• NEWS - Uncategorized

    My Love Affaire With Marriage

    “My Love Affair With Marriage” is the title of the new animated feature film that I’m working on, directed by Signe Baumane.

    Our past work (“Rocks in My Pockets”) brought us close to an Oscar nomination (Academy Awards)… we will try again with this exciting new film.
    Part of the cast is Matthew Modine an actor that we all know from his participation in the television series “Stranger Things”, but above all for his starring role in Kubrick’s “Full Metal Jacket”.

    Here’s the news from Variety
    https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1055277857/my-love-affair-with-marriage

    I write because this project needs the help of you and your friends.
    The director started a fundraiser on Kickstarter – this independent animated feature cannot rely on the budgets that Disney, Pixar and Dreamworks have.

    This project is being made by having independent film fans fund the film, “pre-buying” the movie, which will ensure its production.
    Just to explain how the animation business works for feature films, to put a professional actor under contract to dub any character, no matter the budget of the film (independent or a blockbuster), the costs are the same. Consequently an independent producer must pay the same actor rates as the giants such as Disney.
    For this I ask you please to click on this link:

    www.KickstartMarriageFilm.com

    Please make a small donation, pre-purchasing the film perhaps, or a larger one for some great rewards.
    Otherwise spread the word by sharing the link on Facebook, Twitter or email – just getting the word out is critical.

    Thanks in advance for helping this little (big!) Project. Independent art needs the support of those who benefit from it – us.
    In these complicated times, supporting art and culture (in all its forms) is the most revolutionary act that we can do.
    Below is a synopsis of the film in the words of the Director:
    “My Love Affair With Marriage” is based on my personal experiences – I have been married two times and could never understand why those marriages didn’t last longer than they did. To unravel this mystery, I set out to research the neuroscience and mythology of love.
    I decided to weave my many discoveries into the single story of Zelma, a fiery young woman with a wild imagination, who believes that love will make her a complete human being with four arms, four legs and two heads. Zelma keeps falling in love, but something always goes wrong. She journeys through many marriages, some real, some imaginary, while confronting pressures from society and her own biology. Although the marriages fail to make her complete, they, like baptism by fire, transform her.
    This story is driven by 26 speaking and four singing characters. The singers are the chimerical, shapeshifting Mythology Sirens, who, with their seductive songs, lure Zelma into fantasies of everlasting love and never-ending happiness.

    One of the best film composers I know is Kristian Sensini of Italy, who scored “Rocks In My Pockets”. Kristian has agreed to join us and write the songs for “My Love Affair With Marriage”, as well as score the film. It is a great honor to work with Kristian again! He is an excellent collaborator who always goes the extra mile!”
    Kristian

  • NEWS - Uncategorized

    Rocks in My Pockets at Annecy Film Festival 2015

     

    affiche_annecy2015

    Feature film selections have been unveiled for the 2015 edition of the Annecy International Animation Film Festival, which runs this year June 15-20.

    This year, the Festival received a record number of submissions: 2,606 films coming from 95 different countries, including 73 features.

    I’m proud to announce that “Rocks in My Pockets” directed by Signe Baumane (and scored by your truly) is one of the movies selected for this year!

     

    Here’s the full list of movies

    – ADAMA di Simon Rouby – Francia
    – AVRIL ET LE MONDE TRUQUÉ di Christian Desmares, Franck Ekinci – Francia
    – MUNE [news] di Alexandre Heboyan, Benoìt Philippon – Francia/Canada
    – POS ESO di Sam – Spagna
    – SABOGAL di Juan José Lozano, Sergío Mejía Forero – Colombia
    – MISS HOKUSAI [news] di Keiichi Hara – Giappone
    – THE CASE OF HANA & ALICE di Shunji Iwai – Giappone
    – TOUT EN HAUT DU MONDE di Rémi Chayé – Francia/Danimarca
    Out of competition:
    – DESTERRADA di Diego Guerra – Colombia
    – DRAGON NEST: WARRIORS’ DAWN di Yuefeng Soong – Cina
    – EDEN’S EDGE di Gerhard Treml, Leo Calice, Autriche – USA
    – HISTOIRES EXTRAORDINAIRES di Raúl García – Belgio/Spagna/Francia/Luxeburgo
    – MORTADELO Y FILEMÓN CONTRA JIMMY EL CACHONDO [news] di Javier Fesser – Spagna
    – PETITE DE LA POISSONNERIE di Jan Balej – Repubblica Ceca
    ROCKS IN MY POCKETS di Signe Baumane – USA/Lettonia
    – STAND BY ME DORAEMON [news] di Yagi Ryuchi, Takashi Yamazaki – Giappone
    – THE SNOW QUEEN 2 di Aleksey Tsitsilin – Russia

