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Camille Awards

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Camille Awards
European Film Composer Awards
The logo
Awarded forEuropean film music and its composers
CountryBelgium
Presented byECSA
Formerly calledGrand Scores
First awarded2014
Websitecamilleawards.eu
Television/radio coverage
Directed byBernard Grimaldi

Camille Awards - European Film Composer Awards, are Brussels-based television awards created in 2014, named in tribute to Camille Saint-Saëns, composer of the first music to be scored for the movie The Assassination of the Duke of Guise (1908), as a celebration of European film music and its composers.[1]

Editions

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2016

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The 2016 edition took place in Berlin, Germany on 10 February 2016.[2]

Best Orchestral Score
Best Electro-Acoustic Score

2017

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The 2017 edition took place in Berlin, Germany on 2 February 2017.[3]

Winners

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2018

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The 2018 edition took place in Pula, Croatia on 19–21 October 2018.[4]

Best Orchestral Score
  • Ginge Anvik (Norway) for Askeladden: I Dovregubbens hall
  • Lasse Enersen (Finland) for The Unknown Soldier
  • Dario Marianelli (United Kingdom) for Paddington 2
Best Electro-acoustic Score
  • Ola Fløttum (Norway) for Thelma
  • Adrian Foulkes & Lucio Godoy (Spain) for La niebla y la doncella
  • Jonas Struck (Denmark) for QEDA
Best Original Music for a Series
  • Lorne Balfe & Rupert Gregson-Williams (United Kingdom) for The Crown second season
  • Jacob Groth (Denmark) for Modus second season
  • Ivan Martinez Lacámara & Manel Santisteban (Spain) for La casa de papel

2020

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2019 edition not was disputed, 2020 took place in Brussels, Belgium on 3 February 2020.[5]

2021

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The 2021 edition took place online, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, on 8 April 2021. The ceremony premiered live on ECSA’s YouTube channel.

Winners

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  • Best Orchestral ScoreJohan Ramström (Sweden) for “Sara with All Her Being”
  • Best Electro-Acoustic Score – John Gürtler (Germany) for “Systemsprenger
  • Best Original Music for a SeriesLabrinth (United Kingdom) for “Euphoria

2022

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The 2022 edition took place in Split, Croatia on 27 September 2022.

Winners

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  • Best Film ScoreJohan Söderqvist (Sweden) for “Utvandrarna (The Emigrants)”
  • Best Score for a Feature DocumentaryNainita Desai (UK) for “The Reason I Jump”
  • Best Original Music for a Series – Manel Santisteban & Iván Martínez Lacámara (Spain) for “La Casa de Papel” (Season 5)

The Lifetime Achievement Award was awarded to renown Croatian film, theatre and TV music composer Alfi Kabiljo.

2024

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The 2024 edition of the Camille Awars will take place in Paris, France, on 13 November 2024.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Camille Awards - History". camilleawards.eu. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  2. ^ "ECSA - GRAND SCORES 2016". composeralliance.org. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  3. ^ "ECSA - GRAND SCORES 2017". composeralliance.org. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  4. ^ "First edition of the Camille Awards". soundtrackfest.com. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Camille Awards 2020". camilleawards.eu. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
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