![]() | Joby Talbot Born: 1971, Wimbledon, England. Background: Exciting young English composer who effortlessly mixes contemporary classical music with pop. Studied composition at the Royal Holloway and Bedford New College, and then at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London. First came to prominence in the early 1990s as one of a quartet of young composers commissioned a new piece of music for the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra and Sir Peter Maxwell-Davies. Made his film music debut in 1999, writing music for the highly original comedy series “The League of Gentlemen” (for which he won a Royal Television Society Award), and has since gone on to undertake a number of projects for the BBC, notably the Cornwall-based sitcom “Wild West”, the animated short “Legend of the Lost Tribe”, and the comedy sketch show “Grass”. He scored his first big-screen projects in 2005 when he took on the cinema versions of Douglas Adams’ “Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy”, and the big-screen debut of the his old friends in “The League of Gentlemen’s Apocalypse”. In addition to his film work, Talbot is a founder member of the alternative pop group The Divine Comedy; working with singer-songwriter Neil Hannon, Talbot has arranged three albums, including the popular “Fin de Siecle” in 1998. Talbot also collaborated with composer Michael Nyman at the Edinburgh Festival, worked on Ute Lemper’s acclaimed album “Punishing Kiss”, co-wrote the new theme for the popular British TV science show Tomorrow’s World, and has produced albums for artists such as Travis, Tom Jones and Paul McCartney. He has also written a number of classical works, including a percussion concerto entitled “Incandescence”, and a piece for electric cello Highlight Scores: The League of Gentlemen, Legend of the Lost Tribe, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse. |
![]() | Alexander Tansman Born: INSERT. Died: INSERT. Background: INSERT. Highlight Scores: INSERT. Awards: INSERT. Links: INSERT. |
![]() | Max Terr Born: INSERT. Died: INSERT. Background: INSERT. Highlight Scores: INSERT. Awards: INSERT. Links: INSERT. |
![]() | Mikis Theodorakis Born: 29 July 1925, Chios, Greece. Background: Studied composition in Paris following the end of WWII, in which he was a freedom fighter with the Greek resistance. As much a politician as he is a composer, Theodorakis became a Member of the Greek Parliament from in 1964 after the political murder of a colleague. He was imprisoned when the military dictator Papadopoulos came to power in 1968, and subsequently exiled. He returned to Greece in 1974, and entered politics again, until standing down in 1990. He did manage to write some music during this time, which in addition to his film music included two operas, and music to commemorate two different Olympic Games. Highlight Scores: Phaedra, Elektra, Zorba the Greek, Z, State of Siege, Serpico. Awards: Golden Globe nomination for "Zorba the Greek" (1964), and three BAFTA nominations. Links: Official Site |
![]() | Pierpaolo Tiano Born: Milan, Italy. Background: Young, talented Italian composer making a name for himself in Hollywood. Played the piano as a child, and moves from Italy to Los Angeles aged 18 to study music and theatre at UCLA. While undertaking further study in jazz piano and arranging, Tiano began working with composer Barend Ross, and spent some time composing incidental music for Disney. Scored his first film, "Love & Sex" in 2000, in collaboration with Native American composer Billy White Acre, and has since gone on to work on a number of successful independent features while supplementing his income writing music for advertising, where his clients have included BMW, Hyundai, Amazon and the Fox Network. Highlight Scores: Love & Sex, Southside, Curse of the Forty-Niner, Miner's Massacre. Links: SoundView Music: Official Site |
![]() | Yann Tiersen Born: 23 June 1970, Brest, France. Background: Popular and successful French composer and instrumentalist, who has released a number of solo albums to great acclaim in his native country. A multi-instrumentalist with a love of folk music, specifically that relating to the Brittany region of France, Tiersen burst onto the music scene in the mid-1990s with his debut album, "La Valse des Monstres", and followed it up with the acclaimed "Le Phare", "Rue des Cascades", "Tout Est Calme" and "L'Absente". Made his film music debut in 1998, working with director Erick Zonca, but was launched into world wide fame through his association with the Oscar-nominated "Le Fabuleux Destin d'Amélie Poulain", better known as simply "Amelié". Since then Tiersen has become one of the most sought-after young composers in Europe, and continues to balance his burgeoning film music career with his solo recordings and concert performances. Highlight Scores: The Dream Life of Angels, Qui Plume La Lune?, Night Shift, Amelié, Goodbye Lenin Awards: BAFTA nomination for "Amelie" (2001). Links: Official Site |
![]() | Martin Tillman Born: INSERT. Background: INSERT. Highlight Scores: The Pledge, The Ring 2. Awards: INSERT. Links: INSERT. |