    Previews:
    – LE VOYAGE D’ARLO
    – INSIDE-OUT [news] della Pixar
    – Le prime immagini di ZOOTOPIA dei Walt Disney Animation Studios
    – Le prime immagini di LA MONTAGNE MAGIQUE
    – I primi 40 minuti di DOFUS – LIVRE 1 : JULITH
    – Director’s cut del film LE VOLEUR ET LE CORDONNIER di Richard Williams
    – Premiere del nuovo GHOST IN THE SHELL [news]

    Works in progress: – Ma vie de courgette di Claude Barras
    – The Boy and the Beast [news] di Mamoru Hosoda – Giappone
    – The Red Turtle di Michaél Dudok de Wit – Francia/Giappone/Germania
    – Capture The Flag [news] di Enrique Gato – Spagna
    – Snoopy and The Peanuts [news] di Steve Martino – USA
    – The Bad Cat di Mehmet Kurtulus, Ayse Ünal
    – Loving Vincent di Dorota Kobiela
    – Ballerina di Eric Summer

  • NEWS - PRESS

    “Rocks In My Pockets” Won Colonne Sonore Award 2014 !

    http://www.colonnesonore.net/news/premi-e-concorsi/3613-colonnesonorenet-awards-2014-winners-announced.html

    I’m really proud to share this news with you :

    The soundtrack I wrote for the animation movie “Rocks in my Pockets” directed by Signe Baumane, won the Colonne Sonore.net Awards 2014

    “In the category Best Music for a Foreign Film—young composer Kristian Sensini wins the top prize thanks to his sensitive and moving score to the Latvian animated film Rocks In My Pockets.

    A surprising win, made even more impressive considering the tough competition among the nominees (who included top names like Hans Zimmer, Howard Shore and James Newton Howard among others).”

    Here are the voting results: of course Rocks in my Pockets ISN’T the Best Soundtrack of 2014 (c’mon! The Hobbit Just 4,1% and Maleficent 9,6% ? ), but I’m happy to read that my listeners wanted to support my work , thank you!

    FULL LIST OF WINNERS
    Best Italian Composer of the Year 2014
    GIORDANO CORAPI
    Best Foreign Composer of the Year 2014
    ALEXANDRE DESPLAT
    Best Music for an Italian Film 2014
    GIORDANO CORAPI Take Five
    Best Music for a Foreign Film 2014
    KRISTIAN SENSINI Rocks In My Pockets
    Best Original Song for an Italian Film 2014
    MARCO TESTONI and EDOARDO DE ANGELIS and Maria Cristina Di Giuseppe, “Io credo, io penso, io spero”, performed by ANTONELLA RUGGIERO – from the film BlackOut
    Best Music for an Italian Television Series or Mini-Series (a.k.a. “Fiction”) 2014
    STEFANO LENTINI Braccialetti rossi (Red Bracelets)

  • NEWS - PRESS

    “Rocks in My Pockets” one of the best scores of 2014 on Film.Music.Media

    My score for “Rocks in My Pockets” is listed in this chart as one of the best scores of 2014

    http://www.filmmusicmedia.com/articles/bestscoresof2014

    2014 was an exceptional year for film music as we saw composers have their shot at original ideas from some amazing auteur directors. The result is a grand selection of scores that put strong emotional storytelling on full display. 2013 saw the fall of the studios in terms of quality, and indie films rose to show how things should be done. In 2013, Ain’t Them Bodies Saints topped this list, which is a film that barely got any distribution. 2014 saw the studio pictures take the spotlight a bit more, but not without some impressive scores from the indie world. All in all, these scores represent the best film scoring had to offer in 2014. When selecting, all scores for film and television were considered. This year, video games got their own separate list because it was deemed that the musical needs of a video game are vastly different than structured narratives. While this is a numbered list, all these scores demonstrate excellence and effectiveness.

    15. Rocks In My Pockets by Kristian Sensini
    Rocks In My Pockets squeezes into the list to start the countdown. Signe Baumane’s very personal film is indeed very autobiographical. It took a unique and personal way to explore mental illness, and did it in a way that resonated. Kristian Sensini’s score compliments and supports the stories in the film perfectly. It has the right amount of quirk and style. At times sounding like a circus, but never disregarding the emotions the story is conveying, it’s a wonderful window into one woman’s mind. 

