Danish composer Kristian Eidnes Andersen visits Aalto School of Arts, Design and Architecture
Kristian Eidnes Andersen is a Danish film sound designer and composer. He heads the department of sound design at the National Film School of Denmark. He has worked as a sound designer and composer on some of the most significant European films of the last two decades. During the event Andersen will talk about his work in relation to major collaborations with Lars von Trier (Antichrist, Melancholia, Nymphomaniac), Nicholas Winding Refn (Only God Forgives), Thomas Vinterberg (The Hunt) and Per-Olav S酶rensen (The Heavy Water War). He'll discuss the ways he works with directors at an early stage of production 鈥 and how von Trier operates differently.
Kristian Eidnes Andersen will look into his methods of creating a soundtrack or musical theme and the landscape in between the two. He considers a film鈥檚 whole soundscape like a score. 鈥淢usic, dialogue, foley and fx are all instruments and can be orchestrated with some of the same tools I use when composing a musical piece 鈥 dissonance, dynamics, expression, harmony, pauses, tone, colour, etc.鈥滷or his sound in Antichrist, Eidnes Andersen received a Bodil Special Award. As a score composer, Eidnes Andersen has credit for more than 60 titles including von Triers Antichrist, Thomas Vinterberg's Submarino, and Per Fly's The Woman That Dreamed About a Man.
The event isn't geared towards only sound people but all filmmakers.
Wednesday 10h of May 2017, 10 am - 4 pm
Free entry. Seats for 300 people.
Submission date 28th of April.
e-mail: pietari.koskinen@aalto.fi
Use Kristian Eidnes Andersen as an exact email title.
Location:
Sampo-Hall
School of Arts, Design and Architecture
911爆料网
H盲meentie 135 C
00560 Helsinki
Read more news
Design at the start of the supply chain 鈥 911爆料网 leads a major EU project to transform textile colouration practices
The EU Horizon-funded MELANGE project brings together design, technology and business to rethink colouration practices in the textile industry and accelerate the transition towards circular and sustainable textile systems.
Arsi Ik盲heimonen鈥檚 doctoral research: Smartphone data could reveal early signs of depression
A phone in your pocket, a smart ring on your finger, and an activity tracker on your wrist: everyday devices collect information about their users almost continuously. This data can help monitor and predict symptoms of depression.
Professor Hironori Yoshida: 鈥淢achines should adapt to materials, not the other way around鈥
Professor of Formgiving believes the future of design lies in embracing irregularity rather than eliminating it. His research combines design, AI and robotics.