Adrian Johnston (musician)

British musician From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Adrian Johnston (born 1961) is an English musician and composer for film and television scores, who resides in London and Samois-sur-Seine.[1]

Born1961 (age 6465)
OriginLancashire, United Kingdom
OccupationsMusician, composer
Quick facts Born, Origin ...
Adrian Johnston
Born1961 (age 6465)
OriginLancashire, United Kingdom
GenresFilm and television scores, experimental, ambient, drone, electronic, synthwave
OccupationsMusician, composer
InstrumentsKeyboards, synthesizer, drums
Years active1996-present
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Early life and education

Born in the county of Lancashire, Johnston attended the University of Edinburgh, studying English. He has been a drummer in bands including Moles for Breakfast, The Waterboys, the Wanglers, Combo Zombo, and The Mike Flowers Pops.[2]

Career

During his twenties, Johnston travelled the world providing music accompaniment to silent films at film festivals. He later scored productions for the Royal National Theatre and the Royal Shakespeare Company.

Johnston's first film score was for the 1996 Thomas Hardy adaptation Jude. He has also composed original scores for The Turn of the Screw (1999), Becoming Jane, a 2007 film about Jane Austen,[3] and the 2008 adaptation of Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited. In 2008, he was awarded a BAFTA for the score of the BBC film Capturing Mary.[4]

Johnston's score for Charles Sturridge's mini-series Shackleton won a 2002 Primetime Emmy.[5] In 2009, he scored the British science-fiction procedural TV series Paradox. He composed the theme music for the BBC detective series Zen, which won him a 2011 RTS Awards;[6] the World War II drama The Sinking of the Laconia; Stephen Poliakoff's acclaimed 2013 TV series Dancing on the Edge; and the drama The 7.39. Johnston won another RTS award in 2014 for scoring The Tunnel.[7]

References

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