John Bucchino
John Bucchino is an American songwriter of both lyrics and music, an accompanist, a cabaret performer, and a teacher. He has been called "super-talented". Stephen Schwartz said his songs have "insightful lyrics and gorgeous melodies", "rich harmonic textures and subtle…inner voicings." His music has "beautiful intricacies."
Career
Bucchino was born in South Philadelphia, son of an accountant; his family moved to Palm Springs, California when he was 12. He started writing songs in high school. After college he moved to Los Angeles. He never had music lessons of any sort. He does not read music, and he taught himself to play the piano by ear.Bucchino did not seek out a career as songwriter for musicals; he "wanted to be a singer/songwriter/piano player ala Billy Joel or Elton John or Joni Mitchell". Bucchino has been an accompanist for Holly Near starting in the mid 1980s, and for the Australian singer David Campbell.
"He composes at the piano and makes cassette tapes which he gives to friends. For years, those amateur Bucchino tapes have been legendary among insiders in the music business, as singers and song-writers passed them around to each other with words of glowing praise." This was how he came to the attention of both Stephen Sondheim and Stephen Schwartz. Schwartz called him in 1987 and suggested he write for the theater. Bucchino relocated to New York in 1992. He has at times struggled; he was reported in 2000 as playing the piano in office-building lobbies at lunchtime.
Bucchino has been featured in Broadway revues and concerts, including Lincoln Center's American Songbook series, and given highly acclaimed concerts at venues such as Birdland, The Duplex, and The Hollywood Bowl.
Performances
Musicals
- Urban Myths, with book by James Waedekin, an English teacher and director of the theater program at El Segundo High School, is a series of seven short musical pieces based on tales of the peculiar, urban myths, like the woman who dried her dog in the microwave. That show received a production, with no press, at the Century II theater in Wichita, Kansas, in 1998. An article on Bucchino from 2000 says that it "had its premiere last season in Kansas City;" perhaps that is the same performance. A 1999 interview says it had "five readings" in New York. The only documented performance was before an industry-only audience of musical theatre producers, at the 10th Annual Festival of New Musicals, New York, 1998.
- * "Temporary" has "the outlandish setting of a mother flushing her son's baby alligator down the toilet, but was a touching lament about the ephemeral nature of life and its contents." It has also been published in TTBB arrangement.
- * "My brother died of AIDS in 1992 and I wanted to create an urban myth which was an AIDS story…a story we would like to see perpetuated into an urban myth. I wrote a song called "Not a Cloud in the Sky,"...and the line "You're not really about to die" just came out of nowhere; I didn't know it was coming! But once that line came out, I realized it could be the opening number for the AIDS myth."
- * Far and away Bucchino's most popular song is "Grateful". "Not too long after that I wrote 'Grateful' and I thought 'Oh my God! This could be the closing song!' Then we had the difficult task of deciding what was going to happen between the two songs and who the characters were. That section turned into a beautiful story about a man who's dying of AIDS whose lover, the one who sings 'Not a Cloud in the Sky', is very clenched and in denial about the situation. Towards the end of the piece, when his lover asks, 'What do we have to be thankful for?', the man who's covered with lesions and dying sings 'Grateful'. So it's pretty powerful and makes his lover cry for the first time during the story. The piece is called 'Last Supper' and the man who's dying has requested a meal of all of his favorite foods, after which he's going to kill himself. And what happens is that his lover's tears fall into the food and it miraculously cures him."
- *One section of Urban Myths, one legend, was "Lavender Girl", which became part of the following production.
- The one-act musical Lavender Girl, originally part of Urban Myths, is the story of a Princeton student, out looking for a conquest in a "night of reckless pre-college abandon," who falls in love with the mysterious title character when he almost runs her down with his car. It is set during the jazz era, in 1927 Alabama, because, Bucchino says, "I thought it would be fun to write a Charleston—we have a big Charleston number at a party in the show. And I wanted to write the sort of romantic, melodic songs that were written in the '20s, like classic Irving Berlin songs, or Jerome Kern. It's just a really colorful, beautiful world."
- The DreamWorks animated film . Released on DVD; no soundtrack CD.
- Bucchino made his Broadway debut as composer/lyricist of A Catered Affair, featuring four-time Tony Award-winner Harvey Fierstein as bookwriter and co-star. Fierstein sought out Bucchino, whose "songs had become something of a hot property in New York's cabaret scene". A Catered Affair concerns a working-class family in the Bronx in 1953; there is family conflict over the cost of a huge banquet for the eldest daughter's wedding. After a try-out in San Diego, it opened on Broadway on April 17, 2008, and closed July 27, 2008; there were 116 regular performances and 27 previews. It won the Drama League Award for Distinguished Production of a Musical. The show has received subsequent productions by Chicago's Porchlight Music Theatre, the Atlanta-area Aurora Theatre, the Hattiesburg Light Opera Company, a community production in Helena, Montana, and the Royal Academy of Music in London.
