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Michael Penn

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Michael Penn
Penn playing guitar
Penn in 2007
Background information
Born (1958-08-01) August 1, 1958 (age 65)
Greenwich Village, New York City, U.S.
GenresAlternative Pop/Rock
Occupation(s)Singer-songwriter, composer, musician,
Instrument(s)
  • Guitar
  • piano
  • bass
  • vocals
Years active1989–present
Labels
Spouse(s)
(m. 1997)
Websitewww.michaelpenn.com

Michael Daniel Penn (born August 1, 1958) is an American singer, songwriter, and composer. He is noted for the 1989 single "No Myth", a top 20 hit in the US and successful in several other countries.

Early life

Penn was born in Greenwich Village, New York City. He is the first son of actor and director Leo Penn and actress Eileen Ryan, and the brother of actors Sean Penn and Chris Penn. He is of Lithuanian Jewish (father) and Irish-Italian (mother) descent.

Career

Michael Penn is a critically acclaimed singer/songwriter and film composer.[1] Prior to the release of his 1989 debut album March, Penn was a member of the Los Angeles band Doll Congress, was one of two musical guests on Saturday Night Live October 24, 1987 (as a solo artist, with his brother Sean Penn hosting), and had appeared as an extra on a few television series, including St. Elsewhere.

March, particularly the first single, "No Myth," brought Penn attention, as well as the 1990 MTV Video Music Award for Best New Artist. Penn's follow-up albums Free-for-All (1992), Resigned (1997), MP4: Days Since a Lost Time Accident (2000), Mr. Hollywood Jr., 1947 (2005) and Palms and Runes, Tarot and Tea (2007) weren't able to match the commercial success of March, although critics continued to praise his songcraft.

It was with Free-for-All that Penn faced the specter of the one-hit wonder. The album, while praised by critics, was not as successful as Penn's debut, though it had more than its share of supporters. Rolling Stone called it "stunning"[2] and CMJ wrote that the album "exhausts any doubts" about whether March was a fluke.[3]

In Vox magazine, critic Gary Leboff acknowledged that Penn could be "pig-headedly uncommercial," but, he conceded, "the payoff is sublime". Leboff continues, "His freeform songwriting creates tracks of startling shape and originality, offering literate reflections on the human condition..."[citation needed]

Penn collaborated with the renowned surrealist animators The Brothers Quay on "Long Way Down (Look What The Cat Drug In)," which found a home not only on MTV but in film festivals around the country.

He has worked extensively creating original music for film. He scored Paul Thomas Anderson's films Hard Eight (1996) and Boogie Nights (1997); he also appears in the latter in a cameo role playing Nick, a recording engineer. During the editing of the film, Anderson directed a music video with Penn for "Try" from Resigned (the video can be found on the Boogie Nights DVD). Other films scored by Penn include Alan Cumming's first two directorial efforts, The Anniversary Party and Suffering Man's Charity;[4] American Teen, Sunshine Cleaning;[5] the documentary The Comedians of Comedy; and The Last Kiss. In 2003, he was nominated for a DVDX Award for Best Original Score in a DVD Premiere Movie for Melvin Goes to Dinner.[6]

Penn has produced recordings for Aimee Mann, The Wallflowers and Liz Phair.

In August 2005, Penn released Mr. Hollywood Jr., 1947 on his own Mimeograph Records label. Its songs are set against the background of post-World War II Los Angeles; Penn said he chose the year because of several notable events that took place then, including the passage of the National Security Act and the invention of the transistor.[7] The album was reissued by Legacy Recordings in April 2007 with bonus tracks from a KCRW session.[8]

The reissue came in conjunction with Legacy's release of Palms and Runes, Tarot and Tea: A Michael Penn Collection, a compilation that includes several alternate versions and previously unreleased songs. Penn said his goal in compiling, ordering tracks for and producing Palms and Runes was to "make it feel like an album" in its own right.[citation needed]

In late 2009, Penn composed the music for the film That Evening Sun.[9]

In 2012 Penn began work as the composer for the HBO TV show Girls.[10]

In January 2013, the "Girls VOL.1" soundtrack was released on iTunes. The album contained a new song by Michael Penn titled "On Your Way", which was featured in the finale of Season 1.

