One of the
most in-demand composers for films and television, Dennis McCarthy
has spent his life in and around music. Growing up, in North
Hollywood, California, McCarthy played violin and piano. He
studied Engineering and Physics at Northridge and UCLA while
supporting himself by playing weddings and frat parties on the
weekends. Eventually Dennis joined the ranks of the "Surf
and Car" groups and began a new career as a keyboardist
in the studios. One of the musicians he met in those years was
Glen Campbell, when he was a session guitarist. When Glen became
a star and recorded "Gentle On My Mind" and
"By The Time I Get To Phoenix" he asked Dennis
to join him as a keyboardist. As Glen’s fame grew, he
needed an ‘on the road’ arranger/conductor and McCarthy
took on the challenge of a musical self-education and the mentoring
of many wonderful musician/arrangers.
The association with Campbell, who was at the peak of his popularity
in the late 1960s as a crossover singer hitting it high on both
the country and pop charts, led to McCarthy’s first television
work, acting as the musical director on the long running "Glen
Campbell Goodtime Hour" variety show. Dennis also
served as musical director for three seasons of "The
Barbara Mandrell Show." He went on to become Alex
North's scoring assistant, working with the great composer on
many of his finest works, including orchestrating North’s
score to "Wise Blood," before McCarthy embarked on
his own composing career in the early 1980s.
One of the first people McCarthy met during his stint as a road
musician was Marty Paich, a television music director who first
recognized McCarthy’s musical abilities. Nelson Riddle
became another source of inspiration; it was Nelson who suggested
McCarthy spend more time composing and arranging rather than
playing the piano on the TV show.
McCarthy spent four years on "Glen Campbell Goodtime
Hour," working and learning from Marty Paich as
well as Ray Charles, who was the show’s choral director,
and also Earl Brown who also worked on the show. An opportunity
to compose a film score in England opened doors for McCarthy
when he returned to Hollywood, giving him experience in orchestral
writing while also giving him a feature film credit that created
new opportunities in Hollywood. One of them led to "Enos,"
a spin-off of "The Dukes of Hazzard,"
which McCarthy began to compose in 1981. A fistful of TV scores
for Warner Bros followed included "V: The Final
Battle," the new incarnation of "The
Twilight Zone," "Dynasty,"
"MacGyver," and a few movies-of-the-week
like "Sam Houston: The Legend Of Texas"
and "Sworn To Silence." With George
Doering, McCarthy flexed his blues muscles and composed the
music for a series called "Houston Knights,"
which led to an assignment scoring the first of the two-hour
"Police Story" shows.
McCarthy found himself basking in public prominence when he
was hired as one of the regular composers on "Star
Trek: The Next Generation" in 1987, and since
then has contributed music to all the subsequent Star
Trek series, including scoring the seventh Star
Trek movie, "Generations"
in 1994. McCarthy’s musical versatility hasn’t stayed
still for episodic television, however – he has scored
a number of feature films and made-for-TV movies, including
"Overkill: The Aileen Wuornos Story"
(1992), "McHale's Navy" (1997), "Letters
from a Killer" (1998), and several mini-series
based on the popular novels by Danielle Steele.
McCarthy is a seven-time Emmy nominee, and won the award in
1993 for his work writing the main title to "Deep
Space Nine" and again in 1996 for the score to
the episode, "Unification, Part 1" from "Star
Trek: the Next Generation." He also recently jumped
into theatre work for South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa, CA,
composing the music for "Of Mice And Men,"
"Much Ado About Nothing," "On
The Jump," "The Dumb Show,"
"Dicken’s Christmas Carol,"
"The Beard Of Avon" – the premier
of the Amy Freed play, "Getting Frankie Married,
and Afterwards" a play by Horton Foote which also
premiered at the SCR. Among his latest projects, Dennis is scoring
the TV sitcom "Related," for Warner
Bros Television.
Dennis currently lives in Burbank with his wife Patty and is
within driving distance of their three children and their eight
grandchildren.
Biography
by Randall D. Larson
Click
here to read an interview from Film Music Magazine
Click
here for an article about Dennis' last ENTERPRISE Scoring Session
AWARDS
Emmy
Award -
STAR TREK: DEEP SPACE NINE
Best Main Title Theme 1993
Emmy
Award -
STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION:
"Unification Part One" - 1992
Emmy
Nomination
STAR TREK: ENTERPRISE: "The Expanse" - 2003
Emmy
Nomination
STAR TREK: VOYAGER: "Workforce" - 2001
Emmy
Nomination
STAR TREK: VOYAGER: "Heroes and Demons" - 1995
Emmy
Nomination
STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION: "All Good Things" - 1994
Emmy Nomination
STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION: "Half Life" - 1991
Emmy Nomination
STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION:
"Yesterday's Enterprise" - 1990
Emmy
Nomination
STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION: "The Child" - 1989