- Esaura, 2013. In Denmark. "The musical is based on local Danish history, more precisely on a Danish novel by Carl E. Simonsen called Abraham Fournais. It takes place around the siege of the town of Fredericia in 1849." "It tells the story of two young lovers divided by war and religion and their parents' past set in the time of the siege of Fredericia in 1849. Bucchino's description: "an enormously emotionally powerful and completely universal love story against the backdrop of war that anyone can relate to." The first Danish musical. In English. Music and lyrics by Bucchino. Bucchino was recommended to the producers by Steven Schwartz.
Concerts of John Bucchino songs
- It's Only Life is a revue of his songs, presented at Lincoln Center under the direction of Daisy Prince on January 27, 2006.
Recordings
Songs of John Bucchino
Listed here are recordings consisting completely of Bucchino songs.- David Campbell Sings John Bucchino. Reached #1 on the Australian jazz chart.
- Esaura
- A Catered Affair
- It's Only Life. Tracks and singers: "The Artist at 40", "Unexpressed", "Painting My Kitchen", "Sweet Dreams", "Playbill", "That Smile", "Love Quiz" "A Contact High", "What You Need", "When You're Here", "It Feels Like Home". "A Powerful Man", "I'm Not Waiting", "Progression", "It's Only Life", "Love Will Find You in Its Time", "If I Ever Say I'm Over You, "This Moment', "On My Bedside Table", "I've Learned to Let Things Go", "Taking the Wheel", "Grateful", "A Glimpse of the Weave". John Bucchino accompanies on the piano. Sheet music of the songs not already published in the Grateful collection has been published as a book.
- Grateful, A Song Of Giving Thanks. Art Garfunkel sings the song on an accompanying CD..
- 3hree
- Solitude Lessons. Recorded a decade before it was released, "it was originally intended for use as a demo tape and to sell after the concerts in which he played for singer Holly Near."
- Grateful. The Songs of John Bucchino. Bucchino is accompanist of all songs. "Grateful", "Sweet Dreams", "That Smile", "It Feels Like Home", "Powerful man", "Unexpressed", "Temporary", "Dancing", "If I ever say I'm over you", "Sepia life", "The Song with the violins", "In a restaurant by the sea", "Not a cloud in the sky", "Taking the wheel", "Better than I", "This moment".
- Joseph, King of Dreams. All songs, but not score, by Bucchino.
- On the Arrow. Contents: "You're so blasé", "What you're lookin' for", "On the arrow", "That smile", "Come home alone again", "The time and the wine", "Running red lights to you", "It feels like home", "A contact high", "Living in the belly of a dinosaur", "Never catching up, never giving up", "I will not be left behind". Bucchino sings and plays. Sheet music of the songs has been published as a book,
- "Something as Simple". Bucchino sings and plays.
John Bucchino as solo pianist
- Beatles Reimagined. Solo piano improvisations.
- On Richard Rodgers' Piano. Bucchino plays piano interpretations of Rodgers' songs on Rodgers' own Steinway. Voted Best Instrumental CD by Show Business Weekly.
John Bucchino as accompanist
- Holly Near, Peace Becomes You
- Holly Near, Show Up
- Cris Williamson and Holly Near, Cris & Holly
- Art Garfunkel, Grateful : a song of giving thanks
- Holly Near, With a Song in My Heart
- Holly Near and Ronnie Gilbert, This Train Still Runs
- Holly Near, Musical highlights from the play Fire in the rain
- Romanovsky & Phillips, Be Political, Not Polite
- Holly Near, Sky Dances
- Ronnie Gilbert, Love Will Find a Way
- Marcia Berman sings lullabies and songs you never dreamed were lullabies
- Elliot Pilshaw, Feels like home
- Marcia Berman sings Malvina Reynolds' Rabbits dance : and other songs for children
- Ruth Buell, Take a Little Step
- Marcia Berman and Anne Lief Barlin, Dance-a-Story, Sing-a-Song
- Patty Zeitlin; Marcia Berman; Anne Lief Barlin Rainy day dances, rainy day songs
Other projects
In January 2016, Bucchino's It’s Only Life premiered in Paris, France, performed in concert version by American Musical Theatre Live in the presence of the composer.