![]() | Chris Tilton Born: 9 June 1979, New Orleans, Louisiana. Background: Talented young composer from Louisiana who has been heralded by senior figures at LucasArts as “the next big thing”. Played piano as a child, and studied at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, PA with Andrew Rudin. Moved to Los Angeles in 2001 to take up a post as the assistant to composer Michael Giacchino, and since than has spent much of his time working on the hit TV series “Alias” and the upcoming Pixar animation “The Incredibles”. In addition to his work with Giacchino, Tilton has also written a number of scores for short films, and video game scores, most notably “Shrek Super Party”, “Muppets Party Cruise”, “Alias: The Game” and the spectacular “Mercenaries”. Highlight Scores: Alias (additional music), Shrek Super Party, Muppet Party Cruise, Sin (additional music), Secret Weapons Over Normandy (additional music), Mercenaries, The Incredibles (additional music). Links: Official Site |
![]() | Ernest Toch Born: INSERT. Died: INSERT. Background: INSERT. Highlight Scores: INSERT. Awards: INSERT. Links: INSERT. |
![]() | Richard Tognetti Born: 1970, Wollongong, Australia. Background: Studied violin at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and at the Berne Conservatory in Switzerland, before returning to his native Australia in 1989 to become a member of the Australian Chamber Orchestra. Became principal violinist, and subsequently musical director, of the orchestra, and has since performed the many of the world's premiere orchestras in Europe and America. Made his film music debut in 2003, working with composers Iva Davies and Christopher Gordon on the score for the Oscar-nominated "Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World", where his main duty was to arrange the original classical music performed on-screen by Russell Crowe. He says he "composes a little, in the modern genre". Highlight Scores: Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World. |
![]() | tomandandy Born: Vancouver, Canada (Tom); Santa Monica, California (Andy). Background: Better known as composers Tom Hajdu and Andy Milburn, the conglomerate 'tomandandy' was formed when the two musicians met while studying together at Princeton University in the mid-1980s. Interested in developing music for advertising and the media, and with mutual expertise in both composition and sound design, 'tomandandy' was born in 1989, and the two composers quickly found themselves in demand, writing video insert slots for MTV and designing ad campaigns for Coca-Cola. Producer Roger Avary and aspiring director Mark Pellington were two of their collaborators at MTV, and 'tomandandy' were given their first break in 1994 when they were hired to score the Euro-thriller "Killing Zoe". Since then, 'tomandandy' have become popular and established creators of cutting edge electronic music, with several hit films and albums of music to their name. Oliver Stone is also a regular user of their music, having tracked in some of their pieces as source music into "JFK" and "Natural Born Killers". In addition to their film work, 'tomandandy' continue to write music for multimedia, having recently completed fashion show commissions from Gucci and Randolph Duke, and been involved in a performance art project for the Leo Castelli Gallery in New York. Highlight Scores: Killing Zoë, Mr. Stitch, Arlington Road, Waking the Dead, The Mothman Prophecies, The Rules of Attraction. Links: Official Tomandandy Site Page |
![]() | David Torn Born: 26 May 1953, Amityville, New York. Background: Best known as an "experimental guitarist" in the vein of Jimi Hendrix. Jazz-educated, inspired by the minimalism of Terry Riley, and a veteran of half a dozen rock and jazz-rock groups, Torn began as a member of the Everyman Band, and subsequently released five acclaimed solo albums, including "Best Laid Plans", "Cloud About Mercury", "Door X", "Tripping Over God" and "What Means Solid Traveller?". As a guitarist, Torn has collaborated with numerous film composers (notably Carter Burwell and George S. Clinton) on scores such as "Mortal Kombat", "Three Kings", "Traffic" and "A Knight's Tale", before making his solo film music debut as a composer in 2002. Sometimes uses the stage-pseudonym SPLaTTeRCeLL. Survived a life-threatening brain tumour in 1992. Highlight Scores: The Order Links: David Torn: Solid States |
![]() | Brian Transeau Born: 4 October 1971, Rockville, Maryland. Background: A leading light in the world of dance and trance music, who uses his initials "BT" as a stage name. Despite playing piano as a child, and attending Berklee School of Music in Boston, Transeau first emerged as a DJ in the night spots of Washington DC. Moving to England in the early 1990s, he fell in with the groundbreaking group of artists such as Paul Oakenfold and, as a resident artist at Ministry of Sound, helped shape and invigorate the British dance music scene. His remix of Tori Amos's "Blue Skies" in 1996 brought him fame; his subsequent collaborations with Mike Oldfield and Robert Miles cemented his reputation as one of the most popular and successful artists in his field. Made his film music debut as a composer in 1999 with the action thriller "Go", and has since gone on to amass a small but distinguished filmography of box office successes, notably the Oscar-winning "Monster", many of which incorporate orchestral and world music elements into his electronic palette. Has released a number of albums of ambient dance and trance music, beginning with his self-titled debut in 1995, and subsequently works such as "ESCM" and "Movemements in Still Life". Highlight Scores: Go, Under Suspicion, Driven, The Fast and the Furious, Monster, The Underclassmen, Stealth. Links: Official BT Site |
