Paul Zaza | |
Birth Date: | 1 September 1952 |
Birth Place: | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada |
Nationality: | Canadian |
Occupation: | Songwriter |
Paul Zaza (born 1952) is a Canadian Genie Award-winning film score and songwriter who worked frequently with director Bob Clark and with fellow composer Carl Zittrer. He has composed scores for more than 100 films.[1]
Originally from Toronto, Zaza trained as a classical pianist, graduating from the Royal Conservatory of Music.[2]
In 1980 Zaza won the Genie Award for Best Music Score alongside Carl Zittrer for their work on Murder by Decree. That year the pair teamed up again to write the score for the film Prom Night.[3]
In 1981 Zaza composed the score for the slasher film My Bloody Valentine;[4] in 1983 he once more collaborated with Zittrer to write the score for the well-known film A Christmas Story, which was released as an album much later in 2009.[5]
He was nominated for the same award in 1985 for Isaac Littlefeathers. In 1987 he received a Genie nomination for Best Original Song alongside Peter Simpson for the film Bullies. In contrast, in 1986 he was nominated for the Razzie Award for Worst Musical Score for the film Turk 182. He also composed the theme music for Mr. Wizard's World.
Zaza wrote the new television theme song and composed an all-new soundtrack for the 1993 Canadian English dub of Osamu Tezuka's anime, Kimba the White Lion in Toronto, originally released in 1965 in Japan.
In 1978, the Longo Brothers had a single " Sun Side Up" bw "Looking For Love" released on People City Music PCM 123. Zaza produced the single. He was also the arranger on their single, "Manhattan" bw "Nightwalk".[6] [7]
With Frank Longo and Larry Longo, he played on the Parry Music Library releases Orchestral Drama 2 PML 141, Country Moods PML 144 and High Style PML 147 albums.[8]
The Longo Brothers had a single "City Motions" (Featuring Moe Koffman) in the CanCon Top 10 Adult Contemporary chart for a number of weeks in 1984.[9] [10] [11]
Zaza produced her single, "Don't Send Me Roses (Dear Abby)" and album.[12] The single did quite well. For the week ending October 8, the single had entered the RPM Country 50 Singles chart at No. 50 and was at No. 24 on the RPM Contemporary Adult chart.[13] [14] The song peaked at No. 13 on the tenth week in the RPM Contemporary Adult chart on November 26.[15] [16] It also peaked on that date at No. 22 on its 8th week in the RPM Country Singles chart.[17] [18] He produced her next single, "Let's Not Waste Another Heartbeat" at his Toronto studio.[19] The song spent a total of eleven weeks in the chart, it peaked at No. 12 on June 2.[20] [21]