Search - Artist/Band: Mark Isham

Artist Info

  • Name: Mark Isham
  • Birthday: 09/07/1951
  • Birth Place: New York, NY
  • Decades Active: 1970,1980,1990,2000
  • Genre: Soundtrack
  • Styles: Original Score, Film Music, Chamber Jazz, Soundtracks, Post-Bop, Progressive Electronic, Ambient
  • Moods: Clinical, Melancholy, Unsettling, Atmospheric, Complex, Wistful, Eerie, Light, Brooding, Laid-Back/Mellow, Confident, Detached, Elegant, Intimate, Calm/Peaceful, Dreamy, Sophisticated

Albums

Green links represent an available CD.
Red links represent a CD that is not currently available.
Title Release
  • Crossing Over [Original Score] W
  • 03/31/2009
  • Pride and Glory [Score] W
  • 10/21/2008
  • The Mist [Original Score] WA
  • 01/08/2008
  • Best of Mark Isham WA
  • 11/13/2007
  • Lions for Lambs WA
  • 11/06/2007
  • Bobby [Original Score]
  • 10/30/2007
  • Reservation Road WA
  • 10/16/2007
  • In the Valley of Elah WA
  • 10/09/2007
  • Next WA
  • 04/24/2007
  • Gracie [Original Score]
  • 2007
  • The Black Dahlia WA
  • 09/05/2006
  • Pure Mark Isham
  • 05/23/2006
  • Running Scared [2006 Original Score] WA
  • 03/14/2006
  • Crash WA
  • 06/07/2005
  • Racing Stripes WA
  • 01/11/2005
  • Twisted [Original Soundtrack] WA
  • 02/24/2004
  • Miracle
  • 02/10/2004
  • The Cooler
  • 11/11/2003
  • Life as a House WA
  • 10/30/2001
  • Don't Say a Word WA
  • 10/16/2001
  • Men of Honor
  • 10/24/2000
  • Rules of Engagement [Score]
  • 04/04/2000
  • Body Shots
  • 10/26/1999
  • Miles Remembered: The Silent Way Project WA
  • 05/25/1999
  • October Sky WA
  • 02/16/1999
  • At First Sight [Score/Soundtrack]
  • 01/12/1999
  • A Windham Hill Retrospective
  • 09/15/1998
  • Blade [Score]
  • 09/08/1998
  • Afterglow
  • 02/03/1998
  • Education of Little Tree
  • 01/13/1998
  • Kiss the Girls
  • 09/30/1997
  • Last Dance [Original Soundtrack]
  • 04/1996
  • Blue Sun
  • 1995
  • Losing Isaiah [Original Soundtrack]
  • 1995
  • The Net
  • 1995
  • Nell
  • 12/13/1994
  • Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle
  • 11/15/1994
  • Quiz Show
  • 09/27/1994
  • Timecop [Original Soundtrack]
  • 08/30/1994
  • Fire in the Sky WA
  • 1993
  • A River Runs Through It WA
  • 10/27/1992
  • The Hitcher WA
  • 03/1992
  • Sketch Artist WA
  • 1992
  • The Public Eye WA
  • 1992
  • Billy Bathgate
  • 12/17/1991
  • Little Man Tate
  • 1991
  • Songs My Children Taught Me
  • 1991
  • Emperor & Nightingale
  • 10/25/1990
  • Thumbelina
  • 10/25/1990
  • Mark Isham
  • 1990
  • Tibet WA
  • 1989
  • Castalia WA
  • 1988
  • Film Music WA
  • 1987
  • We Begin WA
  • 1987
  • The Moderns WA
  • 1986
  • Trouble in Mind WA
  • 1986
  • Vapor Drawings
  • 1983

    Individual Bio

    Trumpeter/synth programmer Mark Isham was not only an important part of the Windham Hill stable, but also a successful and versatile composer for film and television, garnering equal acclaim for both his new age and soundtrack work. Born September 7, 1951, to a musical family in New York, Isham began studying classical music (specifically trumpet, piano, and violin) as a child. His family later moved to San Francisco, where Isham played with several local orchestras. However, he was also interested in jazz, pop, and rock music, and moonlighted with a wide variety of local bands; during the '70s, he also learned to program synthesizers. Eventually, he left classical music behind and became a touring and session musician for both jazz (Pharoah Sanders, Charles Lloyd) and pop (the Beach Boys, Van Morrison) artists. He joined jazz pianist Art Lande's Rubisa Patrol quartet, where he displayed a strong Miles Davis influence, and founded a band called Group 87 that played what was essentially contemporary instrumental music years before the term existed as a new age subgenre (they released two albums, the first in 1980). The '80s also saw Isham continue his sideman activities, going on to play with the likes of David Sylvian, Was (Not Was), the Rolling Stones, Bruce Springsteen, Suzanne Vega, XTC, Joni Mitchell, and Willie Nelson, among many others.

    1983 was a pivotal year for Isham: he released his solo debut on Windham Hill, Vapor Drawings, and scored his first film, the Disney release Never Cry Wolf. The first Windham Hill release to emphasize electronics, Vapor Drawings established Isham as a composer adept at blending synthetic and acoustic timbres and became a progressive electronic classic. Meanwhile, Never Cry Wolf quickly led to numerous other soundtrack assignments, demonstrating Isham's facility with a wide variety of musical styles and instrumental settings. Seeking wider exposure by the late '80s, Isham began recording for Virgin, although he continued to release material on Windham Hill as well. He was nominated for Grammys for Best New Age Performance for his albums Castalia (1988) and Tibet (1989), and finally won for 1990's Mark Isham. In 1992, Isham premiered his first commissioned orchestral work, Five Stories for Trumpet and Orchestra, with the St. Louis Symphony, also serving as the soloist. The same year, he was nominated for an Academy Award for his score for A River Runs Through It, which increased Hollywood's demand for his services even further; among his highest-profile assignments in the years to come were Short Cuts, Quiz Show, Kiss the Girls, Blade, the Grammy nominated Men of Honor, Save the Last Dance, Don't Say a Word, Life as a House, and The Majestic. Isham also won an Emmy for his scoring work on the television show EZ Streets, and earned nominations for Chicago Hope and Nothing Sacred. In 1995, Isham released his first album for Columbia, Blue Sun, which found him moving into full-fledged contemporary jazz. He continued in that direction with his next non-soundtrack project, the In a Silent Way tribute/reinterpretation of Miles Remembered: The Silent Way Project, issued in 1999. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide