The Music of Hans Zimmer Program


We acknowledge that the land we make music on is the traditional country of the Kaurna people of the Adelaide Plains. We pay respect to Elders past and present and recognise and respect their cultural heritage, beliefs and relationship with the land. We acknowledge that this is of continuing importance to the Kaurna people living today. We extend this respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people who are with us for this performance today.


Sherlock Holmes: Discombobulate
Driving Miss Daisy: Theme
Pirates of the Caribbean: Suite
Zimmer/Badelt
The Thin Red Line: Journey To The Line
The Holiday: Maestro
Inception: Suite

– Interval 20 minutes –

The Lion King: Orchestra Suite
Kung Fu Panda: Oogway Ascends Zimmer/Powell
The Da Vinci Code: Chevaliers de Sangreal
Batman The Dark Knight: Suite Zimmer/Powell
Interstellar: Suite
Gladiator: Suite & Now We Are Free Zimmer/Gerrard

All works composed by Hans Zimmer unless otherwise stated.

Art of the Score: The Music of Hans Zimmer


This concert is hosted by popular podcasters from Art of the Score. Produced in association with Concert Lab.

Today, when you go to the movies, you’ll hear Hans Zimmer.

You might hear the composer himself, who is surely one of the most prolific creatives in any field working in Hollywood today. In 2021 alone, Zimmer released the soundtracks for six major films, including No Time to Die and Dune, while he worked on another two scores for the following year, as well as music for four television series. Today, especially when you’re seeing the biggest productions Hollywood has to offer, chances are they’ll be scored by Hans Zimmer, who along with John Williams is one of the few film composers to become a genuine household name.

But even if you don’t hear Zimmer himself at your local multiplex, you’re still likely to hear his influence. Hollywood directors, videogame studios, and even reality television producers today all want that Zimmer sound. If you go to a movie like Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning (2023) you’ll hear music by Lorne Balfe, a protégé of Zimmer’s and a long-term collaborator at Zimmer’s Remote Control studios. If you go and see Aquaman (2018) you’ll hear a soundtrack composed by Rupert Gregson-Williams, another Remote Control associate. Or, on the small screen, tune in for an episode of Game of Thrones, Westworld, or House of the Dragon and you’ll hear yet another Zimmer mentee, Ramin Djawadi. Each composer has their own ability, their own skill, and their own sound – but each also follows in the footsteps of Zimmer, as do many who have never officially collaborated with the man himself. Zimmer is everywhere.

So how did Hans Zimmer become the man who changed the way we hear the movies?

Born in Frankfurt in 1957 to a musician mother and an engineer father, Zimmer grew up with “one foot in the music camp and the other foot in the technology camp,” as he told an interviewer in 2013. It was to prove an auspicious beginning. Despite only sustaining interest enough for two weeks of piano lessons as a child, Zimmer quickly took to synthesisers in his twenties and meandered his way through several rock bands in 1970s London including The Buggles, and Zimmer can to this day be seen on keyboards at the back of their music video for “Video Killed the Radio Star”. Falling in with veteran film composer Stanley Myers (The Deer Hunter), Zimmer apprenticed in the UK film industry before breaking into Hollywood first with his music for Rain Man (1988) and then Driving Miss Daisy (1989). He was a man in-demand in the 1990s, with his mixture of slightly dorky early digital music-making and the familiar film orchestra giving the movies he wrote music for, like Thelma & Louise (1991), Crimson Tide (1995), and The Rock (1996) a burst of fresh energy (and, in the case of The Lion King, an Academy Award for Zimmer along the way).

The new millennium, and a string of critical and financial successes in the form of The Thin Red Line (1998), Gladiator (2000, co-composed with Australian Lisa Gerrard), and then the Pirates of the Caribbean (2003—) and Batman Begins (2005-2012) franchises cemented Hans Zimmer as Hollywood’s musical man of the moment. This Hans Zimmer was a long way from the man who composed the very 1980s beat of Driving Miss Daisy. This Zimmer’s music was muscular and powerful, delving into a musical vocabulary informed by rock and pop, German art music of the likes of Wagner and Mahler, and the digital tools Zimmer used and developed along the way.

Zimmer’s music has always been negotiated through technology. Not content with the usual electronic synthesisers used by composers in the 1980s, Zimmer quickly moved on to writing music for samplers and virtual instruments, where highly sophisticated digital technology is deployed to create an orchestral sound on a single computer. Gone overnight, it seemed, were the days where a director would hear their score for the first time with hundreds of musicians at the recording studio. For Gladiator, director Ridley Scott and editor Pietro Scalia moved into Zimmer’s music studio to cut the film while Zimmer composed next door, with ideas shared, tested, and debated in real time. Today, Zimmer writes at least partly as much for computer as for orchestra.

