Isaias Gamboa (music producer)

Isaias Gamboa (April 21, 1963) is an Afro-Costa Rican-American music producer, songwriter, musician, arranger, author and filmmaker. Born in San Jose, Costa Rica to parents of Spanish and Afro-Caribbean ancestry. His mother, Carmen Gamboa Beckles, was born in the coastal Costa Rican city of Puerto Limon and his father; Danilo Gamboa Mora, from the interior province of San Ramón, Costa Rica.

Isaias Gamboa
Born (1963-04-21) April 21, 1963

A music industry veteran, Gamboa has written, performed, produced and arranged more than 200 songs for recording artists including, Shalamar, Gladys Knight & the Pips, Tavares (group), The Brothers Johnson, Dynasty (band), The Pointer Sisters and five albums for Rock and Roll Hall of Fame recording artists The Temptations. Three of these include, For Lovers Only (The Temptations album), Phoenix Rising (The Temptations album), which received a Platinum certification and the Grammy Award winning CD Ear-Resistible, which won the 2001 Grammy Award for Best Traditional R&B Performance. In 1994 he produced the remix of "Pain" by the late, Tupak Shakur for the Multi-Platinum, Above the Rim (soundtrack)[1][2]

Isaias Gamboa grew up during the turbulent 1960's and 70's in the primarily African American community of West Adams, Los Angeles. He was first introduced to piano by his mother at age 5 and by age 11, was accomplished in several musical instruments. By age 12 he was playing Honkey tonk guitar and a particular style of West Coast blues called, Jump blues. At the age of 13 he was asked to accompanied Los Angeles-based Blues singer, Ernie Andrews on the blues guitar; having been schooled in the genre by noted Jump blues guitarist, Edgar Rice of the Alexander Nelson Trio. At age 17, Isaias was discovered by hit R&B producer, Leon Sylvers III, who mentored him over the next 15 years. While still in his teens, Gamboa was signed by legendary music industry executive, Clive Davis as a member of the 1980s R&B band, Real To Reel (Arista Records).[3] Notably, after having met Leon Sylvers III at a celebrity basketball game in Los Angeles, five-time Grammy Award winning music producers, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis produced their first ever recordings as professional music producers, "Can You Treat Me Like She Does"[4] and "Don't Keep Me Hangin' On" for Gamboa's band, Real To Reel". Isaias Gamboa was also a founding member of the 1990s neoclassical R&B singing group, "Double Action Theatre" (Polydor Records[5]). In the 1990s, Gamboa was discovered by legendary music producer, Richard Perry, who mentored him and with whom he would become close friends. Gamboa and Perry worked closely with artists such as the The Pointer Sisters and The Temptations.

In June 2010, Gamboa released a solo CD entitled, "Don't Lie To Me". Featuring his own vocal and instrumental performances, the 12 song collection was written, produced, performed and arranged by himself. The CD also includes performances by famed guitarist, Larry Carlton, The Temptations; drummer, Trevor Lawrence Jr., singer, Vida Jafari and saxophonist, Donald Hayes.[6] [7] [8]

Gamboa is a licensed Christian minister with a diverse religious heritage. His mother was Baptist, and his father - Catholic. He also identifies his Jewish heritage through his Jamaican maternal grandmother, Louise Teitelbaum. This background, along with his musical expertise has inspired and informed several important projects in his life. Notable among them is his 2012 book, We Shall Overcome: Sacred Song On The Devil's Tongue.[9][10]

Published in 2012, We Shall Overcome: Sacred Song On The Devil's Tongue is the biography of Louise Shropshire (1913-1993). Shropshire...a hymn writer, civil rights activist and close friend of the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King Jr., Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth and Rev. Thomas A. Dorsey, played an important role in the creation of the iconic freedom song, “We Shall Overcome.” The song, adapted by Pete Seeger and others, has been credited to “Unknown” for more than half a century, however newly uncovered facts presented in Gamboa’s book trace Shropshire’s uncredited involvement with the freedom standard to her hymn, “If My Jesus Wills”, more commonly known as "I'll Overcome" from which prima facie and other evidence indicates “We Shall Overcome” was derived. The book was featured at the Author's Pavilion at the 2015 NAACP National Convention.[11] An abridged, dramatized audio book version of the book, also named, We Shall Overcome: Sacred Song On The Devil's Tongue was released on Plum Recordings in 2011. Narrated and produced by, Isaias Gamboa on his own music label, the four-hour collection features slave narratives and negro spirituals.[12] [13][14] A documentary film regarding this subject, written and directed by Isaias Gamboa is scheduled to be completed by fall 2016.

