Arab Times

Film scores composer Johansson dies at 48

Found dead

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NEW YORK, Feb 11, (AFP): Johann Johannsson, the award-winning Icelandic composer whose haunting yet minimalist scores instilled depth in films full of abstractio­n, has died, his manager announced Saturday. He was 48.

Johannsson was found dead Friday at his apartment in Berlin, where authoritie­s were investigat­ing the cause of death, said Tim Husom, his Los Angelesbas­ed manager. “I’m so very sad. Today, I lost my friend who was one of the most talented musicians and intelligen­t people I knew,” Husom said in a statement.

Johannsson, who blended classical form and electronic instrument­ation, had become an increasing­ly in-demand musician for directors whose films probed more theoretica­l ideas.

He won the Golden Globe for Best Original Score for “The Theory of Everything,” about physicist Stephen Hawking.

Johannsson was nominated again for “Arrival,” for which he altered human voices to create amorphous, otherworld­ly sounds to dramatize the story of a linguist seeking to communicat­e with an extraterre­strial visitor.

While Johannsson won acclaim outside of the film world as an avant-garde composer, he was careful never to make his music needlessly convoluted or overbearin­g.

He kept strong, repeated melodies and said that many movies had far too much music, not allowing silences that were also crucial.

“I think my music is a way of communicat­ing very directly with people and with people’s emotions. I try to make music that doesn’t need layers of complexity or obfuscatio­n to speak to people,” he told the online interview magazine The Talks in 2015.

Daniel Pemberton, the composer for films including Danny Boyle’s biopic “Steve Jobs,” said he sat transfixed when he heard Johannsson’s music for “Sicario,” which showed “you could still do something radically new in mainstream film music.”

“He was always pushing the boundaries, creating works of art so unique and exciting it becomes hard to imagine they didn’t exist before,” Pemberton wrote on Twitter. The experiment­al DJ Flying Lotus tweeted that he was in “disbelief” over his death, calling Johannsson a major influence and hailing his score for the new thriller “Mandy.”

Growing up in Reykjavik, Johannsson said he listened to everything from John Philip Sousa marches to deafening shoegaze rockers The Jesus and Mary Chain, but was transforme­d when he discovered ambient music pioneer Brian Eno.

Largely self-taught as a musician, Johannsson studied literature and took inspiratio­n from the French Oulipo school of writers such as Georges Perec who aimed to stir up fresh ideas by imposing constraini­ng rules on their compositio­ns.

Johannsson co-founded Kitchen Motors, the influentia­l Icelandic artist collective that also helped launch experiment­al rockers Sigur Ros, and in 2002 released his first album, “Englaborn,” set to a theatrical piece.

His most ambitious albums included “IBM 1401, A User’s Manual,” inspired by the early mass-manufactur­ed computer.

Johannsson’s father, a programmer in 1960s Iceland, had playfully transforme­d the computer into a musical instrument by making reel-to-reel recordings.

Johansson

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