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Lucian Piane (born October 4, 1980), also known by the Internet nickname RevoLucian, is an United States of America, American composer and record producer, music producer. He has composed music for several films, television shows, theater productions and singers, and received a Recording Industry Association of America, RIAA Music recording sales certification, Platinum Album Award for his production work on ''Hairspray (2007 soundtrack), Hairspray: Soundtrack to the Motion Picture''. Piane has also achieved List of Internet phenomena, Internet fame under the name RevoLucian for his satirical techno remixes, most notably "Bale Out", which featured profanity-laced tirades from actor Christian Bale made on the set of ''Terminator Salvation''.


Career

Piane graduated from New York University in 2003 with a Bachelor of Music in musical composition. He has worked closely with composer and songwriter Marc Shaiman; the two have collaborated on such films as ''Team America: World Police'', ''Rumor Has It...'' and ''Hairspray (2007 film), Hairspray'', as well as the Broadway theatre, Broadway show ''Martin Short: Fame Becomes Me'', and the 76th Academy Awards. Piane received a Recording Industry Association of America Music recording sales certification, Platinum Album Award for his production work on New Line Records' ''Hairspray (2007 soundtrack), Hairspray: Soundtrack to the Motion Picture'', which was also nominated for a Grammy Award. Piane scored the music for the 2006 musical ''In Your Dreams (musical), In Your Dreams'', which was written by Zeke Farrow. Piane has composed scores for the HBO documentary ''An Omar Broadway Film'' and the film ''Pretty Ugly People''. He wrote the song "Year End Rap" which blogger Perez Hilton performed on his VH1 special, ''What Perez Sez''. Piane also wrote the song "Stunning" for Calpernia Addams for her reality television show, ''Transamerican Love Story''. Piane lives in Los Angeles, California, and in 2009 worked on the album ''Champion (RuPaul album), Champion'' by RuPaul. Piane composed the music for the 2009 in film, 2009 horror film, ''Sorority Row'', and arranged music for a song and video called "The Clap" by Perez Hilton, recorded for the motion picture soundtrack of the film ''Another Gay Sequel: Gays Gone Wild''. In 2011 he teamed up with RuPaul again producing the album ''Glamazon (album), Glamazon''. His third album with RuPaul, ''Born Naked'', was released in 2014.


Internet remixes

Published under his online name RevoLucian, Piane has released remixes featuring Barbra Streisand, List of Governors of Alaska, Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, political commentator Bill O'Reilly (political commentator), Bill O'Reilly, and University of Florida Taser incident, Andrew Meyer, who received national media attention when he was Electroshock weapon, tasered by police during a speech given by United States Senate, U.S. Senator John Kerry at the University of Florida. Piane has described his remixes as "just a hobby." His remix of Streisand's 2006 outburst was described as a "dance-tastic song" by Maxine Shen and Raakhee Mirchandani of the ''New York Post'' who highlighted it on their hot list of "What We're Obsessed With This Week". Louis Bayard of ''Salon.com, Salon'' highlighted Piane's remix of the O'Reilly outburst made public in 2008, in their "Critics' Picks" column. Piane attracted particularly strong attention for "Bale Out" a three-minute-long techno remix featuring audio clips from a profanity-laced tirade actor Christian Bale delivered to cinematographer Shane Hurlbut on the set of ''Terminator Salvation''. Piane made the song shortly after Bale attracted national media attention in February 2009, and "Bale Out" became so popular it attracted media attention itself. He initially heard the audio of Bale while working on an album for RuPaul. The song was posted on the websites MySpace and YouTube on February 2, 2009, and received over 200,000 views within one day. By February 4, 2009, it had received 700,000 views. Regarding the song, Piane said, "I think most people are enjoying it. I don't know if Christian Bale is enjoying it, but I hope he does. I think I've taken something that maybe made him look really bad and turned it into something that all these people are enjoying." In an interview with ''E!, E!: Entertainment Television'', Christian Bale said of the song, "It was a good remix. They did a good job." After receiving a remix of his outburst from a friend, Bale said, "They did a bloody good job! I've gotta say, what a great impulse, you know? To take something ugly like that and make it into a dance? That's a wonderful thing." McG, the director of ''Terminator Salvation'', has also praised "Bale Out" and has a copy of the song on his iPod.


Personal life

On November 3, 2016, Piane generated controversy when he sent out a series of Twitter, tweets and Instagram posts that implied the Clintons had murdered people, that Michelle Obama was an "idiot" and various other conspiracies. His tweets were criticized for being racist, often using ethnic slurs. This led to a major backlash against his longstanding ties with RuPaul, who came to Piane's defense, attributing the incidents to mental illness. Piane later claimed he made the posts while in a state of "marijuana psychosis". In August 2019, Piane was arrested multiple times, most notably on August 27 after refusing to leave a Chase Bank, Chase bank. After the arrests became public knowledge, his family revealed that he was undergoing mental health treatment. He was further arrested in August and September 2021, for drunken intoxication and felony vandalism of a bank respectively.


Awards and nominations


See also

* List of Internet phenomena * List of YouTube celebrities * List of Rusicals (Piane wrote many of these) * Mashup (music) * Sound collage


References


External links


Official site

RevoLucian YouTube Channel
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Piane, Lucian 1980 births 21st-century American composers 21st-century American LGBTQ people 21st-century American male musicians American gay musicians American LGBTQ composers American LGBTQ songwriters American male composers American male songwriters American remixers Gay composers Gay songwriters LGBTQ people from Missouri LGBTQ record producers Living people Musicians from Kansas City, Missouri Musicians from Los Angeles Record producers from California Record producers from Missouri Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development alumni