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Buskin & Batteau

About Me

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David Buskin and Robin Batteau evoke a wide range of emotions in their audiences, ranging from light-hearted amusement at "ESPN" or the pun-filled "Death in Venice" to a gentle sense of loss expressed by their beautiful ballad for the late Kate Wolf, "Never Cry Wolf".
As professional jingle writers, Buskin and Batteau's voices and tunes have been heard in almost every American household. They've had us listening "to the heartbeat of America", living "in a Burger King Town" and climbing "all aboard Amtrak".
The popular duo also brings their unique style and sound to the stage and the audience has come to expect the unexpected whenever David and Robin perform. Drawing inspiration from current events they gave us "Second Homeless", on the heels of the October 1987 stock market crash, a tongue-in-cheek portrayal of the plight of stockbrokers no longer able to afford a second home.
Buskin and Batteau combine talent, humor and showmanship with the element of surprise to produce a crowd-pleasing performance.
David Buskin’s bio
First of all, this is me writing this, so you can be pretty sure the good stuff is left out – hey, I might need it for my memoirs or to blackmail someone. I was born and grew up in the Bronx. I went to PS 28 (like Artie Traum ), Horace Mann ( like Eliot Spitzer ), Brown University (like E. Howard Hunt ) and the U.S. Army (like Ulysses S. Grant) . I’ve been doing music of one form or another as long as I can remember. So that’s for a least half an hour.
My father was a sea captain. We didn’t know each other too well, but he had a good sense of humor, and my love of silliness is a gift from him. My mother wanted to be a doctor, but she had a congenital hearing loss, and her zoology professor at Barnard spoke too softly for her to hear, so she ended up studying botany. She taught dance at Russell Sage in Troy, NY, where they dedicated the yearbook to her. She was incredibly sweet, gentle and loving, and she wanted the world to be high-minded and well-mannered. I get my gullibility from her. Music from both of them. One of my fondest memories is singing at Carnegie Hall around 1971 with my parents beaming up at me from the third row. I remember thinking, “For a Jewish kid from the Bronx, it don’t get too much better than this.”
I think this is already too long. I’ve made several albums, the first of which was recorded on an Edison cylinder. I’ve had songs recorded by Judy Collins, Tom Rush, Peter, Paul & Mary, Johnny Mathis, Astrud Gilberto, Tracy Nelson, Jane Olivor, Dixie Carter, Pat Benatar, Roberta Flack, the drummer from Kiss, some guys from Toto, and some others I’m not remembering at the moment. My darkest moment as a songwriter was having Frank Sinatra cut one of my songs, not like his vocal and never re-record it. Jingles recorded by everybody. My faves are a Burger King spot by Mel Tormé with a big band –little slice of heaven for Davy getting to meet and work with Mel – and – aside from Robin singing his little heart out on my Post Office song, “We Deliver For You” – maybe Richie Havens’ work on the Amtrak campaign I did, “All Aboard, America.” Oh, and Jonatha Brooke singing “Serious Freedom” for Goodyear, which has about nothing to do with tires and gives you a pretty good idea of the Alice In Wonderland qualities of the ad biz. This is an industry that hired Dr. John to do a voiceover (!), and then the woman asked him, 1) Could he put a little more smile into it, and 2) Did he have to do it in a Southern accent….But the money was cute.
But I digress, as Rob Carlson ( one of my two, ah, supporting players in Modern Man ) would say. The best part about the rock and roll purgatory that was the late, unlamented band Pierce Arrow was meeting the aforementioned Batteau person. We certainly have had a lot of fun. For example. Singing the Everly Brothers’ classic, “Bird Dog” at a benefit with Paul Newman speaking the “He’s a bird” lines. Paul Newman! Hearing about the Peekskill riots from Pete Seeger himself. Pete Seeger! Starting to sing my verse to “Amazing Grace” at one of the Newport Folk Festivals – big finale with all your serious folk royalty onstage – and having Bonnie Raitt goose me, causing the lyrics to mutate into French or something. Bonnie Raitt! Grabbing my…attention! It’s a full life.
Last few years I’m getting my kicks writing plays and sketches and the like. The first one, my putative director James Naughton says lacks a second act. I suggest we do it as a one-act, thus saving everyone a lot of time and trouble. He does not respond. But I’m happily at work on a musical with one of my jingle mentors, the prodigious and very Protestant Jake Holmes. We have high hopes. One act. No intermission. Home in time for Law and Order. What more could anyone need?
Thank you to Robin for the music and the yoks. Thank you to Nina our beloved Spacemistress for easing us into the 21’st Century. And thank you to all of you for all those irreplaceable moments.
Robin Batteau's Bio
Robin Batteau is a Grammy-winning, Emmy-winning, Clio-winning, and Oscar-nominated singer-songwriter-soloist and music producer. Six months out of Harvard with a degree in biochemistry, he was signed to his first record deal with Columbia Records. A dozen CDs later, he’s played his personal style of improvisational violin with everyone from Yo-Yo Ma to Benny Goodman to Bruce Springsteen and has had his songs sung by Whitney Houston, Judy Collins, and Paul Newman, to name a few.
He has created songs for charities and causes from Save the Whales to Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign to Paul Newman’s Hole in the Wall Gang Camp for kids with such things as cancer, sickle-cell, AIDS and thalassemia. He’s heard nice words from the Boston Globe (”Acoustic heaven…”), Time Magazine, People Magazine, the New York Times, The Washington Post, Entertainment Tonight, Mary Hart, Oprah Winfrey, Bonnie Raitt (”Here comes the Love God”), and helped advertising campaigns win nearly 1,000 awards with jingles like “I’m Lovin’ It” for McDonalds, “This is Beer” for Budweiser and “The Heartbeat of America” for Chevrolet.
Buskin & Batteau at the 2005 WMFA Association Benefit Concert (Thanks Dick Cerri, WFMA, & Chuck Morse.Boy with the Violin Composition Master Class with Robin Batteau. Robin talks about his life as a composer and students of Greenwich High School, CT share their music and Robin gives feedback.Streaming Video by Ustream.TV

