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Cezary Skubiszewski
Australian composer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Cezary Jan Skubiszewski (born 1948) is a Polish-born Australian film and television composer.[1] He composed the film scores for Two Hands (1999), Red Dog (2011), The Sapphires (2012) and the TV series, Picnic at Hanging Rock (2018).
Personal life and education
Skubiszewski was born in Warsaw, Poland. His mother was a concert pianist.[1][2] Skubiszewski, himself began piano lessons at 8 years of age and received a classical musical education over a period of 10 years under the tutelage of the director of the Warsaw Opera. [3] In the late 1960s, Skubiszewski played in bands including ACB with other Warsaw musicians such as Aleksander Bem, Bem's sister Ewa, a vocalist, Jan Ciecierski and Grzegorz Kędzierski.[4] While touring and performing in Europe with Alexis Korner, the British Blues musician and radio broadcaster, Skubiszewski injured his hand in a horse-riding accident.[2] He then spent one year in Paris and did not return to Poland due to the nation's political situation and his own sense of wanderlust.[1]
In 1974, Skubiszewski moved to Australia.[1][2] With an interest in both horses and biology, Skubiszewski commenced a undergraduate degree in veterinary medicine at the University of Melbourne.[2] In August 1978, Skubiszewski became an Australian citizen. Skubiszewski has two daughters, Viva Bianca and Jan Skubiszewski. Both work in the Australian entertainment industry. [5][6]
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Career
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In Australia, during 1978 and 1979, Skubiszewski played the Moog synthesizer, Rhodes piano and Clavinet in his jazz fusion band, Corroboree (an Aboriginal Australian word meaning a meeting involving traditional dance and song).[7][8]
Skubiszewski's beginning as a professional music composer began with a piece urgently required for an advertisement for Lincraft, an Australian haberdashery chain store company.[2] He first received widespread recognition as a composer when his film score for the movie, Lilian's Story won awards for best music at the Asia-Pacific Film Festival.[9] Of this score, Skubiszewski said, "It was a very special experience. I wanted to find a nucleus of feeling without the little trills. It sits on you emotionally without bombarding you."[2]
Since then, Skubiszewski has worked as a self-supporting composer and arranger, conductor, producer, and musician.[9]
His music is heard in television programs such as Neighbours, 19 episodes of the 1994 Australian children's program Sky Trackers (1996) and 13 episodes of Driven Crazy (1998).[10] In 2018, Skubiszewski wrote the soundtrack for the Picnic at Hanging Rock television series.[10]
Skubiszewski's movies scores include Two Hands (1999), Red Dog (2011) and The Sapphires (2012).
Among his compositions for commercials is Skubiszewski's work for Carlton Draught: Big Ad, a parody of the epic style of historical movies and advertisements of large companies. He created a re-working of Carl Orff's Carmina Burana with humorous lyrics.[11]
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Awards and nominations
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Skubiszewski has been nominated in Australian award programs and has won on several occasions.[12] These programs include the APRA Awards, the ARIA Music Awards, the Film Critics Circle of Australia awards and others.[12] Skubiszewski was nominated on five occasions in the ARIAS for Lillian's Story, The Sound of One Hand Clapping, After the Deluge, Night and Red Dog: True Blue.[12] In 2013, the Australian Film Critics Association gave Skubiszewski the award for best music score for The Sapphire. Skubiszewski won the Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts award for best original music score for Falling for Figaro (2021).[12] Two Hands won the Australian Guild of Screen Composers in 1999.[12] Skubiszewski has won the Film Critics Circle award on five occasions and nominated on another two. In 2000, Skubiszewski tied with Edmund Choi with The Dish. He received the best music score award for Bootmen (2000), The Book of Revelation (2006), Bran Nue Dae (2009) and The Sapphires (2012). His nominations were for Beneath the Hill (2010) and Death Defying Acts (2007).[12] Red Dog also won an Inside Film award in 2011.
APRA Music Awards
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Selected discography
- 1981 Home at Last (symphony)
- 1991 Soundescape (music theatre)
- 1994 Sky Trackers (TV)
- 1995 Lilian's Story (film)
- 1996 Hurah a.k.a. Heaven Sent (film)
- 1998 The Sound of One Hand Clapping (film)
- 1999 Two Hands (film)
- 1999 Witch Hunt (TV film)
- 2000 Bootmen (film)
- 2000 The Wog Boy
- 2001 La Spagnola
- 2002 Black and White (film)
- 2003 After the Deluge (TV)
- 2003 The Rage in Placid Lake
- 2004 The Brush-Off (TV)
- 2005 Hating Alison Ashley (film)
- 2006 The Book of Revelation (film)
- 2006 The Society Murders (TV)
- 2007 Death Defying Acts (film)
- 2008 Night (film)
- 2008 (Lionel) (film)
- 2009 Carla Cametti PD (TV)
- 2009 Blessed (film)
- 2009 Bran Nue Dae (film)
- 2010 Beneath Hill 60 (film)
- 2010 Wolf Blass television advertisements
- 2011 Red Dog (film)
- 2012 The Sapphires (film)
- 2015 Oddball (film)
- 2016 Red Dog: True Blue (film)
- 2018 Tiger (film)
- 2020 Mosquito State (film)
- 2021 Falling for Figaro (film)
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References
External links
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