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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Scott Bomar
Bomar in 2013
Bomar in 2013
Background information
Born (1974-06-15) June 15, 1974 (age 49)
Memphis, Tennessee, U.S.
GenresSoul / Jazz / Blues / Soundtrack / Americana / Funk
Occupation(s)musician, composer, music producer, recording engineer
Instrument(s)Bass, Guitar, Keyboards, Percussion
Years active1993 to Present

Scott Bomar (born June 15, 1974) is a Memphis-based musician, Emmy Award-winning film composer, Grammy-nominated music producer, and recording engineer. Scott Bomar's songs are represented by Downtown Music Publishing.

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Transcription

Early years

A native of Memphis, Tennessee, Bomar was introduced to music at an early age, aided by his mother's record collection and regular exposure to Memphis' legendary musicians.

Impala

Bomar's music career began in the early 1990s. Impala, consisting of guitarist John Stivers, saxophonist Justin Thompson, drummer Jeff Goggans, and Bomar on bass, gained national prominence on the strength of their debut album, El Rancho Reverbo, co-produced by Roland Janes. They signed with Estrus Records.

Following the release of Kings of the Strip, Impala toured relentlessly, appearing at a slew of garage rock festivals (including Garage Shock, Sleezefest, Crap Out, and Dixie Fried) and alongside guitar legends Dick Dale and Davie Allen and the Arrows.

Over the past decade, Impala has been featured on numerous occasions in film and on television, most notably for their arrangement of Henry Mancini's "Experiment in Terror," and Duane Eddy's "Stalkin'", as a medley, which appeared in the Chuck Barris biopic Confessions of a Dangerous Mind. The band's current lineup includes trumpeter/keyboardist, former Bobby "Blue" Bland sideman, and Bo-Keys member Marc Franklin.

In 2018 Impala released In the Late Hours on Bomar's Electraphonic Recording imprint. When premiering the song, "The Insomniac", Rolling Stone said it "...combines surf-guitar nostalgia with a minor-key, spy-movie-worthy riffage. Together, those influences form a truly unique sound, one that’s retro without lapsing into mimicry." [1]

The Bo-Keys and Al Green

Bomar gained individual prominence playing bass for legendary Stax artists such as Rufus and Carla Thomas, Eddie Floyd, William Bell, Sun Records pioneer Rosco Gordon, and Motown session guitarist Dennis Coffey, both in studio session and on the road.

In 1998, he formed The Bo-Keys, a Memphis soul/funk group featuring former Stax/Volt, Hi Records and Isaac Hayes session players Skip Pitts, Howard Grimes and Ben Cauley.

Following the success of The Bo-Keys' critically acclaimed album, The Royal Sessions, Bomar was asked to serve as assistant engineer on Al Green's comeback album, I Can't Stop, which was nominated for a Grammy in 2003. In 2005, Scott re-joined producer Willie Mitchell to record Al Green's Everything's Okay.

In 2005, The Bo-Keys performed on the film and soundtrack for Hustle & Flow as well as the Paramount/Nickelodeon animated feature Barnyard, directed by Bob Oedekirk. Three years later, they appeared in the film Soul Men, performing on-screen with Samuel L. Jackson and Bernie Mack. The group also added three songs to the film's soundtrack (produced by Bomar), including Anthony Hamilton's "Soul Music," which was nominated for a Grammy in 2009.[2]

The Bo-Keys have performed at various festivals, including multiple appearances at The Ponderosa Stomp, London’s Barbican Performing Arts Centre, and Lincoln Center’s Midsummer Nights Swing Series.

Collaborations with Craig Brewer

In 2005, Bomar composed the score for Craig Brewer's award-winning film Hustle & Flow. Touted as Memphis soul meets hip hop, Bomar's work on the film has received much critical acclaim.

Bomar's collaboration with Brewer continued in 2006 when he served as Executive Music Producer and Composer for the film Black Snake Moan. In preparation for the recording process, Bomar took Brewer and lead actor Samuel L. Jackson on a road trip through Mississippi, during which the trio met with a slew of blues musicians, working to parlay classics like "Stackolee" and "That Black Snake Moan" into modern sinister laments. Upon returning to the studio, Bomar enlisted musicians rooted in Memphis, including harmonica legend Charlie Musselwhite, and The North Mississippi Allstars, the contemporary blues/rock group of Jim Dickinson and his sons Luther and Cody. He was later joined by the stars of the film, Samuel L. Jackson and Christina Ricci, to record songs subsequently performed on screen.

