John Braden | |
Birth Date: | 17 January 1946 |
Birth Place: | Asheboro, North Carolina, U.S. |
Death Place: | New York City, U.S. |
Occupation: | Folk musician, record producer of children's music |
John Braden (January 17, 1946 – July 22, 1987) was an American folk musician, songwriter, composer, and producer of children's music.
Braden released an eponymous album on A&M Records in 1969.[1] Ry Cooder played guitar on a few tracks, as did Chris Ethridge and Sneaky Pete of Flying Burrito Brothers, Richard Bell (keyboardist for Janis Joplin and The Band), jazz musician Paul Horn, and folk musician Bruce Langhorne.[2]
Braden wrote and contributed to many musicals, often collaborating with arranger Jeff Waxman, writer Jeff Tambornino, and director John Vaccaro.[3] Many of his musicals and musicals to which he contributed were produced at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in the East Village of Manhattan throughout the 1970s and early 1980s. His first production at La MaMa was Audition!, in 1972, which was directed by Suzanne Foster and co-written with Stephen Holt.[4] Robert Patrick directed a production of Braden's Silver Queen at La MaMa in 1973.[5] In 1974, he co-wrote and produced a children's street theatre piece called The King's Crown and I with Alan Braunstein, which took place at La MaMa and on the block of East 4th Street outside the theater.[6] He wrote the music for Charles Dizenzo's Big Mother, which Vaccaro directed at La MaMa in 1974.[7] He also wrote the music for Leonard Melfi's Horse Opera, directed by Wilford Leach at La MaMa in 1974.[8] He wrote the music and lyrics for Tambornino's "revivalist musical" Hellbent for Heaven, produced at La MaMa in 1977,[9] and for Kenneth Bernard's Sixty Minute Queer Show, directed by Vaccaro and performed by his Playhouse of the Ridiculous.[10]
Braden was musical director for the Cracker Club Country Fair Gala at La MaMa in 1976. The production included segments from Silver Queen, Horse Opera, and Greg Antonacci's Myths of America Smith and His Son, and also featured a "special duet" by Braden and Ronnie B. Baker.[11] In 1978, he composed music for Juba with Donald Arrington, Babafemi, William Elliott, Ada Janik, and Richard Weinstock. Juba was written by Laurence Holder, directed by Vaccaro, and produced at La MaMa through the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act.[12] Braden wrote music for Paul Foster's Silver Queen Saloon, directed by Pat Carmichael at La MaMa in 1978,[13] and for William M. Hoffman's A Book of Etiquette, also directed by Vaccaro and produced through La MaMa-C.E.T.A. in 1978.[14] He then wrote music for Hoffman's musical adaptation of Gulliver's Travels, directed by Vaccaro at La MaMa in 1978,[15] and XXXXX, directed by Vaccaro at La MaMa in 1981.[16]
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Braden created narrative stories and songs for Atari video games including Asteroids, Missile Command, Super Breakout, and Yars' Revenge.[17] He also produced nine gold records with Kid Stuff Records, and produced albums for Masters of the Universe, Barbie, Strawberry Shortcake, My Little Pony, Flash Gordon, Marmaduke, Pink Panther, and others.
Braden died of complications resulting from pneumococcal meningitis in July 1987, at the age of 41.