Trevor Rabin
Trevor Charles Rabin (born 13 January 1954) is a South African-born musician, singer-songwriter, record producer, and film composer renowned for his guitar work and songwriting contributions to the progressive rock band Yes during the 1980s, as well as his extensive scoring for major Hollywood films.[1][2] Rising from session playing and band leadership in apartheid-era South Africa, where he fronted the successful group Rabbitt and released his debut solo album Beginnings (1978), Rabin relocated to London and then Los Angeles, eventually auditioning successfully for Yes in 1982.[1][3] With Yes, he co-produced and co-wrote key tracks on the 1983 album 90125, including the band's sole number-one single "Owner of a Lonely Heart," propelling the group to commercial heights and earning a Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance for "Cinema."[1][4] After departing Yes in 1989 to pursue film music, Rabin composed scores for over 40 features, frequently partnering with producer Jerry Bruckheimer on blockbusters such as Con Air (1997), Armageddon (1998), Enemy of the State (1998), and the National Treasure series, amassing accolades including eleven BMI Film and TV Awards and a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Los Angeles Music Awards.[1][5][6]Early life
Upbringing in Johannesburg
Trevor Charles Rabin was born on January 13, 1954, in Johannesburg, South Africa, to Godfrey Rabin, a prominent lawyer and accomplished violinist who served as first chair of the Johannesburg Symphony Orchestra for nearly a decade, and Joy Eileen Rabin (née Wallach), an actress, classical pianist, painter, and ballet dancer.[7][8][9] The family resided in the Parkland suburb in a Jewish household, where Rabin's paternal grandfather had been a Lithuanian cantor, and his mother converted to Judaism, fostering an observant environment.[10][11] Raised amid a blend of intellectual and artistic influences, Rabin grew up in a home emphasizing music and law, with his parents' professions reflecting broader cultural pursuits in mid-20th-century Johannesburg.[12] The apartheid-era context of South Africa shaped the societal backdrop, though specific personal impacts on the Rabin family during his childhood remain undocumented in primary accounts.[11] This upbringing in a musically oriented yet professionally grounded family laid foundational exposure to the arts from an early age.[13]Musical beginnings and early training
Rabin was born into a musical family in Johannesburg, South Africa, where his father, a physician and conductor, encouraged him to begin piano lessons at age five.[14][15] He received formal piano training, developing proficiency in classical techniques during his childhood.[16] At age twelve, Rabin discovered the guitar and taught himself to play, drawing initial inspiration from rock and jazz influences prevalent in his environment.[12][15] His early training emphasized self-directed practice alongside family support, with Rabin's parents fostering his interest without formal guitar instruction.[16] By his teenage years, he had integrated piano and guitar skills into session work, though his foundational development remained rooted in Johannesburg's local music scene rather than institutional conservatories.[15] This period laid the groundwork for his versatile style, blending classical piano foundations with self-taught electric guitar improvisation.[12]Career
South African band work and solo starts (1972–1978)
In 1972, Trevor Rabin co-founded the pop-rock band Rabbitt in Johannesburg with former bandmates from his earlier group The Conglomeration, including Neil Cloud and Ronnie Robot, establishing himself as the lead guitarist and primary songwriter.[1] The band quickly gained prominence in South Africa, performing to large audiences and becoming one of the country's most successful rock acts through a mix of original songs and covers.[6] Rabbitt's debut album, Boys Will Be Boys, released in 1975, achieved gold status faster than any previous South African record, driven by hits like the title track and reflecting Rabin's emerging style of melodic hard rock with intricate guitar work.[17][6] The band's follow-up, The Earthman Stood Still (also known as A Croak and a Grunt in the Night), arrived in 1977, featuring Rabin's compositions such as "Hold On to Love," which further solidified their teen-pop appeal amid South Africa's insular music scene under apartheid-era restrictions on international touring.[18] By late 1977, amid growing frustrations with local limitations, Rabin began transitioning toward solo endeavors while Rabbitt continued briefly without him, releasing Rock Rabbitt in 1978 under new leadership.[19] Parallel to his band commitments, Rabin recorded his debut solo album, Beginnings, in Johannesburg over approximately six weeks in 1977 for RPM Records, showcasing self-penned tracks like "Getting to Know You Better" and "I Love You" that blended AOR sensibilities with progressive elements.[20] The album, initially released in South Africa that year, highlighted Rabin's multi-instrumental talents on guitar, keyboards, and vocals, marking his initial steps beyond band constraints before its 1978 remix and international reissue as a self-titled effort.[21] This period encapsulated Rabin's rapid ascent in South Africa's rock ecosystem, where he balanced group stardom with independent artistic exploration.[6]Relocation and pre-Yes solo career (1978–1982)
