Lewis Furey

Personal Info

Known For Sound

Gender Male

Birthday 1949-06-07 (75 years old)

Place of Birth Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Lewis Furey

Biography

Lewis Furey, born Lewis Greenblatt (born 7 June 1949) is a Canadian composer, singer, violinist, pianist, actor and director. Born in Montreal, Quebec to French and American parents, Furey trained as a classical violinist, and at age 11 performed as a soloist in the Matinées pour la jeunesse concert series of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra. From 1961 to 1965 he studied at the Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal. He later studied at the Juilliard School in New York City. In 1972, he began playing and recording his own rock music compositions. In the ensuing years, he produced three albums of pop music: Lewis Furey (1975, A & M 4522), The Humours of Lewis Furey (1976, A & M 4594) and The Sky is Falling (1979, Aquarius AQR-521). Distinguishing features of the albums were Furey's Lou Reed-like vocal stylings, a number of songs with gay content (particularly the local Montréal radio hit Hustler's Tango), and exotic arrangements featuring unusual uses of violin and banjo as well as elements of klezmer music. In 1975, he began a new venture as a composer for films. His first film score, for director Gilles Carle's La Tête de Normande St. Onge (1975), won a Canadian Film Award. In 1977, he worked on the Gilles Carle film L'Ange et la femme along with his future wife, the actress and singer Carole Laure. This project involved more than composing alone; Furey and Laure are famously seen performing a sex act in the film. Furey also composed for the Allan Moyle film The Rubber Gun, which despite the risqué-sounding title was about families affected by drug use. Later in the 1970s, Furey and Laure produced a number of successful stage reviews in Paris. Furey also served as producer and frequently also as songwriter for a series of albums by Carole Laure, beginning with Alibis (1979, RCA KKL-1-0290), a hit in Québec in 1979. In 1980, Furey wrote the music for another Gilles Carle film Fantastica, which starred Laure in the lead role of Lorca. Furey also acted in the film and was nominated for a Genie Award in Canada for "Best Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role." Furey further developed his career in film and television music with productions such as a 1983 Gilles Carle movie, Maria Chapdelaine, based on the classic Québec-based Louis Hémon novel of the same name. His score for this film won a Genie Award. In 1984 he wrote the screenplay for Night Magic, with the script co-written by Leonard Cohen. Based in France since the late 1970s, Furey has continued to score film and television work as well as producing and writing for successful albums by Laure, such as She Says Move On (1991) and Sentiments naturels (1997). A stage production based on the latter ran for over a month in Paris in 1998. ... Source: Article "Lewis Furey" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA 3.0.

Known For

Sound

2014
Love Project

as Music

1988
Shades of Love: Tangerine Taxi

as Original Music Composer

1986
Sauve-toi, Lola

as Original Music Composer

1985
The Peanut Butter Solution

as Original Music Composer

1985
Night Magic

as Original Music Composer

1984
American Dreamer

as Original Music Composer

1983
Maria Chapdelaine

as Original Music Composer

1980
Agency

as Original Music Composer

1979
1978
Jacob Two-Two Meets the Hooded Fang

as Original Music Composer

1977
The Rubber Gun

as Original Music Composer

1975
Normande

as Original Music Composer

Actor

2015
The Forbidden Room

as Skull Faced Man

1982
1980
Fantastica

as Paul

1977
The Angel and the Woman

as Angel Gabrielle

1975
Numéro un

as Self

Director

2000
Rats And Rabbits

as Director

1988
Shadow Dancing

as Director

1985
Night Magic

as Director

Writer

2000
1985
Night Magic

as Writer

1980
Fantastica

as Musical