“Hans is a minimalist composer with a sort of maximalist production sense,” says director Christopher Nolan, one of Zimmer’s most significant collaborators. From the mid-2000s the Zimmer sound became exactly this – simple musical ideas suffused into extremities. His Batman theme from The Dark Knight trilogy, for example, is just two notes, like a musical bat-signal illuminating the clouds above in its sign-like simplicity. Zimmer’s beloved ‘Time’ from Nolan’s Inception (2010) is also a case in point, with just four simple chords repeated in the same order over and over from the beginning of the piece to its conclusion. It’s Zimmer’s sense of epochal scale that makes the track: we begin ‘Time’ whisper-quiet on piano, and over the course of four-and-a-half minutes reach the full might of fortissimo symphony orchestra and Zimmer’s bag of digital production tricks. It is breathtaking. “They can just turn the music louder and louder and louder,” says Nolan, “because you realise the momentum of the film is entirely defined by the structure of the music.”

Yet the moment you think that the rest of the film industry has cottoned on to Zimmer’s style, he moves on. “You have to learn how to deal with the technology so it doesn’t drive you,” says Zimmer in a lesson that some of his imitators have never learnt. Today, Zimmer’s career spans as wide a variety as the church organs of Interstellar (2014), the reverb-drenched synths of Blade Runner 2049 (2017), the rumble of Dune (2021), and the musical nostalgia of No Time to Die (2021).

In all cases, what you remember is more than music. You remember the power of the soundtrack and the overwhelming emotion of Zimmer’s score. You remember music that is bigger than you are, that is bigger than the moment. You remember music that is bigger, even, than Hans Zimmer.

© Dan Golding 2024

Artists

L-R Dan Golding, Andrew Pogson, Nicholas Buc
L-R Dan Golding, Andrew Pogson, Nicholas Buc

Art of the Score

Art of the Score is a Melbourne-based podcast that explores, demystifies and celebrates some of the greatest soundtracks of all time from the world of film, TV and video games. In each episode hosts Andrew Pogson, Dan Golding and Nicholas Buc check out a soundtrack they love, break down its main themes, explore what makes the score tick and hopefully impart their love of the world of soundtracks.

Art of the Score has enjoyed time in the iTunes Top 10, What’s Hot and New & Noteworthy lists and is listened to by soundtrack geeks all around the world. Head on over to artofthescore.com.au for more nerdery and tomfoolery.

Nicholas Buc | Conductor

Nicholas Buc is an Award-winning composer, conductor and arranger. As the recipient of the prestigious Brian May Scholarship, he completed a Master’s degree in Scoring for Film and Multimedia at New York University, receiving the
Elmer Bernstein Award for Film Scoring.

He recently completed work on the new Australian feature film Slant, starring Sigrid Thornton and Pia Miranda, which won Best Australian Feature at Monster Fest 2022. He also scored the Ukrainian documentary Slava, which won Best Short Film at Byron All Shorts Flickerfest 2023.

He has worked with Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, Chris Botti, Amanda Palmer, Ben Folds and Australian pop sensation Tina Arena. He has written arrangements for Birds of Tokyo, Missy Higgins and Vera Blue as well as working on Junior MasterChef, The Voice Australia and the 2021 AFL Grand Final.

Nicholas is highly sought after as a conductor for live film concerts, having conducted the world premieres of Star Wars: The Last Jedi, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, The Lion King (2019), Beauty and the Beast (2017), Shrek 2 and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2.

He is also the only person in the world to have conducted all three original Star Wars films in concert…in one day!

A/Prof. Dan Golding | Host

Associate Professor Dan Golding is Chair of Media and Communication at Swinburne University, the host of Screen Sounds on ABC Classic, and an award-winning composer and writer.

Dan is the author of Star Wars After Lucas (University of Minnesota Press, 2019), and the co-author of Game Changers (Affirm Press, 2016). He also created the soundtrack for the BAFTA, DICE, and GDCA winning Untitled Goose Game (2019), which became the first game soundtrack to be nominated for an ARIA award in history. Other composing includes the soundtracks for Push Me Pull You (2016) and the Frog Detective series, for which his score for The Haunted Island (2018) won the APRA-AMCOS Australian Game Developer award for Best Music. Dan recently composed the theme for the ABC’s flagship podcast, ABC News Daily. Find him on Instagram @dan.golding, or online at dangolding.com.

Andrew Pogson | Host

Andrew Pogson is a producer, director and jazz musician who has worked in the music industry for over 20 years. He is the founder and Creative Director of Concert Lab, a concert producing and production company, and was previously the Head of Presentations at the Melbourne Symphony Orchestra.

