Jump to content

The IFMCA Award winners are...


Erik Woods

Recommended Posts

INTERNATIONAL FILM MUSIC CRITICS ASSOCIATION HONORS MULTIPLE FILMS; “LIFE OF PI” TAKES SCORE OF THE YEAR BUT DESPLAT, ELFMAN, GIACCHINO, NEWMAN, VELÁZQUEZ, WILLIAMS ALSO WIN




FEBRUARY 21, 2013 — The International Film Music Critics Association (IFMCA) announces its list of winners for excellence in musical scoring in 2012. Unlike in previous years, where one score has taken multiple victories, the main film prizes are split equally between 11 different movies and composers, the greatest spread in IFMCA history.


The award for Score of the Year goes to Canadian composer MYCHAEL DANNA for his score for director Ang Lee’s vivid shipwreck drama LIFE OF PI. Danna’s dramatic and beautiful score made use of a large number of Indian musical elements in addition to a traditional western orchestra, capturing through music one the film’s key ideas, the collision of different cultures to form the large, ethnic melting pot from which the lead character, Pi Patel, originates. This is the first Score of the Year award from the IFMCA for Golden Globe winner and double-Oscar nominee Danna, who had never previously been nominated in this category, although he did receive five previous nominations in genre categories for scores such as BEING JULIA, THE NATIVITY STORY and THE IMAGINARIUM OF DOCTOR PARNASSUS.


Hollywood A-lister DANNY ELFMAN was named Film Composer of the Year for his outstanding body of work in 2012, during which he composed music for such popular and successful films as DARK SHADOWS, FRANKENWEENIE, HITCHCOCK. MEN IN BLACK III, PROMISED LAND and SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK. Elfman’s music in 2012 ran the gamut of styles and genres, from the soft rock of Silver Linings Playbook to the Gothic atmospherics of Dark Shadows and Frankenweenie, to the subtle Bernard Herrmann echoes of Hitchcock, cementing his position as one of the most versatile and sought-after composers working today. This is the second Composer of the Year Award Elfman has received from the IFMCA, having previously been similarly honored for his work in 2008.


The IFMCA’s ongoing recognition of emerging talent in the film music world this year spotlights 37-year-old Colorado-born composer NATHAN JOHNSON, who was named Breakout Composer of the Year for his unconventionally percussive music for the acclaimed sci-fi thriller LOOPER. To create the film’s unique aural atmosphere Johnson took a standard small orchestra, featuring mainly strings and piano, and augmented them with a massive array of sampled sounds and processed percussion effects, ranging from trash can lids, an oscillating fan, and gunfire to hammered PVC tubes and fire alarms. The end result is cacophonous, unsettling, but weirdly fascinating music that somehow manages to bring together these seemingly random and incoherent musical collisions of sounds into a propulsive, exciting score.


Spanish composer FERNANDO VELÁZQUEZ wrote the IFMCA’s Film Music Composition of the Year – “The Impossible Main Title” from director Juan Antonio Bayona’s film THE IMPOSSIBLE, which tells the story of a family caught up in the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. Velázquez’s main title is an overwhelming emotional powerhouse, capturing both the tragedy of the situation and the sense of desperation felt by the family concerned. The score was recorded by the excellent string section of the London Metropolitan Orchestra at the historic Abbey Road Studios, and has been praised by numerous mainstream film critics as one of the outstanding elements of the film. This is the first IFMCA Award win for Velázquez, who was previously nominated for his scores EL ORFANATO (THE ORPHANAGE) in 2007 and GARBO: EL ESPÍA in 2009.


The various genre awards were won by JOHN WILLIAMS for director Steven Spieberg’s historical drama LINCOLN, WALTER MURPHY for the raucous comedy TED, THOMAS NEWMAN for his work on the near-universally lauded James Bond film SKYFALL, MICHAEL GIACCHINO for the epic Edgar Rice Burroughs space adventure JOHN CARTER, ALEXANDRE DESPLAT for the whimsical fantasy animation RISE OF THE GUARDIANS, and Finnish composer PANU AALTIO for his music for the beautiful nature documentary METSÄN TARINA.


In the non-film categories, British composer MURRAY GOLD won the award for Best Original Score for a Television Series for his outstanding work on the most recent season of the classic BBC science fiction show DOCTOR WHO, while composer AUSTIN WINTORY won the award for Best Original Score for a Video Game or Interactive Media for his score for the groundbreaking game JOURNEY, which earlier this year made history by being the first Video Game score nominated for a Grammy.


La-La Land Records won the Best Archival Release of an Existing Score award for their magnificent release of Jerry Goldsmith’s classic 1979 score STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE, newly re-mastered and re-released in a lavish 3-CD set. They also continued their monopoly of the Film Music Record Label of the Year category, winning for the third straight year, and solidifying their position at the top of the list of labels specializing in lovingly restoring the greatest film music of the past.


Finally, conductor Nic Raine and producers James Fitzpatrick and Luc Van de Ven won the Best Archival Re-Recording of an Existing Score award for the monumental re-recording of Miklós Rózsa’s score for the epic 1951 film QUO VADIS?, which featured stellar performances from the City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra.


