Hubbry Logo
Bob TelsonBob TelsonMain
Open search
Bob Telson
Community hub
Bob Telson
logo
7 pages, 0 posts
0 subscribers
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Be the first to start a discussion here.
Bob Telson
Bob Telson
from Wikipedia

Key Information

Robert Eria Telson (born May 14, 1949) is an American composer, songwriter, and pianist best known for his work in musical theater and film, for which he has received Tony, Pulitzer, and Academy Award nominations.

Biography

[edit]

Robert Eria Telson was born in Cannes, France, in 1949. He grew up in Brooklyn, New York, son of Paula (née Blackman) and David Telson. He began studying piano when he was five years old. By nine he had already performed a Mozart piece on television and given a concert of his own compositions. At 14, he wrote 72 love songs for his first girlfriend, Margie. At 16 and 17 he studied organ, counterpoint and harmony in France with Nadia Boulanger.[1] He followed this with a degree in music from Harvard University in 1970. Telson also played organ and composed original songs for a rock band called The Bristols, while he was a high school student at Poly Prep in Brooklyn, New York. Several of these were recorded at Decca Studios but never released. At Harvard, he formed another group called Groundspeed, which brought him back to the Decca Studios in 1967 to record a demo recording of his songs "L-12 East" and "In a Dream" with producer Dick Jacobs. This was released by the label in 1968. After the demise of Groundspeed, Telson formed the band Revolutionary Music Collective, which included then-unknown singer Bonnie Raitt on lead vocals.

After graduation from Harvard, Telson's first professional work was as a member of the Philip Glass Ensemble from 1972 to 1974. After that began his immersion in ethnic world music, as the pianist of salsa bandleaders Tito Puente and Machito. He was then organist of the gospel group Five Blind Boys of Alabama, for whom he also composed, arranged and produced. Collaborating with director/writer Lee Breuer, in 1983 he composed the musical The Gospel at Colonus,[2] an adaptation of Sophocles's Oedipus tale, featuring Morgan Freeman, the Five Blind Boys and the Soul Stirrers. Newsweek called it: "The best white man’s capturings of the essence of black music since Gershwin's Porgy and Bess."

As a composer, Telson received an Academy Award nomination for his song "Calling You" from the movie Bagdad Café,[3] as well as Pulitzer,[4] Grammy and Tony Award nominations for his Broadway musicals, The Gospel at Colonus and Chronicle of a Death Foretold, an adaptation of the Gabriel García Márquez novel.

Telson has composed soundtracks for American, French, German and Argentinian films (including five for Percy Adlon), as well as a ballet score for Twyla Tharp (Sextet) His songs have been recorded by many international artists, such as Barbra Streisand, Natalie Cole, George Benson, Joe Cocker, Celine Dion, Wynton Marsalis, k.d. lang, Shawn Colvin, Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa, Etta James, Jeff Buckley, and George Michael.

According to The New York Times: "Mr. Telson has a remarkable talent for relating to musicians from diverse musical cultures and for writing stirring, dramatic music in non-Western European idioms."[5] They also described his music as "a compendium of world music styles brilliantly reimagined, embellished and sometimes made to overlap by Mr. Telson, a classically trained American composer and multi-instrumentalist".[6]

Current work

[edit]

Telson's latest CDs, "Bantú," and "Desafiando las Distancias, Part II," were released in December 2024. His new musical, "Bantú," with libretto and lyrics by Graciela Corso, was presented in New York in October 2023, and in Uruguay in November, 2024.

Musical theater

[edit]
  • Sister Suzie Cinema – premiere: 1980 NY Public Theater / collaboration with Lee Breuer
  • The Gospel at Colonus – 1983 Brooklyn Academy of Music / collaboration with Lee Breuer/ 1988 Broadway, still touring internationally
  • The Warrior Ant – 1988 Brooklyn Academy of Music/ collaboration with Lee Breuer
  • Chronicle of a Death Foretold – 1995 Broadway/ produced by Lincoln Center
  • Bagdad Cafe the Musical: toured in Europe 2004–06/ collaboration with Percy Adlon and Lee Breuer
  • Bantú: with libretto and lyrics by Graciela Corso, presented in concert version in New York, October 2023, and in Uruguay in November, 2024

Discography

[edit]
  • The Gospel at Colonus (original cast recording) (Nonesuch, 1988)
  • Bagdad Cafe (soundtrack) (Island Records, 1989)
  • Calling You (Warner Bros., 1992)
  • An Ant Alone: Songs from the Warrior Ant (Little Village) (Rykodisk, 1991)
  • La Vida Según Muriel (soundtrack) (Polygram, 1997)
  • Trip (Isabel de Sebastian & Bob Telson) (Acqua, 2008)
  • Old LP (Acqua (2012), Naxos (2012))
  • American Dreamers (CD Baby, 2016)
  • Defying the Distances (2019)
  • Bantú (2024)
  • Desafiando las Distancias Part II (2024)