Bomar served as producer with Brewer on the MTV New Media series "$5 COVER" in 2009.[3]

Bomar most recently composed the original score for Craig Brewer's, Dolemite Is My Name.

Recent accomplishment notes

Bomar at stage with The Bo-Keys in 2017

Bomar won an Emmy for "Best Original Music" for the documentary, I Am a Man: From Memphis, A Lesson in Life.

In 2010, he co-produced and engineered Cyndi Lauper’s Memphis Blues at his Memphis studio, Electraphonic Recording. The album spent 13 weeks at #1 on the Billboard Blues chart and was nominated for a Grammy in the Best Traditional Blues Album category.

Bomar previously served as Trustee and President of the Memphis Chapter of NARAS.

Bomar returned to film in 2010 as Producer/Composer of the soundtrack for Losers Take All, which was recorded at his Electraphonic studio.[4]

Filmography (partial)

Discography (partial)

  • Don Bryant, You Make Me Feel - Producer/Engineer/Songwriter // GRAMMY NOMINATED
  • Dolemite Is My Name, Music From the Netflix Film – Artist
  • Don Bryant, Don't Give Up On Love – Producer/Mixer/Songwriter // BLUES MUSIC AWARD NOMINATED
  • Liz Brasher, Painted Image – Producer/Engineer
  • William Bell, This is Where I Live – Songwriter // GRAMMY WINNER ‘Best Americana Album’ in 2017
  • Scott Sharrard, Saving Grace – Producer/Engineer
  • Cedric Burnside Project, Descendants of Hill Country – Engineer // GRAMMY NOMINATED
  • John Németh, Memphis Grease – Producer and Engineer (Blue Corn Music) BLUES MUSIC AWARD WINNER – BEST SOUL BLUES ALBUM
  • Robin McKelle, Heart of Memphis – Producer and Engineer (Sony/Okeh)
  • The City Champs, The Set-Up – Producer and Engineer (Electraphonic Records)
  • Cyndi Lauper, Memphis Blues – Producer and Engineer (Downtown Records) // GRAMMY NOMINATED
  • The Bo-Keys, Got to Get Back ! – Producer and Mixing (Electraphonic Records) // BLUES MUSIC AWARD NOMINATED
  • The City Champs, The Safecracker – Producer and Engineer (Electraphonic Records)
  • Jay Reatard, Watch Me Fall – Engineer on “I’m Watching You” (Matador Records)
  • Soul Men: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack – Producer on “Private Number,” “Memphis Train,” and “Soul Music” (Stax/Concord Records) // GRAMMY NOMINATED
  • Black Snake Moan: Music From the Motion Picture – Soundtrack Album Producer (New West Records)
  • The Bo-Keys, The Royal Sessions – Producer and Mixing (Electraphonic Records) // W.C. HANDY AWARD NOMINATED
  • Calvin Newborn, Newborn – Producer and Mixing (Yellowdog Records)
  • Al Green, Everything's OK – Assistant Engineer (Blue Note Records) // GRAMMY NOMINATED
  • Al Green, I Can't Stop – Assistant Engineer (Blue Note Records)

Other sources

  • Beifuss, John. "Movie with the Memphis Sound," The Commercial Appeal, 3 April 2008.
  • Callaghan, Dylan. "Up and Coming Composers," The Hollywood Reporter, 19 April 2005.
  • Donahue, Michael. "Moan Music Man," The Commercial Appeal, 21 October 2005.
  • Lisle, Andria. "Sam in the Studio," The Memphis Flyer, 7 September 2005.
  • Lisle, Andria. "Two Worlds Collide," The Memphis Flyer, 4 November 2005.
  • Mehr, Bob. "South by Southwest: Tennessee Heats Up Texas," The Commercial Appeal, 13 March 2008.
  • Morris, Chris. "Brewer's Moan Howls North Mississippi Blues," The Hollywood Reporter, 30 November 2006.
  • Olsen, Mark. "Back to Memphis, This Time Making the City Moan," The New York Times, 11 February 2007.

References

  1. ^ Crawford, Robert (August 24, 2018). "10 Best Country and Americana Songs of the Week: Eric Church, Jillian Jacqueline".
  2. ^ Mehr, Bob. "News in the Arts: Stax-infused film 'Soul Men' premieres Friday", The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, 31 October 2008.
  3. ^ Lisle, Andria. "$5 Cover: Craig Brewer", The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, 26 April 2009.
  4. ^ Beifuss, John. "Real Memphis musicians lend talents to fictional band for movie to film here", The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, 11 February 2010.

External links

This page was last edited on 24 June 2023, at 16:49
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