He has worked with artists such as Sting, Randy Newman, Tim Minchin, Ben Folds, Joe Hisaishi and Studio Ghibli, Kate Miller-Heidke and Flight Facilities, along with creating and producing world premieres with the MSO such as The Doctor Who Symphonic Spectacular, Video Games Unplugged, Babe in Concert, Symphonica featuring Armand Van Helden, The Film Music of Nick Cave & Warren Ellis and This Gaming Life with music comedy trio Tripod (where he also hosts their podcast Perfectly Good Podcast). Find him on Instagram @andrewjpogson or online at concertlab.com.au.

Desiree Frahn | Soprano

South Australian soprano Desiree Frahn is a graduate of the Elder Conservatorium of Music, and a principal artist with State Opera South Australia and the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation opera program.

For the company she has performed Mabel (The Pirates of Penzance), Musetta (La Bohème), Johanna (Sweeney Todd), Julie (Carousel), Bubba (Summer of the Seventeenth Doll), Vixen (The Cunning Little Vixen) Valencienne (The Merry Widow), Leïla (Les pêcheurs de perles), Lauretta (Gianni Schicchi), Rose Pickles (Cloudstreet world premiere), Pamina (The Magic Flute), Rosalinde (Die Fledermaus), and Bastienne (Bastien und Bastienne). She has also sung as a soloist in their regional tours, concerts, and radio broadcasts.

In 2024, Frahn will perform the lead roll of Ellen Holland in the world premiere season of Eucalyptus, an Opera Australia, Victorian Opera, Perth Festival and Brisbane Festival co-production. Other notable performances include the role of Stephanie in the Australian premiere and return seasons of Jake Heggie’s To Hell and Back with Australian Contemporary Opera Co.

Frahn performs regularly as a soloist with the Adelaide Symphony Orchestra in new and established works, including several recordings and world premieres.


Adelaide Symphony Orchestra

Violins

Kate Suthers** (Concertmaster)
Cameron Hill** (Associate Concertmaster)
Holly Piccoli* (Principal 1st Violin)
Alison Heike** (Principal 2nd Violin)
Lachlan Bramble ~ (Associate Principal 2nd Violin)
Janet Anderson
Ann Axelby
Erna Berberyan
Minas Berberyan
Gillian Braithwaite
Julia Brittain
Hilary Bruer
Elizabeth Collins
Jane Collins
Belinda Gehlert
Danielle Jaquillard
Michael Milton
Ambra Nesa
Julie Newman
Liam Oborne
Emma Perkins
Alexander Permezel
Alison Rayner
Kemeri Spurr

Violas

David Wicks** (Guest Principal)
Rosi McGowran~ (Acting Associate)
Martin Alexander
Lesley Cockram
Linda Garrett
Anna Hansen
Natalie Maegraith
Michael Robertson

Cellos

Martin Smith** (Guest Principal)
Sharon Grigoryan~
Joseph Freer
Sherrilyn Handley
Kate Hwang
Shuhei Lawson
Andrew Leask
Gemma Phillips
David Sharp
Cameron Waters

Double Basses

David Schilling**
Harley Gray~(Acting Associate)
Jacky Chang
Aurora Henrich
Belinda Kendall-Smith
Gustavo Quintino

Flutes

Kim Falconer**
Lisa Gill

Piccolo

Julia Grenfell*

Oboes

Joshua Oates**
Renae Stavely~

Cor Anglais

Peter Duggan*

Clarinets

Dean Newcomb**
Darren Skelton

Bass Clarinet

Damien Hurn* (Guest Principal)

Bassoons

Mark Gaydon**
Kristina Phillipson

Contrabassoon

Leah Stephenson* (Acting Principal)

Horns

Sarah Barrett~
Emma Gregan
Philip Paine*
Sam Peng
Timothy Skelly

Trumpets

David Khafagi**
Martin Phillipson~
Gregory Frick

Trombones

Colin Prichard**
Ian Denbigh

Bass Trombone

Amanda Tillett*
Todd Burke* (Guest Principal)

Tuba

Stan McDonald*

Timpani

Andrew Penrose*

Percussion

Steven Peterka**
Jamie Adam
Amanda Grigg
Ryan Grunwald
Max Ziliotto

Harp

Jessica Fotinos* (Guest Principal)

Keyboard

Katrina Reynolds* (Guest Principal)
Andrew Georg* (Guest Principal)

Rhythm Section

Sam Leske* (Guest Principal)
Shireen Khemlani* (Guest Principal)

** denotes Section Principal
~ denotes Associate Principal
* denotes Principal Player

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