Bio
It's hard to describe David Hoffner's music without using the words "creative" or "eclectic". A
veteran of both stage and studio, he is always searching for the next musical challenge.

From the beginning, David's life has been a musical journey. Born and raised in Maryland, he began
playing piano and ukelele at age five, adding guitar and banjo a few years later. By his teenage
years he had a country-rock band, then worked his way through college as a church organist and by
playing in the bars around Baltimore.

After college, Hoffner moved to Nashville and spent the entire 1980's decade on the road. For most
of those years he was pianist and songwriting partner for pop/country star Michael Martin Murphey,
playing and writing songs on thirteen Murphey albums.

As a featured instrumentalist, he's performed with many of the nation's symphony orchestras, as
well as on The Tonight Show with both Johnny Carson & Jay Leno, The Late Show with David
Letterman, Austin City Limits, Nashville Network, Merv Griffin and Hee Haw. He's played the major
showrooms of Las Vegas, Reno & Lake Tahoe, and performed onstage with Alabama, The Nitty
Gritty Dirt Band, Dwight Yoakam, and many others.

After ten years and over a million miles on the road, Dave retired from touring to concentrate on
recording and composing. His work on Murphey's albums paved the way to becoming an in-demand
Nashville session musician. He's played keyboards and written string arrangements for both
chart-topping and Grammy-winning records, for a wide variety of artists.

Also a prolific composer, Hoffner co-wrote the "Lonesome Dove" song for the TV series, and the
theme song for Time Warner's ten-hour documentary "The Wild West". His instrumental music has
been heard on such TV shows as Good Morning America, 20/20, Saturday Night Live, Dukes of
Hazzard, National Geographic TV Specials, and the Arnold Schwarzenegger/Gabriel Byrne film "End
of Days".

Two of his orchestral compositions were recorded by the San Antonio Symphony, and he received
the National Emmy Award Nomination of "Outstanding Achievement in Music" for his score to
National Geographic's "Braving Alaska".

In 1999, Dave co-wrote and co-produced the experimental Warner Bros. album "Back Tuva
Future", a collaboration with Tuvan throat-singing master Kongar-ol Ondar. The record was hailed
as one of the "Top Ten CD's of the Year" by the New York Post, and the "Tuva Groove" single
climbed Billboard's Hot Dance Music chart to #14.

Dave's most recent scoring project was writing and producing the original musical score for the two
hour biography film "Billy Graham, God's Ambassador".

Hoffner explains, "I'm still excited by the same things that attracted me to music when I was a kid.
There's always more to learn, and it's exciting to work with other creative people, pulling ideas out
of thin air and molding them into finished music. And though the music is "invisible", it's emotional
impact on people is real and powerful."