=============================================


THE WINNERS


FILM SCORE OF THE YEAR

• LIFE OF PI, music by Mychael Danna


FILM COMPOSER OF THE YEAR

• DANNY ELFMAN


BREAKOUT COMPOSER OF THE YEAR

• NATHAN JOHNSON


BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR A DRAMA FILM

• LINCOLN, music by John Williams


BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR A COMEDY FILM

• TED, music by Walter Murphy


BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR AN ACTION/ADVENTURE/THRILLER FILM

• SKYFALL, music by Thomas Newman


BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR A FANTASY/SCIENCE FICTION/HORROR FILM

• JOHN CARTER, music by Michael Giacchino


BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR AN ANIMATED FEATURE

• RISE OF THE GUARDIANS, music by Alexandre Desplat


BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR A DOCUMENTARY FEATURE

• METSÄN TARINA, music by Panu Aaltio


FILM MUSIC COMPOSITION OF THE YEAR

• “The Impossible Main Title” from THE IMPOSSIBLE, music by Fernando Velázquez


BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR A TELEVISION SERIES

• DOCTOR WHO, music by Murray Gold


BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR A VIDEO GAME OR INTERACTIVE MEDIA

• JOURNEY, music by Austin Wintory


BEST ARCHIVAL RELEASE OF AN EXISTING SCORE

• STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE, music by Jerry Goldsmith; album produced by Didier C. Deutsch, Mike Matessino, Bruce Botnick, MV Gerhard, Matt Verboys and David C. Fein; liner notes by Jeff Bond and Mike Matessino; album art direction by Jim Titus (La-La Land)


BEST ARCHIVAL RE-RECORDING OF AN EXISTING SCORE

• QUO VADIS?, music by Miklós Rózsa; conducted by Nic Raine; album produced by James Fitzpatrick and Luc Van de Ven; liner notes by Frank K. DeWald; album art direction by GINKO DIGI (Prometheus/Tadlow)


FILM MUSIC RECORD LABEL OF THE YEAR

• LA-LA LAND RECORDS, MV Gerhard, Matt Verboys
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 7
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

I don't understand how Life Of Pi can win score of the year without also winning it's category (I assume Drama)? That makes no sense!

I still say Chris P. Bacon was ROBBED!!!

Yay for Nathan Johnson, and Yay for Williams!

And SUPER YAY FOR LA-LA LAND RECORDS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

:groupwave::ola:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't understand how Life Of Pi can win score of the year without also winning it's category (I assume Drama)? That makes no sense!

Each category is voted on separately. And as you can see in the nominations list the scores up for best score of the year differ than what is nominated in the drama category So, while a voter might prefer Life of Pi in the Score of the Year category they might have thought that one of the other scores in the drama category (not nominated in the score of the year category) was stronger than Life of Pi.

For instance, a member might have compiled their own best of list, which would have placed THERE BE DRAGONS in first place and LIFE OF PI in second spot. When it came down to vote for the winners, they selected LIFE OF PI in the score of the year category. But since they had THERE BE DRAGONS as their favorite score of the year they gave the vote to Folk's score instead of Danna's in the drama category.

Does that help?

-Erik-

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don't understand how Life Of Pi can win score of the year without also winning it's category (I assume Drama)? That makes no sense!

Each category is voted on separately. And as you can see in the nominations list the scores up for best score of the year differ than what is nominated in the drama category So, while a voter might prefer Life of Pi in the Score of the Year category they might have thought that one of the other scores in the drama category (not nominated in the score of the year category) was stronger than Life of Pi.

For instance, a member might have compiled their own best of list, which would have placed THERE BE DRAGONS in first place and LIFE OF PI in second spot. When it came down to vote for the winners, they selected LIFE OF PI in the score of the year category. But since they had THERE BE DRAGONS as their favorite score of the year they gave the vote to Folk's score instead of Danna's in the drama category.

Does that help?

-Erik-

Hmmm........here are the nominees for Score Of The Year

FILM SCORE OF THE YEAR

CLOUD ATLAS, music by Tom Tykwer, Johnny Klimek and Reinhold Heil

THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY, music by Howard Shore

THE IMPOSSIBLE, music by Fernando Velázquez

LIFE OF PI, music by Mychael Danna

LINCOLN, music by John Williams

Here are the nominees for Drama

BEST ORIGINAL SCORE FOR A DRAMA FILM

ANNA KARENINA, music by Dario Marianelli

THE IMPOSSIBLE, music by Fernando Velázquez

LIFE OF PI, music by Mychael Danna

LINCOLN, music by John Williams

THERE BE DRAGONS – SECRETOS DE PASIÓN, music by Robert Folk

3/5s are the same scores. And Lincoln won one and Life of Pi won the either.... I dunno it's weird. But it doesn't matter. Congrats to all the winners!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Congrats to all the winners!

Just saw The Impossible today, very moving score (and film), main theme reminded me a lot of Ennio Morricone's The Lady Caliph. Occasionally goes overboard with horror scoring tropes -- namely, the slowwwww, gradual crescendo from nothing to a loud shrieking climax, but overall, incredibly effective stuff. Would have been a better Oscar nominee than either Skyfall or Argo IMO.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Congratulations to all! I have to say that after glancing through the list of winners I would find very little to complain myself apart from The Hobbit not winning in any of the categories.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Guidelines.