The big winners at the
Australian Guild of Screen Composers Awards night held on November 19th
in Melbourne were Antony Partos and Lisa Gerrard.
The 2012 Screen Music Awards celebrated the
gifted music composers who create magic behind the ‘screen’ - both small and
large. Held at Melbourne’s BMW EDGE, the Screen Music Awards (staged jointly by
APRA and the AGSC) has recognised composers across thirteen categories. This
year’s recipients include two previous Golden Globe winners and while it’s an
eclectic group they all share one common trait - the unique ability to adapt to
any musical situation and tell a story without even a word being spoken.
Sydney based screen composer ANTONY PARTOS has
been recognised in three categories, winning Best Television Theme for the ABC
TV adaptation of Christos Tsiolkas’ The Slap, Best Music for a Mini-Series or
Telemovie for the ABC mini-series Mabo and Best Soundtrack Album for The Slap
along with co-writers MICHAEL LIRA, JONO MA and IRINE VELA. It’s a phenomenal
victory for Partos who has been responsible for memorable screen scores
including the menacing Animal Kingdom, Unfinished Sky, Rake and Crownies. His
work can currently be heard on the acclaimed ABC television series Redfern Now.
Taking out the coveted Feature Film Score of the
Year is LISA GERRARD with her wonderfully ethereal and dramatic score for
Burning Man. Lisa Gerrard is quite simply a musical force to be reckoned with.
Winner of the Golden Globe award for her score for the Ridley Scott film
Gladiator, Lisa came to fame as a screen composer after recording The Insider
in 1999. A number of high profile scores followed including Ali, Whale Rider,
Balibo (winner of the Screen Music Awards Feature Film Score of the Year in 2009)
and Oranges and Sunshine. Much of the work of Lisa Gerrard’s band Dead Can
Dance has a cinematic quality that led to the group’s music being used in the
cult movie Baraka, television commercials and even a car chase scene in Miami
Vice. Never afraid to take on a challenge, Lisa Gerrard remains one of
Australia’s truly innovative screen composers.
BURKHARD DALLWITZ has received the award for Best
Music for a Television Series or Serial for Underbelly Razor. Burkhard’s
compelling scores for the Underbelly series have been inextricably linked in
the minds of those who are loyal fans of the series. Another Golden Globe
winner, (Burkhard Dallwitz received the Golden Globe in 1999 for his original
score for The Truman Show by Peter Weir), his work on Underbelly has struck a
chord with judges and has seen him receive four previous Screen Music Awards.
Tonight’s honour gives him his fifth Screen Music Award for the Underbelly
series.
The category of Best Music for a Short Film has
been won by ROGER MASON for This Dog’s Life, the story of a young boxer forced
to fight and kill for his father’s love. The first non-American composer to be
granted a scholarship by the Robert Redford Sundance Institute, Roger Mason has
been working solidly as a screen composer since the 1990’s and has won multiple
Screen Music Awards.
Melbourne based composer and classically trained
pianist BRETT APLIN has won the category of Best Music for a Documentary for
Tiger Dynasty, the award winning natural history documentary for Animal Planet.
The AFI and Australian Screen Music Award winning screen composer won the 2000
Annual Pete Carpenter Fellowship (BMI Foundation, NYC) and travelled to Los
Angeles where he composed music for Law and Order: Special Victims Unit. He has
most recently scored the three-part natural history documentary series The
Polar Bear Family and Me for the BBC.
The multi talented LIOR has proven his
versatility by taking out the Best Original Song Composed for the Screen for
Hey Hootabelle from ABC4Kids Giggle & Hoot. An artist whose career has been
built on integrity and independence, Lior’s fertile musical palate continues to
cross broad territory.
Co-composers RYAN GROGAN and HYLTON MOWDAY have
won the Screen Music Award for Best Music for Children’s Television for the Channel
9 animated children’s series Gasp! about a thrill-seeking, mischievous
gold-fish who gets up to all sorts of adventures when his owners are not at
home. With a reputation for being composers who move effortlessly between
genres and styles, their collaboration on Gasp! has proven to be a winner.
HAYDN WALKER has received the award for Best
Music for an Advertisement with his uplifting score for the Nutrilon: Hope ad
campaign. This music all-rounder with first class honours in composition from
the Sydney Conservatorium of Music has worked with everyone from Grinspoon to
the Potbelleez. Last year he won the Screen Music Award in the Best Television
Theme category for the children’s TV series, Scariacs.
In the Most Performed categories (determined by
statistical analysis) ADAM GOCK and DINESH WICKS have won the Most Performed
Screen Composer – Australia while NEIL SUTHERLAND is the Most Performed Screen
Composer – Overseas.
Legendary Australian film director BRUCE
BERESFORD received the INTERNATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARD in recognition of his
considerable international achievements as a film-maker and his specific
commitment to creating opportunities for groundbreaking work by Australian
screen composers.
The Chaser’s Chris Taylor and Andrew Hansen
hosted the 2012 Screen Music Awards, which featured a live ensemble under the
musical direction of Paul Grabowsky.
Presenters on the night were: Jack Thompson,
Melanie Vallejo, Tom Wren, Ian Darling, Don Batte, Diana Glenn, Lachy Hulme,
Christopher Gordon, Peter Luscombe, Tony Briggs and Cezary Skubiszewski with
performances by Kira Puru and Electric Empire.
Congratulations to all of the winners of the 2012
APRA-AGSC Screen Music Awards and thanks so all entrants for their support fo
the Screen Music Awards.
International Achievement Award: Bruce Beresford
Feature Film Score of the Year: Burning Man
(Composer Lisa Gerrard, Publisher Sony/ATV Music Publishing Australia P/L)
Best Music for a Documentary: Tiger Dynasty
(Composer Brett Aplin)
Best Music for a Short Film: This Dog’s Life
(Composer Roger Mason)
Best Soundtrack Album: The Slap (Composers
Michael Lira* / Jono Ma* / Antony Partos* / Irine Vela Publisher Sonar
Music Pty Ltd*)
Best Original Song Composed for the Screen: Hey
Hootabelle from Giggle & Hoot (Composer Lior; Publishers ABC Music
Publishing / Mushroom Music Pty Ltd)
Best Music for Children’s Television: Gasp!
(Composers Ryan Grogan / Hylton Mowday Publisher SLR Productions Pty Ltd)
Best Television Theme: The Slap (Composer Antony
Partos; Publisher Sonar Music Pty Ltd)
Best Music for a Television Series or Serial:
Underbelly Razor (Composer Burkhard Dallwitz)
Best Music for a Mini-Series or Telemovie: Mabo
(Composer Antony Partos; Publisher Sonar Music Pty Ltd)
Best Music for an Advertisement: Nutrilon: Hope
(Composer Haydn Walker; Publisher Song Zu Publishing Pty Ltd)
Most Performed Screen Composer – Australia*
Composers Adam Gock/Dinesh Wicks
Most Performed Screen Composer –
Overseas*
Composer Neil Sutherland
*
Determined by statistical analysis