    Full Review

    14. Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes by Michael Giacchino
    Giacchino steps in with director Matt Reeves to take over Caesar’s story. Giacchino decided to ignore what Patrick Doyle did before, which actually was the most respectful way of going about it. The music is at times primal, at times exotic, and all the time very Giacchino. The music manages to make this tale of man vs. ape emotional, tense and downright thrilling. Also you won’t be able to get that chilling and tumbling ape motif out of your head.

    Full Review

    Composer Interview

    13. Captain America: The Winter Solider by Henry Jackman
    Leave it to Henry Jackman to finally do the most original scoring approach for Marvel since Ramin Djawadi’s rock-based Iron Man score. Turning to European electronica music for influence, Jackman crafted a score that racked up the intensity and action to an unexpected level. The score was a propulsive action soundscape that shrieked and pierced your brain to make your hairs stand on end. The Winter Solider got a ghastly and disturbing vocal cry that announced his presence. This added intensity and dramatic weight that we’ve never seen in any Marvel film prior. It’s also one of the most original action scores in recent memory. Many people criticized the score’s approach, and it’s safe to say those people don’t understand the real function of score.

    Full Review

    Composer Interview

    12. The Monuments Men by Alexandre Desplat
    Alexandre Desplat had quite a year, and early on he wowed us with this gem of a score. It called back to that classic 60’s and 70’s style scoring with a light Elmer Bernstein flavoring. What made this score resonate was its fantastic theme and variation; the ability to alter the mood or tone of the story through the score’s unique personality. 

    Full Review

    11. Calvary by Patrick Cassidy
    You don’t have to be religious to fall in love with one of the most deeply moving and existential scores of the year. Cassidy creates a somber reflection that is widely accessible and relatable to all. Above it all, this is a deeply human narrative that will stick with you through its thematic structures.
    Full Review

    10. Big Hero 6 by Henry Jackman
    Jackman brings tons of heart and excitement to his now substantial Disney resume. Big Hero 6 is probably some of his most matured writing, crafting a great theme that works both as a traditional heroic anthem and as well as a poignant reflection of dealing with loss. Part orchestral and part electronic; the score has a unique identity of its own while staying true to Jackman’s voice.

    Full Review

    Composer Interview

    9. The Theory Of Everything by Jóhann Jóhannsson
    Jóhannsson’s impressive score of the early life of Jane and Stephen Hawking is very impressive. If you dig past its traditional biopic shell, you’ll find at its core that it’s a great examination of love, passion and the complexities of people going through hardship. The score is as much about falling in love as it is about falling out of love, and brings two people’s early-life joys and struggles to a resonating light.

    Full Review

    Composer Interview

    8. The Hobbit: The Battle Of The Five Armies by Howard Shore
    Shore once again concludes another fantasy epic. The third entry in the Hobbit trilogy is the strongest, both film-wise and score-wise. Shore’s thematic writing hits the ground running and sweeps us away on this climactic act in the story. The score is bold, weighty and emotional. The whole experience carries a slight regality to it all, making it a truly fantastical conclusion as well as a thematic bridge to Fro
    do’s journey that follows chronologically. 

    Full Review

    7. Birdman Or (The Unexpected Virtue Of Ignorance) by Antonio Sanchez
    Who knew that a completely improvised drum score would work on such an emotional and psychological level? Sanchez somehow manages to take us inside the minds of the characters. A lot of the film and narration is internal reflection, and the drums are a perfect way for the audience to access that. Also, it allowed for the film to be built around the score, from editing to shot duration, the drums dictate the pace of the film. A very unique score for possibly the best film of the year.

    Full Review

    Composer Interview

    6. Whiplash by Justin Hurwitz
    Whiplash works on two levels. You have the diagetic big band music that exists in the world of the film, and you have the non-diagetic score that works to take us into the mind of our protagonist. The score functions in a similar way to Birdman, it is the externalization of the character’s internal emotions and thoughts. The score is brilliant in its approach and its way to bring the audience in, and it’s all done in that big band style.