In 1978, Trevor Rabin relocated from Johannesburg, South Africa, to London, England, amid frustrations with the demands of his band Rabbitt and an ambition to expand his opportunities in the international music scene.[7] There, he signed with Chrysalis Records and focused on solo work while taking on production roles, including contributions to Manfred Mann's Earth Band. [2] Rabin's debut solo album, originally titled Beginnings and released in South Africa in 1977, was reissued in the UK in 1978 under his name via Chrysalis, featuring tracks that showcased his guitar-driven rock style with progressive and fusion elements.[16] His follow-up, Face to Face (1979), expanded on this with polished production and collaborations, including session musicians from the London scene, though it achieved modest commercial success.[16] By 1981, Rabin shifted to Los Angeles, California, seeking broader exposure in the American market, where he recorded his third solo album, Wolf, released that year on Chrysalis.[22] [23] Wolf incorporated harder rock edges and synthesizers, reflecting his evolving sound amid the era's AOR trends, but like its predecessors, it did not yield major hits, setting the stage for his subsequent band pursuits.[24]Yes era and commercial breakthrough (1982–1995)
In 1982, Trevor Rabin was recruited by Yes bassist Chris Squire and drummer Alan White for their side project Cinema, initially featuring Rabin on guitar alongside producer Trevor Horn's involvement in developing new material.[6] Upon vocalist Jon Anderson's return to the fold and the addition of keyboardist Tony Kaye, the project transitioned into a reformed Yes lineup, with Rabin contributing as guitarist, vocalist, keyboardist, and co-songwriter on what became the album 90125.[25] Released on November 7, 1983, 90125 shifted Yes toward a more accessible, pop-influenced sound driven by Rabin's songwriting and arrangements, yielding the band's biggest commercial success to date, including the number-one Billboard Hot 100 single "Owner of a Lonely Heart," which Rabin co-wrote and initially sang lead on before Anderson overdubbed vocals. The album's production, helmed by Horn with Rabin's input, emphasized polished, radio-friendly tracks like "Changes" and "Leave It," both Grammy-nominated for Best Rock Instrumental Performance.[26] The ensuing 90125 tour solidified the lineup's viability, but internal strains emerged during sessions for the follow-up Big Generator, as Horn departed production midway due to creative clashes and scheduling conflicts, leaving Rabin and engineer Paul DeVilliers to complete the album in Los Angeles.[27] Released on September 28, 1987, Big Generator retained Rabin's multifaceted role—guitar, vocals, keyboards, and production—while incorporating heavier riffs and themes of interpersonal dynamics, as in co-written singles "Rhythm of Love" and "Love Will Find a Way."[28] Though less triumphant than its predecessor amid band exhaustion and label pressures, the album achieved platinum certification and sustained Yes's arena-level popularity through a 1988 tour, during which Rabin fell ill from overwork, prompting several cancellations.[27] By 1989, fractures deepened when Anderson, alongside Bill Bruford, Rick Wakeman, and Steve Howe, pursued the parallel project Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe (ABWH), releasing an album in 1989. Record label intervention forced a merger, culminating in the 1991 double-disc Union, which integrated tracks from both camps; Rabin produced and performed on several, including the single "Saving My Heart," blending his pop sensibilities with the ABWH's progressive leanings.[29] The Union tour featured an eight-member stage lineup, but tensions persisted, with Rabin later stating he had not listened to the full album due to its patchwork nature.[30] Post-Union, the core Squire-Rabin-Anderson-White-Kaye group reconvened without the ABWH elements for Talk, Rabin's final Yes production, emphasizing digital recording techniques and extended compositions like the 11-minute "Endless Dream." Released on March 21, 1994, the album closed the Rabin era with polished tracks reflecting his guitar-driven, melodic style, though commercial momentum had waned.[31] Following the 1994-1995 world tour supporting Talk, Rabin and Kaye departed the band in 1995, allowing Yes to revert toward its classic configurations while Rabin pivoted toward film scoring.[32]Emergence as film composer (1995–2012)
