Craig Abaya
Craig Abaya is a celebrated multi-artist from San Francisco, California. He is a singer, musician, songwriter, producer, filmmaker, photographer, and graphic designer.[1] He also served as director of Digital Media & Entertainment Programs for San Francisco State University Extended Learning. He has won ten Billboard songwriting awards.
Craig Abaya | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Craig Abaya |
Born | San Francisco, California |
Genres | Alternative rock, rock and roll, pop, grunge, heavy metal, Americana, neo-classical music |
Occupation(s) | Musician, songwriter, composer, music producer, recording engineer, filmmaker, photographer, graphic designer, educator |
Instruments | Vocals, electric and acoustic guitars, piano, drums, bass, percussion, electronic keyboards, sarunay, mandolin, bandoria, Irish bazouki |
Labels | ARTifice Music |
Associated acts |
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Website | abaya |
Early life
Abaya is a native of San Francisco's Bernal Heights neighborhood.[2] He became involved in music during childhood, taking up the piano at age six, the drums at age eleven, and the guitar at age twelve. He became involved in film and photography at the age of nine.[2]
At seventeen, Abaya enrolled at San Francisco State University. Initially a psychology major, he ultimately proposed a special major in multimedia, combining studies in film, audio, video, computers and electronics.[3] He chose to call his major "Technology Interface", a name he selected from suggestions he received from members of American Zoetrope.
Music
Abaya is a singer and cites his main instruments as guitar, piano, and drums. Although there is no direct influence on his passion for music, he would often hear his mother, a classical pianist, play the family piano, favoring the composer Claude Debussy. He also took up recording from a young age, moving from 2- and 4-track analog tape to ADAT and eventually to DAWs (digital audio workstations). At 17, he formed his first professional band, the grunge/metal trio "Apparition." At this time, he also wrote and performed music with the local church youth choir. After disbanding "Apparition," he founded the 4-piece group "The Basics" and later, "Abaya," in an attempt to merge his divergent musical interests. He has won numerous songwriting awards in various genres, including 10 from Billboard Magazine.[2]
In 2009, Abaya released his first solo album, The Fine Art of Politics, singing and playing several instruments in addition to hosting several guest artists.
In 2014, he composed and played guitars and bass on the DJ Qbert album, Extraterrestria. The same year, Craig released the single, "This Jail I Made."
In 2016, he composed and performed the orchestral music score to the film, Ambush.
In 2018, his long time musical collaborator, Fred Wolford, expressed a desire to record a series of cover songs. As a result, Craig released a version of Neil Finn's "Truth" featuring Wolford and drums, Tom Edwards on bass, and Leslie Caroline on backing vocals.
In 2019, Abaya released the album, One Bus to Mercy, once again singing and playing several instruments and hosting several guest artists. Despite his reputation for eschewing record labels (especially majors), Abaya signed, but later tore up, a contract with MCA/Universal Music Group and released this album on his own ARTifice music label (as with his previous releases). Late that year, he released his music video for the song "Restless Soul." Originally, he referred to it as "the world's first crowd-sourced composition, because, years earlier, he had played a riff on social media and asked everyone what they thought the song should be about. He eventually wrote and recorded the song, including many of their ideas (mostly metaphorically). Shortly after releasing the video, showing Craig in solitude, recording himself performing all of the parts, the COVID-19 Pandemic rapidly spread and the irony of the visuals and title weren't lost on him.
In 2020, Craig released his single and "socially distanced music video" of the Who song, "Behind Blue Eyes", featuring Craig on guitar and vocals; along with vocalists, Nisha Anand, Lena Shabanova, Danelle Abaya, and Marissa Abaya. All performers recorded themselves from their respective homes.]
In a description to the video, Craig wrote:
″We each recorded our own singing at home as we physically distanced.
'Behind Blue Eyes' was written in 1970 by Pete Townshend for his dystopian rock opera 'Lifehouse' and released the following year on The Who′s album, Who′s Next.
It′s written from the perspective of the opera's anti-villain, who is forced into lifelong emotional armor in a world in which something called "The Grid" (a futuristic worldwide computer network from which physically distanced humans receive everything including news and entertainment) is taken over by forces that wish to control it and the people.
Pete's ideas for his opera were a mystery to everyone to whom he tried to explain it. It nearly drove him mad and nearly to suicide.
'Lifehouse' was visionary, not just because it predicted the web and social media but because it predicted the sinister ways in which it could be used.
Some of us have lost loved ones to influences over our modern day 'grid.'"
