Robert Carli

Robert Carli (born February 10, 1970) is a Canadian film and television composer and saxophonist. He is the composer of 11 seasons of Murdoch Mysteries (CBC),[1] which airs in 120 countries[2] and airs in the U.S. as The Artful Detective on the Ovation Network.[3]

Robert Carli
Born (1970-02-10) February 10, 1970
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
OriginKitchener, Ontario, Canada
Occupation(s)Composer, Arranger, Producer, Performer
InstrumentsSaxophone
Years active1990-present
Websitewww.robcarli.com

Career

Carli studied composition and saxophone performance at the University of Toronto, where his principal teachers were Gustav Ciamaga and Walter Buczynski and has since become a member of their faculty.[4] Carli also studied saxophone with David Tanner and Pat LaBarbera.

He has won five Gemini Awards (Canada), three Canadian Screen Awards, including Best Original Music Score for a TV program in 2017 for Murdoch Mysteries – A Merry Murdoch Christmas[5] and four SOCAN Awards.

Other scoring projects include Wynonna Earp (Syfy)[6] and the 2017 mini-series Tokyo Trial (Netflix).[7]

Carli has been a long-time collaborator with Canadian musician Danny Michel, frequently appearing as a member of his band and performing on his recordings. In 2017. he co-produced and orchestrated Michel’s Khlebnikov album,[8] for which they shared the 2017 Canadian Music Folk Award for Producer of the Year.[9]

A saxophonist, keyboardist, and arranger, Carli has arranged for or performed with such artists as Barenaked Ladies,[10] the Art of Time Ensemble[11] Madeleine Peyroux,[12] the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, and The National Ballet of Canada.[13]

gollark: 100 is the average IQ. Anyone above a tiny age is likely to have access.
gollark: Besides, that's likely to result in massive censorship.
gollark: Also against.
gollark: i̶ ͠w̍ảt̓c̆h̨ȅd̎ ͪt͋h҉eͤ ̫a̔c̸t̥u̼àl̰ ̕r̩e̯w̠ịnͬd̵ ̒a̲n͡d̠ ͮḓi̋d̕ ̇n͗òtͧ ͣg̕ḛt͢ ͠h̰ów̓ ̂i̒t̮ ̄m͠a̤n̡åg̨e͌d̀ ̥tͩo̘ ͗g̎e̠t̑ ͠t̲h̨ät͕ ̳m̟uͧc͢h̍ ̉d͋iͩsͯl̝i̔k̤e̺s̀.̔ ̳i͐ ̷dͫǐs͕l͒ḯk͙e̊d̀ ͦi͜tͪ ͙b̒e̽c͒ḁuͪs̸e̽ ̇i̍t̞ ̸w͆aͧš ̔c̄r̴ȉn̿g͉eͮy͠ ̻a̒n͜dͦ ̽o̫b̪nͨo͑x̀ỉōǘs͕ ͥb̨u̖t̳ ͊p̒e̍o̧p̆ĺe͜ ͦṃuͫst have liked it because mainstream people like fortnite and other cringey stuff in this video.many comm҉ents say "i do not kn҉ow any of these gu҉ys" but i think featuring creators from all over the world is quite a good idea (executed awfully). if all rewinds had always the same people it would not be interesting at all.and guess what҉ is worse and more cringey than the actual rewind? the ҉pewdiepie one!
gollark: Because you're STOOPID.

References

  1. "CBC video, Making Murdoch: The Music of Murdoch". 2014-03-18. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  2. Doyle, John (2016-01-08). "Murdoch Mysteries puzzles American critics". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  3. "The Artful Detective". Ovation TV. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  4. "University of Toronto - Faculty of Music - Our People". University of Toronto Faculty of Music. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  5. "Gala Honouring Excellence in Creative Fiction". Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television. 2017-01-04. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  6. "Screen Composers Guild of Canada interview with SGGC member Rob Carli on his collaboration for the CSA-nominated score "Wynonna Earp: House of Memories."". 2017-02-21. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  7. "Entertainment One Secures Worldwide Distribution Rights To WWII Mini-Series, Tokyo Trial". 2017-09-27. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  8. Rayner, Ben (2017-02-23). "Danny Michel shows off new album written on Russian icebreaker in the Arctic". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  9. Saxberg, Lynn (2017-11-18). "Canadian Folk Music Awards: Danny Michel leads winners on first night". The Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  10. "Rob Carli | credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  11. "Robert Carli". Art of Time Ensemble. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  12. Danilo Navas (2013-06-09). "Art of Time Ensemble: Songbook 7 with Madeleine Peyroux". Latin Jazz Network. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
  13. "Elite Syncopations & Song of a Wayfarer & Chroma". National Ballet of Canada. 2012. Retrieved 2018-01-24.
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