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Bob Telson is an American composer, songwriter, and pianist known for his innovative fusion of diverse musical traditions in musical theater and film, earning an Academy Award nomination. His most celebrated works include the groundbreaking musical The Gospel at Colonus, an adaptation of Sophocles's Oedipus at Colonus featuring gospel and soul elements, and the score for the film Bagdad Café, highlighted by the Oscar-nominated song "Calling You." Telson's compositions have been performed and recorded by prominent artists including Barbra Streisand, Natalie Cole, Celine Dion, Joe Cocker, and George Michael, reflecting his wide-ranging influence across genres. Born Robert Eria Telson in Cannes, France, in 1949, he grew up in Brooklyn, New York, and began studying piano at age five, later training with Nadia Boulanger in France and earning a music degree from Harvard University in 1970. Early in his career, he performed with the Philip Glass Ensemble, salsa legends Tito Puente and Machito, and the gospel group the Five Blind Boys of Alabama, experiences that shaped his eclectic style. His long collaboration with director Lee Breuer produced key theater pieces such as Sister Suzie Cinema and Chronicle of a Death Foretold. Telson has composed for numerous international films, including multiple projects with director Percy Adlon, and created ballet scores like Sextet for Twyla Tharp. More recently, he collaborated with playwright Graciela Corso on the Spanish-language musical Bantú, which premiered in concert form in 2023 and had a theatrical presentation in Uruguay in 2024. His work continues to bridge classical, gospel, world music, and contemporary styles, earning praise for its dramatic and cultural depth.

Early life and education

Childhood and early musical experiences

Bob Telson was born Robert Eria Telson on May 14, 1949, in Cannes, France. He grew up in Brooklyn, New York, as the son of Paula (née Blackman) and David Telson. Telson displayed prodigious musical talent from a young age, beginning piano studies at five. By nine, he had performed Mozart on television and given a concert featuring his own compositions. In high school at Poly Prep, he played organ and composed for the rock band The Bristols, with several recordings made at Decca Studios though they remained unreleased. He later formed Groundspeed at Harvard, producing demo recordings of "L-12 East" and "In a Dream," which Decca released in 1968.

Formal musical education

Bob Telson pursued advanced formal training in music during his teenage years and university education. At ages 15 and 16 he studied organ, counterpoint, and harmony in France with Nadia Boulanger. Boulanger, recognizing his talent, helped facilitate his admission to Harvard University. He earned a degree in music from Harvard in 1970.

Early professional career

Diverse musical engagements

In the years following his university education, Bob Telson pursued a strikingly eclectic path in professional music, engaging with minimalism, Latin salsa, and gospel traditions. His first major role was as a member of the Philip Glass Ensemble, where he performed from 1972 to 1974. He subsequently immersed himself in Latin music as pianist for salsa bandleaders Tito Puente and Machito, gaining a deeper understanding of rhythm and ensemble interplay. Telson later worked with gospel as organist, composer, arranger, and producer for the Five Blind Boys of Alabama. These experiences across genres highlighted his adaptability and capacity to synthesize diverse musical traditions, qualities noted by Philip Glass who described him as a virtuoso ensemble player with a strong ear for cross-cultural and non-Western influences. His gospel involvement would later inform his work on The Gospel at Colonus.

Musical theater career

Collaborations with Lee Breuer

Bob Telson and director Lee Breuer began their long-term collaboration in musical theater with the 1980 premiere of Sister Suzie Cinema, a doo-wop opera composed by Telson with words and concept by Breuer that featured the vocal group Fourteen Karat Soul. The work debuted at the New York Public Theater and explored fantasies shaped by movies and music. Their most celebrated joint project is The Gospel at Colonus, an adaptation of Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus reimagined as a Black Pentecostal gospel revival service, with music composed by Telson and book and lyrics by Breuer (with Telson contributing adapted lyrics). It premiered at the Brooklyn Academy of Music's Next Wave Festival in 1983, incorporating a rousing gospel score and featuring Clarence Fountain & The Five Blind Boys of Alabama as Oedipus. Later productions included actor Morgan Freeman. The piece earned an Obie Award for Outstanding Musical from its premiere engagement and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1985. It transferred to Broadway in 1988, opening at the Lunt-Fontanne Theatre on March 24 and closing May 15 after 61 performances. Also in 1988, Breuer and Telson presented The Warrior Ant at the Brooklyn Academy of Music as part of their ongoing experimental work blending music and narrative.

