Bryan Carrigan is an American music producer, engineer, and electronic musician that has been involved in the production of studio albums and film scores.
[2] In 1993, Carrigan was the assistant engineer on Frank Sinatra's album Duets, which reached number 2 on the Billboard Charts[3] and went triple platinum.
In 1997, he then served as engineer and programmer on LL Cool J's album Phenomenon, which became platinum certified and sent its namesake single to number 7 on the Billboard Charts.
[19] Over his career, Carrigan has worked with music producers including Quincy Jones, Glen Ballard, Will Ackerman,[12] Phil Ramone,[20] and David Foster.
John Diliberto of Echoes wrote that, "It wasn't until he hit 42 in 2011 that Bryan Carrigan released his first solo album, Passing Lights.
[24] After the release of Windows Bill Binkelman wrote that, "Over the course of just three albums, Bryan Carrigan has established himself as an electronic music maestro and someone of substantial importance to follow for any fan of the genre who wants to stay ahead of the curve.
[29] As a programmer, he worked on the films K-PAX, Elektra, The Skeleton Key, The Sentinel, Jennifer's Body, Bad News Bears, Wimbledon, Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle, Tropic Thunder, and The Secret Life of Walter Mitty.
As music editor, he served on the films including Passengers, The Babymakers, 88 Minutes, Righteous Kill, Dedication, The Merry Gentleman, Meet Bill, The Winning Season, and Mother and Child.
As a music scoring mixer, he served on films including Grosse Pointe Blank, Chaos Theory, Pretty Persuasion, RX, and Danika.