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 13/04/2008
Band Website: buskinandbatteau.com
Band Members: David Buskin & Robin Batteau
Influences: Interests......

World Hunger Year

Robin Batteau's song, Voices In The Wall, written for Paul Newman's Hole in the in the Wall Gang Camp, is available at

CDbaby

and at itunes.

100% of all proceeds benefit this charity.
....CDs available include
"Nouveau Retro," (a B&B compilation cd) is temporarily out of stock. We hope to have it back in stock soon. The song list follows:
The Goodbye Look
When I Need You Most of All
I Should Be With You
The Heart of The Audience
Treat Me Right, Treat Me Wrong/He Used To Treat Her
Papa, You Were a Sailor
Outside
All in All
Never Cry Wolf (for Kate Wolf)
The Eyes of My Beholder
Lancelot's Tune (Guinevere)
The Boy With the Violin

B&B3
is now available at
CDbaby
Red Shoes and Golden Hearts (our long-awaited) new CD is now available at CD baby.http://cdbaby.com/cd/buskinbatteau2
Sounds Like: Quotes about Buskin & Batteau:
The Boston Globe: "Acoustic heaven..."
Entertainment Tonight: "Superstars!"
The New York Times: "Buskin & Batteau are the most musically sophisticated act in folk."
Bonnie Raitt: "Love Gods..."
The Washington Post: "Irresistable...an amalgam of melodic sensual pop, folkie grit and killer wit."
The Boston Phoenix: "Post folkies on cruise control...Extraordinary..."
New York Daily News: "Poignant, funny, contemplative.."
The Boston Herald: "Alternately tender and hilarious...the teddy bear matinee idols of the acoustic set."
Time Magazine: "Sophisticated..."
Christine Lavin: "The cutest legs in folk music..."
Record Label: Unsigned
Type of Label: Indie

My Blog

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