Craig also collaborates with his first cousin, JoAnne Lorenzana, who performed on the song "When Change Comes" from The Fine Art of Politics and co-wrote the song "Will I Walk on Water" for the album One Bus to Mercy.
Abaya is a Grammy voting member of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences and a member of the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers.
Filmmaking
Abaya started making films at age 9, starting with The Battle of McLaren Park, in which he spliced a scene of Clint Eastwood as a jet squadron leader from the classic sci-fi film, ‘’Tarantula’’ and earning his first television screen credit from films he shot age 12.[4]
In 2002, Apple, Inc. approached Abaya with an opportunity to make a feature film with his student crew. With a team of students and sponsors, he produced Bruce Hornsby Live at Villa Montalvo for DIRECTV.[5]
In 2003, Abaya served as concert shoot director for the feature, Joan Armatrading, All the Way from America.
In 2006, Abaya became the producer/director of the Stern Grove Festival web series of videos including live performances, artist talks, and interviews. Joining him is his long time friend and collaborator, Philip J. Gallegos.
In 2008, after having served as their live concert photographer for many years, Abaya became the resident filmmaker and concert photographer at the Bridge School. The school, which is for children with severe speech and physical impairments, was founded by Neil Young and Pegi Young.[3]
In 2015, Abaya began filming episodes of the web series, Marissa Anne the Media Fan.
In 2016, Abaya served as director of photography, first assistant director, editor, and music composer for the 2017 neo-noir film, Ambush.[6]
In 2018, Abaya and 9 camera film crew filmed The Bammies Reunion Concert, featuring, Narada Michael Walden, Neal Schon, Sammy Hagar, Eddie Money, Pablo Cruise, Jefferson Starship and Brandeis Marin.
In 2020, Abaya served as producer/director on the 10-part series "Stern Grove Festival - Best of the Fest" and the 3-part webinar titled "Cortical Visual Impairment" written by and starring Dr. Christine Roman-Lantzy.
Craig also writes, directs and edits his own music videos.
Craig is a new media council member of the Producers Guild of America.
Photography
Craig became interested in photography at age 9 when he received his first point-and-shoot camera. Among his first photos were shots of the aftermath of a police chase including officers making an arrest.
Music being his first love, he wanted to capture some of his musical heroes. For years he did so with borrowed photographic equipment but eventually purchased his first professional camera. His early photos included such musical artists as The Who, Queen, Bruce Springsteen, Alice Cooper, Tina Turner, Chris Isaak, Elton John, Tom Petty, Leon Russell and Heart. Occasionally, he would have the opportunity to meet and photograph non-music based celebrities including Gilda Radner and Monty Python's Michael Palin.
In 2000, The Bridge School invited Craig to be their official concert photographer.
In 2006, Apple.com published an interview with Craig about his photography.[7]
In 2013, San Francisco's Macworld/iWorld Expo made Craig their featured artist with a gallery of his concert films and photography entitled Craig Abaya: The Art of Rock'N'Roll from Analog to Digital.[8]
Craig's photos have appeared in the L.A. Times, Gentry Magazine, Nash Country Weekly, Rolling Stone Magazine, and other publications.
Academics
Abaya earned his first teaching experience at SFSU's Graduate Film school while he was still an undergraduate,[3] but eventually took a full-time position teaching in Silicon Valley plus occasional stints at San Francisco State University and elsewhere.[9] Eventually, he moved to SFSU College of Extended Learning, where he worked from 2000 to 2015, teaching and directing departments in Multimedia Studies, Music/Recording Industry, Digital Film Production, and Web Development.[10]
References
- Springer, Denize (December 20, 2004). "People on campus: digital dynamo Craig Abaya". San Francisco State University Campus Memo. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
- "Fil-Am is 10-time Billboard honoree". The Philippine Star. January 3, 2010. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
- "Multimedia Studies: Faculty". San Francisco State University. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
- "San Francisco KRON documentary". Retrieved February 11, 2017.
- "Bruce Hornsby Live at Villa Montalvo". SF Visuals. Archived from the original on April 10, 2009. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
- "Ambush on IMDB". Retrieved February 10, 2017.
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on May 5, 2016. Retrieved May 6, 2017.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- https://web.archive.org/web/20130108073851/http://www.macworldiworld.com/live-zone/digital-art-gallery/
- "About Me". Craig Abaya's Personal Website. Craig Abaya. Retrieved November 22, 2014.
- "Fast Track to a Web Career". Apple. Archived from the original on December 30, 2013. Retrieved November 22, 2014.