Following his departure from Yes in 1995, Rabin transitioned to film composing, beginning with additional music contributions to Fair Game, directed by William Friedkin.[33] His first complete original score came in 1996 for The Glimmer Man, an action thriller directed by John Gray and starring Steven Seagal, which showcased his emerging orchestral style influenced by his classical upbringing.[34] [35] Rabin's profile rose rapidly in the late 1990s through high-profile action films, often in collaboration with other composers. He co-composed the score for Con Air (1997), directed by Simon West and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, partnering with Mark Mancina on guitar and thematic elements.[36] This led to further Bruckheimer projects, including Armageddon (1998), directed by Michael Bay, where Rabin collaborated with Harry Gregson-Williams on cues like the "Launch" sequence, blending rock energy with symphonic swells to underscore the asteroid disaster narrative; the film's global box office of over $553 million amplified the score's reach.[37] [38] That year, he also scored Enemy of the State, directed by Tony Scott, delivering tense electronic-orchestral hybrids suited to its surveillance thriller plot.[12] By the early 2000s, Rabin had established a signature sound—propulsive rhythms, guitar-driven motifs, and lush strings—for blockbuster fare, frequently with Bruckheimer. Notable scores included Gone in 60 Seconds (2000), emphasizing high-octane chases; Remember the Titans (2000), a sports drama with motivational anthems still used in events; Bad Company (2002); National Treasure (2004), featuring adventure themes for its treasure-hunt premise; and The Guardian (2006).[39] [38] He scored over 30 films in this period, prioritizing orchestral recordings when budgets permitted, as in Flyboys (2006), a World War I aviation epic.[5] In reflecting on the shift, Rabin cited film as a rare outlet for "serious classical music" amid rock's limitations, drawing on early training and a youthful score for a South African film, though he viewed post-Yes work as his professional emergence in Hollywood.[38] [39] Deadlines and director input shaped his process, fostering efficiency but occasional revisions, as with thematic adjustments for Deep Blue Sea (1999).[39] This era solidified his reputation for elevating action genres through emotive, large-scale compositions, culminating in scores like The Bourne Legacy (2012), extending his spy-thriller contributions.[5]Return to rock and recent releases (2012–present)
In 2012, Rabin interrupted his film scoring career to release Jacaranda, his fifth solo album and first original non-soundtrack work in 23 years. Issued on May 8, 2012, by Varèse Sarabande, the album consists of nine instrumental tracks showcasing Rabin's guitar prowess, with him performing all instruments and handling production.[40][41] From 2016 onward, Rabin returned to live rock performance by forming Yes Featuring Jon Anderson, Trevor Rabin, Rick Wakeman (ARW) alongside former Yes members Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman, supported by bassist Lee Pomeroy and drummer Lou Molino III. The supergroup toured internationally from 2016 to 2018, delivering sets of Yes classics and select solo material, which culminated in the live release Live at the Apollo on September 7, 2018, capturing a Manchester performance with audio and video formats emphasizing the band's progressive rock roots.[42][43] Rabin's reengagement with vocal rock materialized in 2023 with Rio, his sixth solo album and first featuring original vocals since Can't Look Away in 1989. Released on October 6, 2023, by Inside Out Music, the double-disc set includes 18 tracks blending AOR, progressive elements, and personal themes, with Rabin contributing lead vocals, most instrumentation, production, and cover artwork. In a Goldmine interview, Rabin described the process as invigorating, stating rock music felt "so in [his] blood again" after years dominated by orchestral scoring.[44][45][46] No further solo or band studio releases have followed as of October 2025.[47]Musical style and influences
Primary influences
Trevor Rabin's early musical influences encompassed classical composers such as Arnold Schoenberg and Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, whose works shaped his appreciation for complex structures and orchestration from a young age.[48] In interviews, Rabin has highlighted Schoenberg's impact beyond serialism, particularly through specific compositions that informed his compositional approach.[48] On the rock front, Rabin drew inspiration from British acts including Cliff Richard and the Shadows—specifically guitarist Hank Marvin's clean, melodic tone—as well as The Beatles and Jimi Hendrix, which fueled his initial forays into electric guitar and songwriting during his Johannesburg youth.[16] These influences contributed to his blend of accessible pop-rock sensibilities with progressive elements evident in his later work. As a guitarist, Rabin's primary stylistic touchstones were jazz masters Joe Pass, Barney Kessel, and Herb Ellis, whose technical precision and improvisational flair influenced his phrasing and even his rock playing, despite his primary genre associations.[35] [49] He has also credited John McLaughlin as a pivotal figure in developing his fusion-oriented guitar technique, emphasizing McLaughlin's innovative speed and harmonic exploration as formative during Rabin's formative years experimenting with electric instruments.[35]Guitar techniques and compositional approach
