SCOTT COULTER
Vocalist

SCOTT COULTER

Scott Coulter is one of New York’s most celebrated vocalists, having received five MAC Awards, five Bistro Awards, and two Nightlife Awards for Outstanding Vocalist, along with an Emmy nomination for his performance in American Song on PBS. He set a record with an eight-month run at Feinstein’s in NYC performing the revue 11 O’Clock Numbers at 11 O’Clock, which he also co-created, directed, and musically arranged. His self-titled debut CD won the 2003 MAC Award for Outstanding Recording and was named Best Recording of the Year by TheatreMania and Cabaret Scenes magazines.

Scott directed and starred in A Christmas Carol: The Symphonic Concert during its world premiere with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and reprised his role in the Emmy-nominated PBS production. He frequently performs in concert, both as a solo artist and alongside legendary entertainers such as Academy Award-winner Stephen Schwartz, Tony Award-winner Ben Vereen, and Grammy Award-winner Sheena Easton. He has appeared with symphony orchestras around the world. Of his work, Schwartz has said, “One of the greatest things that can happen to a composer is to have his music interpreted by Scott Coulter.”

Scott is the creator, arranger, and director of several touring productions—both symphonic and non-symphonic—including Music of the Knights, The Wonderful Music of Oz, Blockbuster Broadway!, and Jerry Herman: The Broadway Legacy Concert for The ASCAP Foundation. In partnership with Michael Kerker and ASCAP, he is a regular producer/director of Michael Feinstein’s Standard Time series at Carnegie Hall.

Alongside Dave Gaebler, Scott co-produced the Off-Broadway musical Walking With Bubbles, starring Jessica Hendy and Brianna Barnes, which received a 2023 Drama Desk Award nomination and won the Off-Broadway Alliance Award. He also produced the show's cast album with Vibecke Dahle Dellapolla. Coulter and Gaebler are members of the producing teams for the Broadway musicals Water for Elephants and Suffs, the latter of which received Tony Awards for Best Book and Best Score.

Scott is the founder and owner of Spot-On Entertainment and Spot-On Arts Academy, and serves as a resident director of programming at 54 Below (Broadway’s Supper Club) in New York City. He is also the artistic director of the Pocono Mountains Music Festival and the founder of Pocono Pops!

A proud graduate of the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, Scott was honored with CCM’s Young Alumni Award in 2010 and the Distinguished Service Award in 2020.