    Full Review

    5. The Imitation Game by Alexandre Desplat
    While The Imitation Game bay have been a 2-3 week rush job as a replacement score, it proves that some composers shine under pressure. Desplat delivers a brilliant accompaniment to Alan Turing’s amazing story. Instead of being a biopic, the film focuses on a very specific event in Turing’s life, and through the score we experience all who this man is. The score strives in its simplicity, never being bigger than it needs to. It acts as the side dish, not the main course and with that becomes one of the year’s best.

    Full Review

    4. How To Train Your Dragon 2 by John Powell
    While Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes and Captain America: The Winter Soldier are on this list and are sequels, they really aren’t sequel scores. Here we have the only score on the list that sees a composer returning to score a sequel, and boy is it grand. Powell follows up his Oscar-nominated score with this robustly brilliant second entry. New themes and old ones find a way to co-exist to take the story into a grander scope. We may have lost the intimacy of the first score, but it doesn’t make the score resonate any less. Any timid intimacy is replaced by the warmth and love of Hiccup’s mother who is introduced with some fantastically nurturing music. Powerful passages that bring intensity and reflect painful loss make this journey just as emotional as it was the last time.

    Full Review

    Composer Interview

    3. The Homesman by Marco Beltrami
    Beltrami’s innovation and incredible sense of humanity ended up making one of the most power scores of the year. His third collaboration with director Tommy Lee Jones has shown just how much he really is capable. From creating unique sounds by building custom instruments and recording the score outdoors, Beltrami has crafted a bleak and somber score that penetrates deep. The main theme feels like a hymn or a ballad, and it’s used powerfully throughout the body of the score. You connect with the characters more so because of the music. This unique film carries an equally unique score, that also may possibly Beltrami’s best score to date. It’s also a remarkable entry in the western genre.

    Full Review

    2. The Grand Budapest Hotel by Alexandre Desplat
    Desplat seems to outdo himself with each new Wes Anderson film, and his score for Moonrise Kingdom topped this list in the past. He manages to bring Anderson’s images to vivid life in the most unique way possible. The music here is Russian-inspired as the film takes place in a fictional European place, but the film is also inspired by Austrian writer Stefan Zweig. Desplat blankets it with an eastern European flavor that still manages to craft a unique soundscape. Everything comes alive with fantastic melodies, emotional reverence for the story and unique instrumentation. You won’t find a more uniquely special score like this, and it works hand in hand with the source music Anderson has chosen. It misses the top spot by just a hair.

    Full Review

    1. Interstellar by Hans Zimmer
    This may be Hans Zimmer’s most personal score to date. This isn’t a score about space travel, it’s about the relationship between father and child. One can spend all day speculating about what kind of challenges Hans has faced as a father, be it balancing work with family or trying to create the perfect home for his children to grow up in. Just listen to the score and it will speak to you. Hans’ writing here is very vulnerable and accessible, it echoes the relationship of Coop and Murph perfectly. In the end he does add stunning awe and gravitas to the picture doing what he does best, but at the core it’s something special and uniquely personal. I wrestled whether or not this or The Grand Budapest Hotel would be #1, but ultimately the fact that the film and score rely on each other so heavily really does make it the best example of narrative music working with picture. There’s also so many layers and textures to analyze, from the choice of the organ to the minimalist builds. Even if you disliked the film, one can’t deny the brilliant relationship Nolan and Zimmer have, the score is evidence of complete creative freedom from a composer who was gently guided by a director who loves his craft.

    Full Review

  • NEWS - PRESS

    Rocks In My Pockets Interview on The Audio Spotlight

    image

    http://theaudiospotlight.com/kristian-sensini-interview/

     

    Tell us a little about yourself and how did you get into scoring for films?

    I’m a cinephile and I have a true passion for movies and storytelling. I was lucky enough to grow up in the eighties, a great decade for movies for young audience, with amazing orchestral scores (think about Star Wars, Back To The Future, The Goonies and so on…). I have written music since I was very young and even when I was pursuing a career as a jazz musician people kept telling me that my music had visual qualities, and could be good music for images. As a matter of fact my inspiration, even when I write music not attached to any movie, usually comes from images or stories. So I guess that writing music for movies was sort of my destiny.

    What is your usual process for creating audio content for different media?

    It’s always different, depending on each project. I usually try and immerse myself in the world of the specific project I’m working on, I do musical and technical researches on instruments in order to create a unique palette of sounds that I think can be good and original. Then I cross my fingers and hope for inspiration to come… and I’m often very lucky.

    How did you get involved with “Rocks In My Pockets”?