Rabin's guitar techniques draw from classical training integrated with self-taught rock and jazz elements, emphasizing speed picking for rapid scalar passages, improvisation in solos, and balanced development of left-hand fretting for precise chord voicings and right-hand alternate picking for fluidity.[50][51] He prioritizes tone production through equipment choices, such as signal splitting from a Fender Stratocaster boosted by a Boss DS-1 distortion pedal into Marshall 2203 half-stacks for the layered, chorused sound on Yes's "Owner of a Lonely Heart," and employs string bending alongside tools like the B-Bender to achieve expressive pitch variations mimicking vocal inflections.[52][53] Techniques include arpeggiated runs, double-picking for density, and hybrid picking to blend melody with rhythm, often within complex chord structures that reflect jazz influences from players like Joe Pass and Herb Ellis, adapting these to rock contexts for melodic solos over progressive frameworks.[54][49] His compositional approach centers on melodic accessibility and emotional resonance, prioritizing strong themes over abstraction, as seen in film scores where he crafts appealing cues to engage audiences directly.[55] Rooted in family-influenced classical foundations, Rabin employs harmony, counterpoint, and orchestration across instruments like electric and acoustic guitars, banjo, Dobro, bass, and piano, fusing symphonic elements with rock drive and jazz improvisation to create boundary-pushing works without rigid adherence to atonal systems.[35][56][48] In rock and solo contexts, this manifests as ensemble-oriented arrangements that balance technical virtuosity with harmonic depth, evolving from Yes-era pop-prog hybrids to instrumental albums blending fusion and traditional forms.[57][58]Personal life
Family and residences
Rabin was born on January 13, 1954, in Johannesburg, South Africa, to Godfrey Rabin, a lawyer and accomplished violinist, and Joy Eileen Rabin (née Wallach), a painter, ballet dancer, actress, and pianist.[10][59] He grew up in a Jewish household in the Parkland suburb of Johannesburg as the second child, with piano lessons beginning at age six under his aunt's guidance.[10] Rabin married his high school sweetheart, Shelley May, in 1978 after meeting her during their school years in South Africa.[11][59] The couple has one son, Ryan, born in the United States, who has collaborated musically with his father on projects including family traditions in recording.[60][58] Shelley has been credited by Rabin as a key influence in his return to studio album production in recent years.[61] After departing South Africa in 1978 amid his opposition to apartheid, Rabin resided in London for several years before relocating with his family to Los Angeles, California, in 1981.[11][22] By 1984, the family had settled in Hollywood, where they continued to live as of the late 1980s, including in the Hollywood Hills.[60][22] No public records indicate a change in their primary residence from the Los Angeles area in subsequent decades.[11]Views on South Africa and emigration
Trevor Rabin left South Africa in 1978 at age 24, motivated by professional ambitions stifled by international cultural boycotts against the apartheid government, which barred his band Rabbitt from touring abroad despite their platinum-selling success domestically.[62][63] The group's inability to expand globally, coupled with Rabin's desire to escape being "small fish in a big pond," prompted his relocation first to London and later to the United States.[64] Rabin has reflected critically on apartheid-era South Africa, describing how the white population was "conditioned, quite successfully, to not see the bigger picture" during his youth.[65] Rabbitt's 1976 hit "Charlie" served as an implicit anti-apartheid statement, drawing controversy in a society where such public dissent was rare among white artists and contributing to his decision to emigrate after consultations with his father.[62] These experiences underscored the regime's isolating effects, as the international boycott—intended to pressure change—also curtailed opportunities for non-political cultural exports like rock music.