Through the efforts of, Dr. P. Eric Abercrumbie, Director of Ethnic Programs and Services and the African American Culture and Resource Center at the University of Cincinnati, Louise Shropshire's papers and artifacts were acquired in 2014 by the University of Cincinnati and are preserved in the Rare Books Archives.[15]

According to The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education, the Shropshire collection includes photographs, family memorabilia, letters, sheet music and other documents. The collection is held in UC’s Archives and Rare Books Library, located on the eighth floor of Blegen Library. [16]

Isaias Gamboa is also the founder of the non-profit organization, We Shall Overcome Foundation.[17]

On April 12, 2016, the We Shall Overcome Foundation led by Isaias Gamboa (music producer) filed a class-action lawsuit in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York against, The Richmond Organization (TRO) and Ludlow Music, Inc. The suit seeks to have the copyright status of the song revoked and all royalties collected by the companies from its usage, returned. The foundation, which was in the post production process of a feature-length documentary of the song and its history, were refused permission from TRO-Ludlow to use the song. The filing argued that the because it had not been renewed (as required by United States copyright law at the time), the copyright of the 1948 People's Songs publication containing "We Will Overcome" had already expired in 1976, and that the registered copyrights only covered particular arrangements and "obscure alternate verses", and that because the registered works "did not contain original works of authorship, except to the extent of the arrangements themselves". The firm representing the, We Shall Overcome Foundation in the suit, Wolf Haldenstein Alder Freeman Herz is the same firm responsible for a prominent ruling surrounding the copyright status of "Happy Birthday to You".[18][19]

References

  1. "Isaias Gambona: credits as producer, composer or arranger". ALLMUSIC.com. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  2. "Billboard Goes Backstage at the Grammys". GRAMMY.com. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  3. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kwH2-v9w3TQ
  4. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snXBzGibyqc
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JvgOcxiERlw
  6. https://itunes.apple.com/mn/album/dont-lie-to-me/id379347744
  7. David Holthaus. "Book: Cincinnati musician wrote 'We Shall Overcome'". Usatoday.com. Retrieved 2013-09-11.
  8. Samantha Ofole-Prince. "Costa Rican Author, Isaias Gamboa, Pens Controversial Book". CaribPress News Magazine. Retrieved 2013-05-09.
  9. We Shall Overcome: Sacred Song on the Devil’s Tongue'. ISBN 978-0615475288.
  10. David Neff. "The Religious Roots of Protest: How Justice Movements Have Coopted The Church's Music". "Christianity Today". Retrieved 2015-03-21.
  11. http://naacpauthorpavilion.org/losangeles/authorsubmission/isaias-gamboa
  12. https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0060GF7TW/ref=dm_ws_sp_ps_dp
  13. Joel M Beall. "'We Shall Overcome' belongs to Cincinnati". Cincinnati Enquirer/Cincinnati.com. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  14. Kimberly Milhoan. "One Woman, Three Words: "We Shall Overcome"". ACLU press release). Retrieved 2015-03-09.
  15. Dawn Fuller. "UC Historical Collection Reveals the Songwriter Who United the Voice of the National Civil Rights Movement". University of Cincinnati press release).
  16. "University of Cincinnati acquires the collections of Louise Shropshire". The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education. Retrieved 2015-02-15.
  17. http://www.weshallovercomefoundation.org
  18. "'Happy Birthday' Legal Team Turns Attention to 'We Shall Overcome'". Billboard. Retrieved 15 April 2016.

External links

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