Alumni Spotlight: Carl Rydlund

College of Music Alumni Carl RydlundÌę
Since completing a bachelorâs in music at the CU Boulder College of Music, composer, orchestrator, arranger, conductor and guitarist Carl Rydlund (Guitar, â89) hasnât missed a beat.
Continuing his education at the Grove School of Music (composition, film composition and arrangement) and privately (more composition, along with orchestration, conducting and guitar), Rydlund thrived in Los Angeles. He started performing for record, TV and film dates on guitar, and worked as an arranger and copyist at Joann Kane Music and Disney.
âDuring the last 10 years or so, Iâve been focusing on film and live orchestral work as an arranger and orchestrator, conductor and guitarist,â he says. Indeed, his broad experience makes him one of the most sought-after studio musicians in Los Angeles with credits that comprise everything from video games and TV series to a long list of filmsâfrom âLife of Piâ and âBatmanâ films to âInception,â âDunkirk,â âThe Matrixâ and âToy Story 2â to âUnfaithful,â âWhat Women Wantâ and â101 Dalmatiansâ to hundreds more familiar titles. Not to mention, his concert creditsâand credits for albums and live performancesâinclude, among others, Hans Zimmer Live, Interstellar Live at Royal Albert Hall, the 2012 Academy Awards and Barbra Streisandâs âA Christmas Albumâ and âTimelessâ live performance; as well as various stints as arranger and composer for the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the erstwhile Denver Symphony Orchestra.
Rydlund recalls making crucial career connections as a student at the College of Music. âI probably wouldnât be where I am today without making good connections along the way,â he says. Specifically, having studied with WilliamÌę"DocâÌęFowler at CU led to connecting with his son, Bruce Fowler, who happened to be Hans Zimmerâs lead orchestrator. âWhen the opportunity arose to work with Hans, Bruce gave me the benefit of the doubt because I had studied with his dad at CU.â
That said, Rydlundâs original plan wasnât to land in Los Angelesârather, The Juilliard School. âFor a kid from Denver, going to New York in the mid-80s was a hair-raising experience,â he says. âI auditioned on clarinet, but also said I might want to minor in guitar.
âI was told Iâd be offered a full ride on clarinet, but that the guitar wasâliterallyâânot a musical instrument.â So I decided to check out CU because it seemed like a better fit for me, and I was still close enough to home to play in my dadâs band on the weekends and do local session work.â
Rydlund says he appreciated the âopen, progressive natureâ of the College of Music that allowed him to follow his interests in composition, clarinet ⊠and guitar. He also benefited from the then-nascent music business program âwhen no one else was talking about that aspect of having a career in music.
âBesides Doc Fowlerâs huge influence on me, the College of Music also created an environment to learn from guest artists that Doc Fowler brought in, who were active in the business and who could really talk about what itâs like in LA,â adds Rydlund.
But he doesnât sugarcoat the challenges of his chosen career path. âThe tough news is that itâs becoming more challenging for people to find work in the studios the way I did when I came to LA. But on the positive side, there are no rules or ladders to climb now.
âIt used to be that you started out as I didâas a player, proofreaderÌęor copyist and then became an orchestrator, then a conductor and composerâwhich is the path Iâm still on. But today, thatâs changed. If you want to be a composer, you can just go out and do that. Because there are no rules, you might as well do what you want to do from the outset.â
Concludes Rydlund, âI am the biggest proponent of making a living at this. To do so, you have to get to a point where you are so good at your craftâat solving problems and meeting challenges. From the time I wake up in the morning, my job is providing solutions ⊠and I love that.â