[56] By 1987, after years abroad, Rabin articulated a profound disconnection from his birthplace, stating, "I belong in America more than South Africa. I can't remember the feeling of living there anymore. It's like it was in another life. That's sad" and describing himself as "a man without a land."[22] His 2012 scoring of Invictus, a film about Nelson Mandela and the 1995 Rugby World Cup, reinforced this detachment; Rabin criticized its "Hollywood" glossiness for omitting harsher realities of South African history, preferring a less sanitized portrayal based on his firsthand knowledge.[12] In recent years, Rabin has not rejoined the wave of some apartheid-era emigrants returning home, maintaining residence in California.[66] His 2023 solo album Rio includes "Egoli," a track contemplating persistent challenges in post-apartheid South Africa, signaling ongoing pessimism about the country's trajectory without romanticizing its past or present.[24] This body of reflections prioritizes career pragmatism and empirical critique over nostalgia, viewing emigration as both a necessary escape from systemic constraints and an irreversible personal rupture.Recognition and legacy
Awards and nominations
Rabin earned seven SARIE Awards with the South African band Rabbitt for Best Group between 1976 and 1978.[11] As a member of Yes, he shared a Grammy Award nomination in 1988 for Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal for the album Big Generator.[4] Yes also received a 1987 Grammy nomination for Best Music Video, Long Form, during Rabin's tenure.[67] In film scoring, Rabin received eleven BMI Film and TV Awards for his contributions to various projects.[6] He was nominated for Saturn Awards from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films in 1999 for Armageddon and in 2007 for Flyboys.[67] Additionally, he won multiple ASCAP Film and TV Music Awards, including for The Sorcerer's Apprentice in 2011, I Am Number Four in 2010, and G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra in 2009. Rabin was honored with the Henry Mancini Award at the 2012 ASCAP Film and TV Music Awards for his overall achievements in scoring.[68] He also received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Temecula Valley International Film Festival.[5]| Year | Award | Category/Work | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1976–1978 | SARIE Awards (with Rabbitt) | Best Group | Won (7 total)[11] |
| 1987 | Grammy Award (with Yes) | Best Music Video, Long Form | Nominated[67] |
| 1988 | Grammy Award (with Yes) | Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal (Big Generator) | Nominated[4] |
| 1999 | Saturn Award | Best Music (Armageddon) | Nominated[67] |
| 2007 | Saturn Award | Best Music (Flyboys) | Nominated[67] |
| 2009–2011 | ASCAP Film and TV Music Awards | Various films (e.g., G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra) | Won (multiple) |
| Multiple | BMI Film and TV Awards | Film scores | Won (11 total)[6] |
| 2012 | ASCAP Henry Mancini Award | Lifetime scoring achievement | Won[68] |
Hall of Fame induction and industry impact
Rabin was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as a member of Yes on April 7, 2017, during the 32nd annual ceremony held at the Barclays Center in New York City.[69] He performed "Owner of a Lonely Heart"—the 1983 hit he co-wrote and which topped the Billboard Hot 100—with band inductees including Jon Anderson and Rick Wakeman, alongside guests Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson.[70] [71] The induction recognized Yes's evolution, highlighting Rabin's role in the band's 1980s lineup that produced commercially successful albums blending progressive rock with accessible production.[72] Rabin's contributions to the music industry include revitalizing Yes during the 1980s through his guitar work, songwriting, and production on the 1983 album 90125, which sold over three million copies in the United States and marked the band's shift toward MTV-era appeal while retaining progressive elements.[73] "Owner of a Lonely Heart," featuring Rabin's distinctive riff and layered synth-guitar textures, not only propelled 90125 to No. 5 on the Billboard 200 but also introduced Yes to broader audiences, sustaining the band's relevance amid shifting rock landscapes.[71] His approach influenced subsequent progressive rock acts by demonstrating how technical virtuosity could integrate with radio-friendly hooks. In film scoring, Rabin has composed for over 30 feature films since 1995, often collaborating with producer Jerry Bruckheimer on action blockbusters such as Armageddon (1998), Enemy of the State (1998), and Gone in 60 Seconds (2000), where his scores combined orchestral swells with electronic elements to heighten tension and spectacle.[5] This work, frequently within Hans Zimmer's Remote Control Productions, helped standardize hybrid scoring techniques for high-stakes thrillers, earning him 11 BMI Film & TV Awards for titles including Get Smart (2008) and National Treasure: Book of Secrets (2007).[74] [6] His enduring output has shaped industry norms for composer versatility, bridging rock instrumentation with cinematic demands and mentoring emerging talent through shared studio environments.[24]Critical reception and debates