    I was searching for animation projects to score and I had contacted Bill Plympton, a well know director and animator. He’s a friend of Signe Baumane’s (director of “Rocks in my Pockets”) and suggested she contact me to score her debut feature movie. She did and it all worked out.

    How long did it take you to score “Rocks In My Pockets”?

    It took about three weeks to score this film. That was the deadline to submit the movie to some major festivals.

    What would you consider to be your favorite track to score in “Rocks In My Pockets”?

    Probably “Anna’s Theme”, which became the main theme of the movie. It is a rather simple track, a bouncy waltz, funny but at the same time a melancholic tune. At first, when I was trying to find a tune for Anna’s character, it was coming out really sad and melancholic (I was probably influenced by the Beatles’ song “She’s Leaving Home”, as in the movie we have this story of a young girl who left her home). The director then showed me another point of view, that this girl leaves her home and family to start an amazing adventure, that is to say the discovery of her adult life. So I trashed the old cue and started from scratch, and the result was so good that “Anna’s Theme” became a reoccurring melody in the movie, even in the end titles.

    You have mostly scored films. If you were to score a television show, what would be your ideal show?

    Great question! Probably something like “Black Mirror”, “Utopia” or “Twilight Zone”, projects where you can use different musical approaches and even a bit of humor here and there.

    Your first project you scored was “The Mongol King” in 2005. How do you think your work has changed since that project?

    I think I’m maybe more conscious of what I’m doing. I’ve built a workflow that helps me save time and stay focused on the projects I’m working on at the time. Hopefully I’ve developed a personal voice as a composer.

    Any specific “lessons learned” on a project that you could share?

    Every project is a lesson, because working for film is an intimate and collaborative experience between artists, you share ideas, feelings, and you correlate with other people’s lives. I love this job because there’s something to learn on every project. The greatest lesson I’ve learned is that the best thing is to be honest with yourself and your music, while trying not to imitate any other composer (something that people do all the time for the desire to find an easy consent). This way, in the end, you know that your time is well spent because you’ve created something new and original.

    If your budget was endless for “Rocks In My Pockets”, what would you have done different musically?

    Nothing, from a creative point of view. Monetary wise, maybe I would have recorded in London, at Abbey Road, just for the pleasure of working there for a couple of days.

    Any tips, hints or motivational speeches for the readers?

    Be original, the world needs new beautiful music, not something “already heard” elsewhere. Try to push yourself to experiment as much as possible and be brave to defend your ideas and your musical identity. Also, pray that you find a good director who loves your music and believes in you as much as you do.

    Kristian Sensini interview audio spotlight

  • NEWS - PRESS

    Composer Kristian Sensini talks ROCKS IN MY POCKETS

    New interview about the soundtrack I wrote for Rocks In My Pockets this time for the cool guys at Agents of Geek

    Agents of Geek

    http://agentsofgeek.com/2014/12/composer-kristian-sensini-talks-rocks-in-my-pockets/

     

    We recently had the chance to interview composer Kristian Sensini about his new project Rocks In My Pockets. The film is currrently an early contendor for Latvia’s Best Foreign Language Film for the 87th Annual Academy Awards.

    Directed and written by Latvian animator Signe Baumane, Rocks in My Pockets focuses on how Baumane and five women in her family handle depression. Their stories are told with visual metaphors and surreal images. Keep reading to learn about Sensini’s scoring style and experiences while working on Rocks in My Pockets.

    Rocks In My Pockets is getting a lot of potential Oscar buzz, what do you think about this?

    It’s amazing, of course! It’s one of the 84 movies running for Best Foreign Film and at the same time also one of the 20 movies selected for the Best Animation category, and the Academy has just announced that the soundtrack has been included in the 114 scores in contention for the prize. As an animation movie, Rocks in my Pockets is running with giants like Disney and Dreamworks movies with a big budget (and scores with big orchestras). It’s sort of funny to see our little independent movie compete with them, but after all I really think that Rocks in my Pockets does deserve this kind of recognition. It’s a traditional animation movie, entirely hand-drawn (no CGI or computer images were used) and hand-made (just like the soundtrack). It’s a brave point of view on a really serious topic, depression and mental illness.

    What was the hardest part about scoring Rocks In My Pockets?

    The director’s voiceover (a great interpretation of hers) is present from start to finish, so the difficult thing in this case was trying to compose music on frequencies that wouldn’t disturb the sound of her voice. Another obstacle was using themes/orchestration in order to enhance the storytelling without distracting the audience.