![]() | Nerida Tyson-Chew Born: INSERT. Background: INSERT. Highlight Scores: Hotel Sorrento, Brilliant Lies, Under the Lighthouse Dancing, Mr. Accident, Visitors, Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid. Awards: INSERT. Links: INSERT. |
![]() | Shigeru Umebayashi Born: 1951, Japan. Background: INSERT. Highlight Scores: 2000 AD, In the Mood for Love, Onmyoji, Zhou Yu’s Train, House of Flying Daggers, 2046. Awards: INSERT. Links: INSERT. |
![]() | Fabio Vacchi Born: INSERT. Background: INSERT. Highlight Scores: INSERT. Awards: INSERT. Links: INSERT. |
![]() | Pierre Van Dormael Born: Ixelles, Belgium. Background: Belgian guitarist, composer and arranger, the brother of acclaimed film director Jaco Van Dormael. Has spent the majority of his career working in the pop and jazz fields, where his collaborators have included Belgian music luminaries such as AKA Moon, The James Baldwin Projects, Philip Catherine an Marc Lelangue. Released a number of successful albums with his own group, L'Ame Des Poetes, and spent time teaching music in Senegal, where he recorded an album with kora player Soriba Kouate. Has scored just two films in his short career, both of them directed by his brother, but he continues to remain active in the jazz and performance scene in Belgium. Highlight Scores: Toto le Hèros, Le Huitième Jour. |
![]() | John Van Tongeren Born: Background: Before establishing himself as a film composer, John Van Tongeren had his roots in rock 'n roll. In the early 1980s he was an in-demand arranger and keyboard player, and went on to write and produce hit records for a number of successful artists including Chicago, The Pointer Sister, Robbie Nevil, John Parr, Starship and Al Jarreau. He worked on first film score in 1990, performing keyboard for Hans Zimmer on his score "Days of Thunder". This subsequently led to a long and fruitful collaboration with Zimmer and the Media Ventures stable, in which Van Tongeren worked with composers such as John Frizzell, Mark Mancina, Steve Porcaro, Trevor Rabin and contributed "additional selected cues" to films including "Armageddon", "Dante's Peak", "Moll Flanders", "Twister", "Drop Zone", "Speed", "True Romance" and "Thelma and Louise". Van Tongeren's most prominent solo assignments came in the mid-1990s when he was asked to compose original music for the TV series "The Outer Limits" (1995) and "Poltergeist: The Legacy" (1996), and the mini-series "Creature" (1998) based on the novel by Peter Benchley, and has recently scored the popular Disney Channel movie "The Cheetah Girls" (2003), the feature film "Malibu's Most Wanted" (2003) in collaboration with John Debney), and "Van Helsing: The London Assignment" (2004), the animated spin-off from the smash-hit action movie. Van Tongeren cites Bernard Herrmann, Dmitri Shostakovich, Bela Bartok and Toru Takemitsu among his musical influences - which, he says, allows him to create moods ranging from interstellar awe to supernatural terror. In addition to writing music, Van Tongeren is also the owner of The Blue Room, a state-of-the art recording studio in Los Angeles. Highlight Scores: The Outer Limits (TV), Poltergeist: The Legacy (TV), Creature, Malibu’s Most Wanted, The Cheetah Girls, Van Helsing: The London Assignment. Links: Official Site. |
![]() | James Venable Born: Los Angeles, California. Background: Studied composition and percussion at Cal State University in Long Beach, and undertook further studies with Jack Smalley and Lyle Murphy (studying his "System of Horizontal Composition Based on Equal Intervals"), before turning "professional" in the early 1990s. Is best known for his work in the animation field, having been the recipient of several awards for his scores for "The Powerpuff Girls", "Clerks" and "Samurai Jack". Venable is gradually beginning to slowly break into the world of major feature films, mainly as a result of his recent collaborations with director Kevin Smith, for whom he is now the 'composer of choice'. Highlight Scores: The Powerpuff Girls (TV), Samurai Jack (TV), Clerks (TV), Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back, Iron Monkey, The Powerpuff Girls Movie, Scary Movie 3, Jersey Girl, Eurotrip, Deuce Bigalow: European Gigolo, Happily N'Ever After. Links: Official Site. |
![]() | Alessio Vlad Born: Background: Talented Italian composer of Romanian heritage who has, in recent years, become the favoured musical collaborator of director Franco Zeffirelli. The son of the acclaimed composer, pianist and musicologist Roman Vlad (formerly the artistic director of La Scala in Milan), Alessio followed in his father's footsteps, eventually becoming artistic director of the Teatro Carlo Felice in Genoa. Made his film music debut in 1990. First came to international prominence through his work on Zeffirelli's 1996 adaptation of "Jane Eyre", and has since gone on to become one of the rising talents of Italian film music, with a number of successful titles under his belt. Often collaborates with fellow Italian composer Claudio Capponi and virtuoso pianist Stefano Arnaldi. Highlight Scores: Storia di Una Capinera, Jane Eyre, Beseiged, Tea With Mussolini, Callas Forever. |