Rabin's tenure with Yes from 1983 to 1995 elicited polarized responses among critics and fans, with praise for revitalizing the band's commercial viability through hits like "Owner of a Lonely Heart" from the 1983 album 90125, which peaked at number one on the Billboard 200 and earned platinum certification, yet criticism for shifting the group toward a more accessible pop-rock sound that diluted its progressive roots.[27] Supporters highlighted Rabin's guitar virtuosity and production skills, crediting him with modernizing tracks like "Roundabout" in live settings and injecting heavier elements, while detractors argued his influence led to albums like Big Generator (1987), which suffered from internal toxicity and lack of cohesion, resulting in mixed reviews and sales that underperformed relative to 90125.[75] [76] His solo rock output has garnered more consistent acclaim, particularly the 2012 album Jacaranda, lauded for its melodic depth and instrumental prowess as one of the year's standout releases, and the 2023 album Rio, described as a "huge sounding, near perfect" effort blending genres with assured quality after a 34-year hiatus from vocal-oriented rock.[77] [78] Earlier solo works from the late 1970s to 1981, such as Beginnings (1977), received critical acclaim for launching his career with sophisticated fusion elements.[79] Film scores, comprising over 100 projects since the 1990s, are frequently commended for their energetic orchestration in action genres, with Armageddon (1998) featuring cues praised for emotional buildup and avant-garde choral launches as among Rabin's finest, and National Treasure (2004) noted for entertaining, theme-driven compositions tailored to Jerry Bruckheimer's high-stakes narratives.[80] [81] Reviews of scores like Gone in 60 Seconds (2000) acknowledge their refreshing electronic-orchestral hybrid as suitable for the material, though some prefer traditional symphonic approaches; Hot Rod (2007) stands out for its goofy, tension-filled silliness.[82] [83] Debates center on Rabin's Yes legacy, with purist fans decrying the "Rabin era" as a commercial detour that prioritized hooks over prog complexity—evident in exclusions like Owner of a Lonely Heart from some retrospective compilations—and tensions from Big Generator's production hell, where Rabin described a "toxic" atmosphere and bad blood from inception.[84] [27] Conversely, proponents view him as the guitarist who "saved a dead supergroup" by infusing vitality post-Anderson's departure, fostering hits that sustained the band's relevance into the 1990s amid lineup fractures like the Union (1991) tour debacle.[85] [86] These divisions persist in fan forums and retrospectives, balancing his technical excellence against perceived stylistic dilution.Discography
Solo albums
Rabin began his solo recording career in South Africa with the album Beginnings, released in 1977 on RCA Records, featuring a blend of rock, jazz fusion, and progressive elements influenced by his session work and early bands.[87] The album was later reissued internationally in 1978 under his name as Trevor Rabin and again in 2003 with bonus tracks.[88] Signed to Chrysalis Records after emigrating, Rabin released Face to Face in 1979, showcasing polished AOR-style rock with multi-instrumental performances, including guitar, keyboards, and vocals, alongside contributions from South African musicians like Abe Laboriel on bass.[87] [89] The follow-up, Wolf, arrived in 1981, emphasizing harder-edged rock tracks and orchestral arrangements, though it received limited commercial traction outside niche progressive circles.[87] [3] After joining Yes in 1983, Rabin's solo output paused until 1989, when Elektra released Can't Look Away, his most commercially oriented effort, produced with Bob Ezrin and featuring Rabin handling most instruments except drums on select tracks; it peaked at number 116 on the Billboard 200 and yielded the single "Something to Hold On To."[3] [6] In 2012, Rabin returned to solo work with Jacaranda on Varèse Sarabande, an all-instrumental album self-produced over six years, drawing on his film scoring experience with cinematic guitar and orchestral textures, marking a shift from vocal rock to ambient and fusion soundscapes.[3] [10]| Album Title | Release Year | Label | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginnings | 1977 | RCA | Debut; reissued 1978 and 2003[87] |
| Face to Face | 1979 | Chrysalis | AOR rock with fusion elements[87] |
| Wolf | 1981 | Chrysalis | Harder rock with orchestration[87] |
| Can't Look Away | 1989 | Elektra | Self-produced multi-instrumental; charted on Billboard[3] |
| Jacaranda | 2012 | Varèse Sarabande | Instrumental; post-film score style[3] |
Band contributions