    Where did you get the inspiration for the tone of this soundtrack?

    I got inspiration for this soundtrack from the stunning visuals and voiceover acting of the director. A “Funny Film about Depression”, is quite an impossible mission in itself, and the risk of a bad musical choice was just around the corner… For example, the use of a tone too light or “cartoony” in the most amusing scenes and the over scoring on dramatic ones could have led to disaster. I let the voice guide me in finding the right tone in each cue, seeing it as the main melody, so I had to underscore that with various countermelodies.

    There is many dramatic scenes in Rocks In My Pockets, but the score makes it feel a little lighter at times. Was this intentional?

    Yes, it was intentional. This is the whole point of the movie, not making a joke out of such a serious topic, but trying to explain that depression and mental illness could be considered a part of life. Maybe something we do not want to celebrate, but something we can deal with and that can even help us understand other’s issues and struggles. This film has a brave and amazing view on life, and I think it’s really original and something worth sharing. Life itself has the equal combination of light and darkness and everything contributes to our growth as human beings. It’s exactly what I want to express with my music (and not just in this movie).

    This is one of your first animated films, is it a lot different than scoring live action?

    I’ll never stop saying that animation filmmakers are amazing. They’re usually so imaginative and so caring about their projects, at times more than other directors. When you work on an animated project you feel you are part of a family. From a musical point of view, you may have a little bit more freedom to experiment with new ideas, but it really depends on the director and movie. I’ve tried to score this movie as it was live action in some parts: somehow knowing that it was a true story and that the characters were real people was more predominant than the fact that the visual medium was animation.

    kristian_sensini_rocks_soundtrack

    What direction did the director, Signe Baumane give you when you initially started? Meaning what was the main goal for her in terms of the soundtrack?

    One of the first things we did when we started thinking about the score was to have a brainstorming session about past soundtracks we really enjoyed. I remember in our first phone call, we talked about the soundtrack for Sherlock Holmes by Hans Zimmer, and found that it was one of our favourites because it was so creative and has a really innovative use of orchestration and instruments. We agreed we wanted to keep it a “small” orchestration and use instruments in an original way. We also decided to have something ethnic in the score, hence the inclusion of the Kokle (a beautiful string instrument from the Latvian tradition) because part of the movie is set in Latvia. The main goal was to lead the audience by hand into this beautiful story, and help their immersion in the movie in a good way.

    There is a lot of the piano in this score. Is that your go to instrument? If not, what do you find yourself playing reoccurring in your film scores?

    Flute and piano are my two main instruments. They are the ones I usually record myself in the projects I score. The piano is the instrument on which I compose a lot, it is so rich that it helps one imagine the sound of a full orchestra or of different orchestral sections. I tend not to use an instrument in a score just because I like it, unless it is strictly necessary to the movie. In this case, I thought the piano was the best choice to help fix the harmony and for one of the main themes, “Anna’s Theme”. Recently, I realized I have used a lot of cello in my previous scores, it is such a beautiful instrument and can be really useful in a lot of different situations.

    Who is your favourite character in the film?

    Irbe, probably because she is a musician like myself. I wrote one of my favourite cues in this film for her.

    When you found out you got the job of scoring this film, how long did you have to experiment with instruments/sounds before you actually had to start?

    I usually try to do my research and to experiment with sounds before I sign any contract. To me it is really important to present a demo (usually more than one) to the director which expresses both my point of view on the film and the result of my research. So for about four or five days I researched Latvian and Eastern Europe music because I felt that in terms of feelings and orchestration this sound was the right one. I listened to different kinds of music from different centuries, classical composers, film composers and popular music too. Then I composed two demos for two different scenes and I got the job.

    This film is highly musical. How many minutes did you end of scoring?

    More than an hour of music!

    What would you like viewers to take away from the film?

    You should ask Signe Baumane (the director) about this, I’ll just give you my humble opinion.

    I think this film is a great start for “global conversations” about the things that scare us, in this particular case depression and mental illness. We live in a global society where we think that medication can solve anything and cure any illness. To me, this is a way of seeing the reality too easy and naive. The real deal is taking the journey of your life, questioning ourselves about who we are and especially who we want to be or become, without forgetting that life is full of light and darkness all at the very same time.

