speakeasy, featuring legendary guitarist Ry Cooder, his son Joachim and newcomer Juliette Commagere was singled out twice by the Los Angeles Times in the "Pop Eye" column. He discovered Ms. Commagere when she was 16 years old, singing at a restaurant in Silverlake.Elliott has written orchestrations, arrangements and conducted for acts such as Beck, V.A.S.T., Jamiroquai and Supergrass in addition to Varese Sarabande's tribute to Burt Bacharach. His remix work has been featured on Jamiroquai's multi-platinum "Virtual Insanity" and Eel's "Susan's House." He continues to find talent for record companies and was responsible for signing the band "Eels" to Dreamworks Records.In November, 2000, Elliott produced comedian Brandon Bowlin's one man show, "Return from the Underground." As a result, Bowlin was featured as "the new voice in comedy" in the 1999 preview issue of the Sunday Los Angeles Times Calendar section. After the success of the initial production, Elliott will produce a new incarnation of Bowlin's show with Bernie Brillstein for Brillstein-Grey Productions that will be seen at HBO's Aspen Comedy and Arts Festival in February, 2000. Last year, he started "Al's Records & Tapes" with funding from Interscope Records. This led to the debut release from the band Woven, which he produced.Elliott has studied composition and orchestration with Jack Smalley as well as working and/or studying with such acclaimed artists as Quincy Jones, Dave Grusin, Henry Mancini, Wah Wah Watson, Phil Ramone, the Dust Brothers and his father, Jack Elliott.
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