Dave Pierce
This article contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information. (August 2021) |
Dave Pierce | |
---|---|
Born | Drayton Valley, Alberta, Canada | July 10, 1968
Occupation(s) | Songwriter, composer, producer, and arranger |
Part of a series on |
2010 Winter Olympics |
---|
Dave Pierce (born July 10, 1968)[1] is a Canadian songwriter, composer, producer, and arranger. He was the music director for the opening, closing, and victory ceremonies of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, for which he received an Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Direction in 2010.[2] He was also the arranger for Twyla Tharp's Frank Sinatra musical, Come Fly Away, which opened in March of 2010 in New York at the Marquis Theatre on Broadway and later that year as Sinatra Dance With Me at the Wynn Las Vegas.[3] Additionally, Peirce was the music director of the Calgary Stampede Evening Grandstand Show and of the 2009 Gemini Awards television show in Canada. He is the father of two daughters.
Pierce has worked with a variety of performers, including Michael Bublé, Loreena McKennitt, Petula Clark, Carrie Underwood, Paul Brandt, Ian Tyson, Jann Arden, Jorane, Bryan Adams, Sarah McLachlan, Nelly Furtado and k.d. lang. He was also commissioned to compose a symphonic work for Queen Elizabeth II.[4]
Career
[edit]Dave Pierce was born in Drayton Valley, Alberta.[1] An alumnus of Boston's Berklee College of Music (1992), Pierce returned to his native Canada. He began working with entertainment producers, developing many projects including Radio City Music Hall's Christmas Spectacular in New York City featuring The Rockettes, Grey Cup halftime shows for the Canadian Football League, television awards shows including Canada's Gemini Awards, and the ACMA's in The United States.
His credits range from musical theater, sporting and cultural events to commercial recordings and live mega spectacles. As an orchestrator, Pierce has adapted scores for Broadway National Tours including Chicago, The Music of Andrew Lloyd Webber Concert Tour, Thoroughly Modern Millie, 42nd Street, Crazy for You, Dr. Dolittle, and Annie Get Your Gun.
Pierce worked with Cirque du Soleil, ABC, CBS, Madison Square Garden, 19 Entertainment, Macy's Parade, Arista Records, Tropicana Resorts, Clear Channel Europe, Disney, Bayer, Fashion Television, Norwegian Cruise Lines, Troika Entertainment, the Government of Canada, BMG and Universal Music.
Pierce was the director of music for the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver. His compositions were used as the underpinning of the opening and closing ceremonies as well as the daily medal presentations. Pierce produced the CD Sounds of Vancouver 2010: Opening Ceremony Commemorative Album, and the Sounds of Vancouver 2010: Closing Ceremony Commemorative Album. Each CD features artists from the ceremonies including Bryan Adams, Nelly Furtado, K-os, Michael Bublé, Sarah McLachlan, Nickelback, Alanis Morissette, Donald Sutherland, Garou, and opera singers Measha Brueggergosman and Ben Heppner. Beyond one pre-recorded segment, featuring a performance of Samuel Barber's Adagio for Strings, conducted in studio by ballet maestro Earl Stafford, Pierce conducted all of the recording orchestras as well as the opening ceremony live on-stage orchestra (known as the 2010 Vancouver Olympic Orchestra, per the album). Pierce utilized a unique approach to producing the recordings for the Games which employed over 300 musicians and provided a cross-genre score that included Canadian indigenous musicians, symphonic instrumentalists, and players from the worlds of jazz, punk, rock, R&B, folk and country.[5]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Dave Pierce at the Internet Broadway Database
- ^ Jessica Patterson, for Metro Canada. "Olympics composer Dave Pierce wins one more Gold for Canada". Yahoo! News. Retrieved 2010-11-08.[dead link ]
- ^ "Emmy-Winning Olympic Composer Dave Pierce to dance with Sinatra in Vegas". We Do It All Vegas!. Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2010-11-12.
- ^ "Dave's Bio". davepiercemusic.com. Retrieved 13 August 2019.
- ^ "Dave Pierce Interview". collections.nmc.ca. Retrieved 2022-08-19.