    Listen to an album preview below:

    Read more at http://agentsofgeek.com/2014/12/composer-kristian-sensini-talks-rocks-in-my-pockets/#J17ROvWwTQcJFAlW.99

  • NEWS - Uncategorized

    Concorso di Composizione Lavagnino 2014

    elementi-sito-a

    Con molto piacere vi annuncio che la Colonna Sonora che ho scritto per il corto di animazione “Il Naturalista” è arrivata in finale al concorso di composizione Lavagnino, uno dei più importanti in Italia dedicati alla Musica per Immagini.

    Ho pensato di realizzare il seguente video dove, più che alle immagini del bellissimo cartoon, lascio spazio alla partitura completa per quintetto d’archi, clarinetto e voce.

    La giuria selezionatrice dei finalisti era composta da

    Luis Bacalov – Presidente (Compositore – Docente di composizione di Musica per Film presso l’Accademia Chigiana di Siena, Premio Oscar per la colonna sonora del film "Il postino", Premio Nino Rota, Nastro d’Argento, David di Donatello, Globo d’Oro, Premio BAFTA)
    Franco Piersanti (Compositore – 3 David di Donatello, Premio Nino Rota, Ciak d’oro, Grolla d’oro, Nastro d’argento)
    Luigi Giachino (Compositore – Docente di composizione presso il Conservatorio "Nicolò Paganini" di Genova)
    Paolo Paltrinieri (Responsabile produzioni musicali Direzione Area Musica RTI-Mediaset)
    Federico Savina (Docente di Tecnica del Suono presso il Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia in Roma)
    Marie-Pierre Duhamel Müller (Critico cinematografico, curatrice, traduttrice di film e testi di cinema, membro del Comitato di selezione del Festival Internazionale del film di Roma)
    Angela Colombo (Pianista, Direttore del Conservatorio "Antonio Vivaldi" di Alessandria)
    Luciano Girardengo (Violoncellista – Direttore artistico del concorso)

    Per avere ulteriori informazioni sul cartoon diretto da Giulia Barbera, Gianluca Lo Presti, Federica Parodi e Michele Tozzi,

    vi invito a visitare il seguente sito http://naturalistanimated.blogspot.it/

    Festival Internazionale A. F. Lavagnino - Musica e Cinema short

  • NEWS - PRESS

    “Rocks in my Pockets” Film Score Monthly Review

    A “Four Stars” Review od “Rocks in my Pockets” Soundtrack on http://filmscoremonthly.com/ October Issue

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    Rocks in My Pockets ****

    KRISTIAN SENSINI
    MovieScore Media MMS-14019
    24 tracks – 57:48

    Signe Baumane wrote, directed and provided voices for this unique animated film that addresses the battles with depression that she and four other women in her family have fought. The movie, which has played at several festivals, includes a mini-history of Latvia as part of its narrative, and will be this year’s Latvian entry for AMPAS consideration in the Foreign Language category. Composer Kristian Sensini created distinct musical connections to each character in the film; these themes are provided as separate tracks in the album presentation of the score.

    The opening “How Not to Commit” starts off with xylophone, low brass and a cabaret-like piano rhythm, before a collection of similar ideas take us through different dance styles and variations. The lovely “Anna’s Theme” follows, a gentle waltz with moments that suggest the darker corners of the character; it’s a beautiful idea that calls out for a fuller orchestral setting. A warm low-string motif begins the starker “Divorce Latvian Style” with a lyrical line (recurring in “Forest”) before kicking off a string version of the jaunty music that was set up earlier. “New Wife, New Life” delivers another welcome shift in sound, with the addition of accordion and woodblock, while a more obvious ethnic flavor occurs in “Russians, Germans, Partisans.” All in all, the playlist offers a diverse set of tracks.

    Sensini is relatively new to featuring scoring, though he has around a dozen to his credit, plus some television projects. This score may gain some more attention for the composer. The interesting orchestrational choices lend the music a unique sound that falls closer to European animation than standard Hollywood fare. The result is an often delightful work provided ample space to breathe in this MovieScore Media release. —Steven A. Kennedy

     

    FSM Online, Vol. 19, No. 10- Rocks in My Pockets

  • NEWS - PRESS

    “Rocks in my Pockets” nominated at Hollywood Music in Media Awards

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    The nominations for the music and the film keep coming in!

    My Soundtrack for Signe Baumane’s animation Movie “Rocks in my Pockets” received a nomination for the Hollywood Music in Media Awards.

    It’s a fantastic achievement for an indipendent movie like this, and for a basically low budget soundtrack recorded in my small recording studio.

