Norman Durkee
Biography
Norman Edward Durkee was an American composer and pianist known for his eclectic mix of classical, jazz, rock and blues but best known for his boogie-woogie piano contribution to the 1974 Bachman–Turner Overdrive hit "Takin' Care of Business". Described as a piano prodigy, he graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School in Tacoma, Washington, where he sat next to serial killer Ted Bundy in trigonometry. He had already written and performed a symphony for piano and orchestra. Durkee attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston on scholarship 1967 before returning to his native Washington state. He taught at the K-12 level at the Bush School in Seattle as well in higher education at Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington and Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle. Durkee spent most of his career in Seattle as musical director for local productions of Hair and Tommy (featuring a young Bette Midler) as well as director of the Teatro Zinzanni, a "circus dinner theater" in Seattle. He would later serve as Midler's musical director. He also wrote ballets for the Pacific Northwest Ballet, scores for the Seattle Repertory Theatre, music for the 1979 experimental film The Legend of Black Thunder Mountain; and created a comic opera for children, The Magical Marriage, for Seattle Opera. Durkee's musical versatility led him to create jingles and other Ad music for the Chiat/Day advertising agency in Los Angeles. Durkee's sense of humor fits in well at the agency known for its quirky approach in jingles created for clients such as Apple, Honda, 7–11, and Yamaha.
Bio from Wikipedia
Discography
Records they worked on — most-collected first.
Credited work
180 releases · 20 albums · active 1973–2021
- Performance · 197
- Other credits · 11
- Production · 8
- Engineering · 3
Studios: Kaye-Smith Studios · RCA Studios, Toronto · Phase One Studios · Can-Base Studios
Frequent collaborators
- Bachman-Turner Overdrive
- Various
- Pamela Golden
- Bachman Cummings
- Collier & Dean
- Brownsmith
- Bob Haworth
- 20/20