He also joined the crew of Showtime's Masters of Sex in 2013 as series composer. The show's pilot episode was initially set to be scored by Thomas Newman, but this did not come to fruition and Penn scored both the pilot and the rest of the series.

In 2018, he joined two new TV series as a composer - Good Girls on NBC and Here and Now on HBO.

Personal life

Penn met fellow singer-songwriter Aimee Mann, and during the recording of her album I'm with Stupid (to which Penn contributed), the two struck up a friendship, which blossomed into romance and their December 29, 1997 marriage. Together with manager Michael Hausman they formed United Musicians, an independent music collective founded on "the principle that every artist should be able to retain copyright ownership of the work he or she has created and that this ownership is the basis for artistic strength and true independence."[11] Penn and Mann live in Los Angeles.

Discography

Solo albums

Studio albums

Compilation albums

  • Cinemascope (collection of film score tracks) (2005)
  • Palms and Runes, Tarot and Tea: A Michael Penn Collection (2007)

Singles

Year Title Chart positions Album
US
Hot 100
[15]
US
Modern Rock
[16]
AUS
[13]
BEL
(FLA)

[17]
NED
[18]
1989 "No Myth" 13 4 24 46 48 March
1990 "This & That" 53 10 86 74
"Brave New World" 20
1992 "Seen the Doctor" 5 Free-for-All
"Long Way Down (Look What the Cat Drug In)" 14
1997 "Try" Resigned
"Me Around"
"Out of My Hands"
2000 "Lucky One" MP4

With Gabriele Morgan and Doll Congress/Doll Congress

  • Buried Treasure (5-song EP) (1981)
  • Doll Congress 12" (1983)
  • "Give Up Your Ghost" (sung by Morgan) and "I Will Be Around" (sung by Penn) appear on the soundtrack to Welcome to 18 (1986)

Appearances

Film scores

Filmography

  • St. Elsewhere (playing a lab technician, as an extra) (1985)
  • Boogie Nights (Nick, an engineer) (1997)

References

  1. ^ Jason Ankeny (August 1, 1958). "Michael Penn | Biography & History". AllMusic. Retrieved November 24, 2015.
  2. ^ No. 4 and counting Critically acclaimed, commercially snubbed, Michael Penn tries again Archived February 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, CNN Interactive
  3. ^ Michael Penn: Free-For-All Archived February 11, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, CMJ Review
  4. ^ Glucksman, Mary. Five new films in postproduction, Filmmaker Magazine. Spring 2006.
  5. ^ Michael Penn Filmography, Yahoo! Movies.
  6. ^ DVD Exclusive Awards: 2003, IMDB.
  7. ^ "Michael Penn's Much Anticipated Mr. Hollywood Jr., 1947 in Stores August 2; press release" (PDF). May 4, 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 28, 2007. Retrieved November 24, 2015.
  8. ^ Michael Penn, Morning Becomes Eclectic, KCRW. 2005-10-07.
  9. ^ "ThatEveningSun". ThatEveningSun. Retrieved January 30, 2012.
  10. ^ [1] Archived April 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ unitedmusicians. "Home Page". unitedmusicians.wordpress.com. Retrieved April 16, 2019.
  12. ^ a b "Billboard > Artists / Michael Penn > Chart History > Billboard 200". Billboard. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
  13. ^ a b Australian (ARIA Chart) peaks:
  14. ^ "swedishcharts.com > Michael Penn – March (album)". Hung Medien. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
  15. ^ "Billboard > Artists / Michael Penn > Chart History > The Hot 100". Billboard. Retrieved March 11, 2016. N.B. "This & That" is erroneously listed as "This".
  16. ^ "Billboard > Artists / Michael Penn > Chart History > Alternative Songs". Billboard. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
  17. ^ "Ultratop > Michael Penn – No Myth" (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved March 11, 2016.
  18. ^ "dutchcharts.nl > Discografie Michael Penn" (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved March 11, 2016.