    The Best thing is that I’m running with the most important Film Composer in the whole world!

    Here are the nominations:

     

    ORIGINAL SCORE – ANIMATED FILM
    Danny Elfman – Mr. Peabody and Sherman
    Dario Marianelli – The Boxtrolls
    Gustavo Santaolalla – The Book of Life
    John Powell – How To Train Your Dragon 2
    Kristian Sensini – Rocks in My Pockets
    Mark Mothersbaugh – The Lego Movie

     

    ORIGINAL SCORE – FEATURE FILM
    Alexandre Desplat – The Imitation Game
    Antonio Sanchez – Birdman
    Jóhann Jóhannsson – The Theory of Everything
    Hans Zimmer – Interstellar
    Steven Price – Fury
    Thomas Newman – The Judge
    Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross – Gone Girl

     

    ORIGINAL SCORE – SI-FI/FANTASY FILM
    Tyler Bates – Guardians of the Galaxy
    Steve Jablonsky – Transformers: Age of Extinction
    James Newton Howard – Maleficent
    Michael Giacchino – Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
    Howard Shore – The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
    Clint Mansell – Noah

  • NEWS - Uncategorized

    Working on…”ROCKS IN MY POCKETS”

    Sorry for the recent lack of updates on the website, I’m stuck in my recording studio working on an amazing animation project.

    I’m writing the soundtrack for the animation movie “ROCKS IN MY POCKETS”, written and directed by the talented Signe Baumane.

    She’s a great storyteller, a really original visual artist, not to talk she’s a member of the  Academy of Motion Pictures and Sciences and winner of a lot of movie awards in international festivals.

    So…i’m amazed to work with her and his team, it’s really a great artistic experience (Signe’s website is http://www.signebaumane.com/).

    Signe Baumane

    She wrote: “ The good news – we found another composer, Kristian Sensini. In less than a week he composed over 15 minutes of music that fits well with the film’s images and supports the intense voiceover. As a film score composer he possesses a special kind of sensitivity that we’d like to call Sensinity. “ The project is really interesting (and difficult) to score, that’s because it’s an animation movie, not for kids, and the music i’m writing must be supporting to the voiceover of the narrator, without distracting the listeners. Is definitely a stimulating challenge.

    This is the third time i work with a female director (the other two projects was “Butterfly Rising” by Tanya Wright” and “Brightside” by Clair Haynes), i can only confirm that working with such talented women is a pleasure!

     

    Official website for the movie is http://www.rocksinmypocketsmovie.com/ the facebook page is https://www.facebook.com/RocksInMyPocketsMovie

    There’s a blog too where you can follow the production process of the movie http://rocksinmypocketsthemovie.wordpress.com/ if you’re a filmaker … well you must absolutely read it.

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    I’m a bit in hurry these days, working like a fool to delivery in 4 weeks the music for this 90 minutes animation film.

    I hope in the near future to post here some music samples from what I’m writing (and recording) right now.

     

    THE STORY
    “Rocks In My Pockets” is a story of mystery and redemption. The film is based on true events involving the women of my family (including myself) and their surrender to madness, with names changed to protect innocent bystanders. The film is packed with visual metaphors, surreal images and my twisted sense of humour. If you love animation, art, women, strange daring stories, Latvian accents, history, nature and adventure, this is a film for you!

    A word by the director: “I am making this film because I find the fragility of our minds fascinating. Life is strange, unpredictable and I see the humour in it all. Yes, I almost broke down, but I came back to tell my story. I hope you’ll laugh with me.”

    Miranda amid Midsummer flowers.

    THE ART OF IT
    Each of the 129,600 frames in “Rocks In My Pockets” has been handcrafted. First I made paper mache sets – rooms, forests, city streets. Then we lit and shot them with a digital camera either as still pictures or as stop motion sequences creating a 3D effect. Then on paper, I hand animated the 2D characters walking, talking and interacting with the stop motion sets. After the animation was done, each drawing was scanned and coloured in Photoshop. Then the sequence was imported into After Effects for compositing and output. The final edit is being done in Final Cut Pro. “Rocks In My Pockets” is 90 minutes long, it has 20 episodes comprised of 669 scenes. There are 28 stop motion paper mache sets and approximately 23,000 drawings.

    Anna falls in love with Indulis.

    Indulis receives funding for his turpentine enterprise

    Still 001

    Still 003