Other notable theater works

Bob Telson composed the original score for Twyla Tharp's ballet Sextet, a virtuosic pure-dance work for three couples that premiered on January 30, 1992, at New York City Center performed by Twyla Tharp Dance. The 21-minute piece features fast, flamboyant, and technically rigorous choreography with whiplash partnering and complex ensembles, creating a laid-back tropical atmosphere described as a shimmering success and a tour de force. Telson's inspired score draws deeply from Argentine tangos, incorporating accordion-like bandoneon sounds alongside eclectic elements from Caribbean and Middle Eastern genres to enhance the potent sense of desire in the dancing. The ballet later toured to venues including Tokyo in February 1992 and Paris in 1993, though Telson's music was replaced by a new score from Peter Melnick beginning in September 1993. In 1995, Telson provided the music for Chronicle of a Death Foretold, a Broadway musical adaptation of Gabriel García Márquez's novel presented by Lincoln Center Theater. It received Tony Award nominations for Best Musical and Best Book of a Musical in 1996. Telson wrote the music for Bagdad Cafe the Musical, a stage adaptation of Percy Adlon's 1987 film Bagdad Cafe. The production, with book and adaptation by Percy Adlon and Eleonore Adlon, and lyrics by Lee Breuer, Percy Adlon, and Bob Telson, had its world premiere in 2004 at Barcelona Teatre Musical and toured Europe through 2006 with performances in cities including Barcelona and Lyon. In recent years Telson collaborated with Graciela Corso on Bantú, a Spanish-language musical theater work-in-progress for which he composed eight songs. A concert version was presented at ID Studio Theater in New York on October 22, 2023, featuring performers including Leah Young, Ika Santamaria, and Telson on keyboards. The piece received its theatrical presentation in Montevideo, Uruguay, on November 30, 2024, and a CD recording was released in November 2024.

Film career

Scores and songs for films

Bob Telson has composed original scores and songs for a variety of feature films, with notable collaborations alongside German director Percy Adlon on three projects. These include Bagdad Cafe (1987), where Telson provided the complete score and composed the signature song "Calling You," performed by Jevetta Steele. "Calling You" gained widespread recognition and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song. Other films scored by Telson for Adlon are Rosalie Goes Shopping (1989) and Salmonberries (1991), showcasing his ability to blend evocative instrumental music with thematic songs that complement Adlon's distinctive cinematic style. Beyond these collaborations, Telson contributed scores to additional independent and international features, including Fathers' Day (1990), Life According to Muriel (1997, also known as La Vida Según Muriel), and Hawaiian Gardens (2001). The enduring popularity of "Calling You" from Bagdad Cafe has led to its licensing and reuse in numerous television series and soundtrack compilations over the years. In select projects, Telson has also taken on roles in the music department, such as additional music composition or musician contributions.

Awards and nominations

Major honors received

Bob Telson has received several major honors and nominations in recognition of his contributions to musical theater and film composition. He won an Obie Award in 1984 for Best Musical for The Gospel at Colonus. He was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1988 for The Gospel at Colonus. Telson received a Tony Award nomination for his work on the Broadway production Chronicle of a Death Foretold. In 1989, Telson was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Song for "Calling You" from Bagdad Cafe.

Recent work and discography

Later projects and selected recordings

In the 2010s and 2020s, Bob Telson has released a series of solo albums showcasing his original compositions as a singer-songwriter and pianist. His 2012 album Old LP featured ten tracks, including songs such as "Old LP" and "Show Me Your Face." This was followed by American Dreamers in 2016, a thirteen-song collection that included renditions of earlier works alongside new material. In 2019, he released Defying the Distances (also known as Desafiando las Distancias), a ten-song album described as "a long distance love story." Telson's most recent major project is the Spanish-language musical Bantú, created in collaboration with Uruguayan playwright Graciela Corso, for which he composed the songs. A concert version was performed in 2023, and the Bantú CD, containing eleven tracks, was released in November 2024. The work received a theatrical presentation in Montevideo, Uruguay, on November 30, 2024. A live recording from the Montevideo performances was subsequently made available. The discography page on his official website also notes a planned desafiando las distancias (a long distance love story) part II for 2025. Selected recordings from across his career include the original cast album for The Gospel at Colonus (1988, Nonesuch Records), the Bagdad Cafe soundtrack (1989), the Calling You single (1992), and the La Vida Según Muriel soundtrack (1997). His compositions have been recorded by numerous prominent artists, including Barbra Streisand, Natalie Cole, Celine Dion, George Benson, Joe Cocker, Etta James, k.d. lang, Shawn Colvin, Caetano Veloso, Gal Costa, and George Michael.
Add your contribution
Related Hubs
User Avatar
No comments yet.