John Powell profile picture

John Powell

Bim Bam Smash, Ladies and Gentlemen.

About Me

Steeped in classical tradition, yet drawn to the idea of turning it on its head, John Powell has composed a series of acclaimed motion picture soundtracks since arriving in America two years ago. He brought out the film noir undertones of John Woo's direction for Face/Off (1997) and co-wrote an imaginative score for DreamWorks' computer animated Antz (1998). He's also the creative voice behind the hip, experimental score for DreamWorks' Forces of Nature (1999) and Hollywood Pictures' Endurance (May '99), which fuses African, Arabic and Western music to tell the story of the world's fastest runner.Surrounded by music as a child, Powell was a classical snob until 13, when he began playing everything from rock 'n roll to jazz. In 1986 he exchanged the violin for the viola to gain entrance to London's Trinity College of Music, where he studied composition, earning the John Halford and the Boosey and Hawkes Bursary Music College Prizes.While at Trinity, Powell joined performance art group Media Arts. With longtime collaborator Gavin Greenaway, he composed music and sound for their conceptual performances. Although the duo left the troupe upon graduating in 1986, they continue to co-create mixed-media installation pieces with artist Michael Petry, the most recent featuring bare-bottomed men and a German brass ensemble.In 1988, Powell landed a job composing music for commercials and television at London's Air-Edel Music. There, he worked alongside composers Hans Zimmer and Patrick Doyle and made his first foray into feature films, assisting Doyle with the score of Into the West and writing cues and working as an electronic music programmer for Zimmer on White Fang.Powell left Air-Edel in 1995 to co-found, with Greenaway, London-based commercial music house Independently Thinking Music (ITM). Together they composed scores for more than 100 British and French commercials and for independent films.It was co-creating the opera "An Englishman, Irishman and Frenchman" (which really did end with a fat lady singing) that shifted Powell's focus to longer form composition. Written with Petry and Greenaway, the piece used everything from a traditional chorus to a handmade "smallanimalphone" (sic) to tell the fantastical story. After a series of successful performances at the Germany state-funded art gallery, Powell moved to Los Angeles to take on more demanding projects.Arriving in the States in 1997, he immediately scored two DreamWorks TV projects: the second season of Stephen Spielberg's "High Incident" and the pilot "For the People." He also arranged songs composed by Stephen Schwartz for DreamWorks' animated feature Prince of Egypt (1998).It was Powell's hair-raising score for the Nicolas Cage/John Travolta-starrer Face/Off that put him on the map. He composed one hour and forty-five minutes of hair-raising music, which utilized industrial sounds, unresolved harmonies and tragic melodies to build a heightened state of tension. He then turned to With Friends Like These, writing endearing melodies with an Italian influence for the Adam Arkin and Amy Madigan starring indie scheduled for release in fall 1999.For Antz, featuring the voices of Woody Allen and Sharon Stone and a plot about an ant colony below Manhattan's Central Park, Powell created a musical melange of jazz, Latin and classical sounds. Next came Endurance, developed and co-produced by Terrence Malick. In an almost wordless film, Powell's score serves as dialogue, conveying the central character's joy, dignity and struggle.Adhering to one musical regime is not in Powell's nature. Before moving to Los Angeles, he played for more than 15 years with the Fabulistics, an early Sixties soul band that performed for everyone from Lady Diana to denizens of the local pub.John Powell lives with his wife Melinda in Marina Del Rey, CA.

My Interests

Music:

Member Since: 3/30/2006
Influences: Composers Hans Zimmer, Patrick Doyle and Harry Gregson-Williams
Sounds Like: In all honesty, I like to think that I have a fresh, unique sound. Sure, I take certain facets and traits of music from contemporaries like Hans Zimmer, however I believe that the sound I have forged is something new. The music in a film cannot stand as simply music to fill the void, it has to have a voice of its own. Knowing this, the music can also never be entirely separate from the film. Again, there have been some wonderful pieces that have stemmed from film scores, but I believe that the term, "film score" implies that both the film and the music must walk that path hand in hand. One cannot thrive without the other.
Type of Label: Major

My Blog

Music Change - A Treat For Those Frothing Over An X-Men Peek (Bulletin Revisited)

I've been fairly busy in the past few weeks, and this is actually the first pocket of quiet I've had in a number of days. With that, I decided to poke around here and give the fans a little taste of v...
Posted by John Powell on Tue, 16 May 2006 05:36:00 PST

Ahh...the X-Men, at last.

As some of you may already know, the score for X-Men 3: The Last Stand has been FINALLY completed.  I'm fairly pleased with the final product, still ironing out a few minute details, but for the ...
Posted by John Powell on Fri, 28 Apr 2006 09:21:00 PST

X-Men 3: The Last Stand

As many of you may know, I am working on the score for the upcoming film, X-Men 3: The Last Stand.  Progress on the music is going quite well, and I hope you all see the film when it is released ...
Posted by John Powell on Tue, 04 Apr 2006 07:07:00 PST