Rabin co-founded the South African rock band Rabbitt in 1972, serving as lead guitarist, primary vocalist, and main songwriter alongside members including Neil Cloud on drums and Ronnie Robot on bass.[90] The group pioneered progressive rock elements in South Africa, releasing three albums between 1975 and 1977, with Boys Will Be Boys (1976) achieving gold status as the fastest-selling South African record up to that point.[6] [91] Rabbitt's success included multiple hit singles and tours, but disbanded in 1978 after Rabin left for international pursuits.[92] In 1983, Rabin integrated into Yes via the short-lived Cinema supergroup project with Yes alumni Chris Squire and Alan White, plus Tony Kaye, which evolved into the band's core lineup.[93] He provided lead guitar, vocals, keyboards, and key production input across four studio albums: 90125 (1983), Big Generator (1987), Union (1991), and Talk (1994).[60] Rabin's contributions modernized Yes's sound, blending progressive complexity with arena rock accessibility; he co-wrote and sang lead on the title track of 90125 and produced the album, which sold over 3 million copies in the US.[94] His signature track, "Owner of a Lonely Heart," co-written with Squire and others, topped the Billboard Hot 100 for two weeks in early 1984, marking Yes's sole US number-one single and driving the album's commercial peak.[38] On Big Generator, Rabin handled most lead vocals and co-wrote hits like "Rhythm of Love," while his guitar work emphasized concise riffs over extended solos, influencing the band's shift from 1970s prog epics.[95] Rabin departed Yes in 1995 amid lineup changes but reunited sporadically for tours.[25]Film and television scores
Rabin transitioned to film composition in the 1990s after departing Yes, marking a shift from rock performance to scoring major Hollywood productions. His early breakthrough arrived with the action thriller Con Air (1997), directed by Simon West, where his orchestral score blended high-energy cues with emotional depth to underscore the film's tension and heroism. This led to a prolific output, with Rabin ultimately composing music for over 34 feature films by the 2010s.[1] A cornerstone of his career involved repeated collaborations with producer Jerry Bruckheimer, spanning ten films that collectively generated more than $2.4 billion in global box office revenue.[1] Key examples include Armageddon (1998), a Michael Bay-directed asteroid disaster epic featuring Rabin's anthemic main theme, which propelled NASA's promotional efforts and earned a Golden Globe nomination for its Aerosmith-endorsed soundtrack integration; Enemy of the State (1998), Tony Scott's surveillance thriller amplified by Rabin's pulsating electronic-orchestral hybrid; Gone in 60 Seconds (2000), where driving rhythms mirrored high-octane car chases; and National Treasure (2004), Jon Turteltaub's adventure film bolstered by Rabin's adventurous motifs evoking historical intrigue.[96] [97] Other Bruckheimer projects like Remember the Titans (2000) showcased Rabin's ability to fuse inspirational brass fanfares with period authenticity, with cues later repurposed for Olympic broadcasts.[1] These works highlighted Rabin's versatility in action, drama, and sci-fi genres, often employing synthesizers alongside full orchestras for dynamic propulsion.[24] Beyond Bruckheimer, Rabin's scores graced diverse titles such as Deep Blue Sea (1999), Renny Harlin's shark thriller with underwater tension built through percussive motifs; The Guardian (2006), a Coast Guard drama emphasizing heroism via swelling strings; and Coach Carter (2005), Samuel L. Jackson's basketball biopic underscored by motivational themes.[5] His compositional approach prioritized narrative support, drawing from rock roots for rhythmic drive while adapting to directors' visions, as evidenced by 11 BMI Film and TV Awards recognizing commercial impact.[1] In television, Rabin's contributions were more selective, focusing on series requiring sustained atmospheric scoring. He composed for the ABC miniseries Zero Hour (2013), blending mystery elements with urgent pulses, and the Syfy adaptation 12 Monkeys (2015–2016), where his themes navigated time-travel paradoxes through layered electronics and orchestration across two seasons.[24] These efforts extended his filmic style to episodic formats, though television work remained secondary to his cinematic portfolio.| Year | Film | Director | Producer | Notable Elements |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | Con Air | Simon West | Jerry Bruckheimer | Breakthrough action score with heroic motifs |
| 1998 | Armageddon | Michael Bay | Jerry Bruckheimer | Anthemic theme; $553 million worldwide gross |
| 2000 | Remember the Titans | Boaz Yakin | Jerry Bruckheimer | Inspirational cues reused in sports events |
| 2004 | National Treasure | Jon Turteltaub | Jerry Bruckheimer | Adventure themes evoking treasure hunts |
| 2006 | The Guardian | Andrew Davis | Jerry Bruckheimer | Heroic strings for rescue drama |