Charlie Gillingham

Charles Thomas Gillingham (born January 26, 1960) is a keyboardist and multi-instrumentalist best known for his performance on the Hammond B-3 organ, accordion, piano, and keyboards for the band Counting Crows. He has also played the bass guitar in live shows during certain songs such as "Holiday in Spain".

Charlie Gillingham
Background information
Birth nameCharles Thomas Gillingham
Born (1960-01-26) January 26, 1960
OriginTorrance, California, United States[1]
GenresRock
Occupation(s)Instrumentalist
Instrumentskeyboards
Years active1990–present
Associated actsCounting Crows, Low Stars, Feeder, American Music Club, Train, Cracker, Matt Nathanson

Gillingham attended Richard Henry Dana Junior High in San Pedro, California, and also attended Miraleste High School in Rancho Palos Verdes his sophomore, junior and senior year. He was a member of Slip Stream, Clark, Kent, and the Reporters, Midnight Radio, Zip Code Revue, and played keyboards on Train's 1998 debut album.

In 2004, Gillingham was nominated for an Oscar as co-composer of the song "Accidentally in Love". He was put forward in the category Academy Award for Best Original Song with his fellow songwriters Adam Duritz, Jim Bogios, David Immerglück, Matt Malley, David Bryson and Dan Vickrey.[2] The track was used in the film Shrek 2.

Gillingham studied philosophy and artificial intelligence at University of California, Berkeley.[3][4] Before entering the music industry, he worked as a software engineer in the field of artificial intelligence.[5]

Recordings

Apart from his work with Counting Crows, Gillingham also contributed to the following recordings:[6]

gollark: Well, cheaper hats.
gollark: More hats!
gollark: I mean, apart from government taxation, you *could* barter.
gollark: Just send it as two messages.
gollark: S̬ͯ̃ṵ̑̐b̟̕ͅm̜̎͠i̹ͯͅt̛͎̣ ̱͇͞ṯ̵͡ơ̵͝ ̞͚̉t̟ͣͮh͉̹̽e͉̳ͪ ̭̗̩U̱̺ͩn̡͚͡i͚ͩͬċ̞̃oͩͫ̈́d̰̉̋e͏̳̇ ͚̞̓C͔̀͜oͫͧͪn̾̉̍s͍̑̈ȯ̧̟r̶ͥͅt̝ͦͣi̸̙͜ů̴̎m͋҉͕.̼̲͆

See also

References

  1. "Musicsquare.com birthday information file". Archived from the original on February 10, 2012. Retrieved December 10, 2007.
  2. IMDb Academy Award details
  3. "Hey, Mr Jones!". Rolling Stone. June 30, 1994. Retrieved August 2, 2014.
  4. Rolling Stone article under the cut at the bottom of the picture
  5. "Frequently Asked Questions". Another Fallen Satellite--A Tribute To Counting Crows. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  6. Allmusic information
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