- New Mexico resident, John Thomas Bullock, is a life-long musician who grew up in a musical family in New York. He learned to play guitar at an early age and performed with bands throughout New York City and Long Island. He was formally trained in composition, harmony, counterpoint, and orchestration. He is composer-in-residence for the "Placitas Artists Series" and has had a number of public performances of his chamber works performed by prominent artists in the Albuquerque area, where he is also chief recording engineer, arranger, and producer for the "Half Way to Hell" Studio. He composed the soundtrack for audio book "Leaving Cairo as if it Were a Dream." In 2015, he was co-writer of the song "The Ghosts of San Francisco" (with lyricist R. Christian Anderson) sung by legendary Motown artist Chris Clark, for the feature documentary-drama, "When the World Came to San Francisco." The music video of the song was an official selection at the New York Jazz Film Festival in 2016 and was the winner of the "Mixed Genre Jazz Film Award."- IMDb Mini Biography By: Linda Bullock and R. Christian Anderson
- John Thomas Bullock is the nephew of lyricist, Walter Bullock, who was twice nominated for an Academy Award. He was first nominated for the song "When Did You Leave Heaven" for the movie "Sing, Baby, Sing" (1936) (shared with Richard A. Whiting), then nominated for song "Who Am I?" for the movie "Hit Parade of 1941" (1940) (which he shared with Jule Styne).
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