LUDWIG Göransson achieved success by winning an Academy Award on Sunday night for the music of the film “Oppenheimer,” his second win in the best original score category.
This Oscar completes the series of achievements of this 39-year-old Swedish composer who has won Grammy, Golden Globe, BAFTA, Critics Choice and Society of Composers & Lyricists awards for Christopher Nolan’s film scores.
Göransson previously won an Oscar for 2018’s original score for “Black Panther.” He has also won two Emmys for music on “The Mandalorian,” earned another Oscar nomination for a song in the 2022 film “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,” and took home three Grammys for “Black Panther” as well as his work in composing and producing with Childish Gambino.
In his biopic of nuclear physicist J Robert Oppenheimer, Göransson spent nine months creating more than three hours of music. He created a violin theme that conveys a “haunting loneliness” for the main character and added synthesizer elements to create an atmosphere of “impending doom” from the atomic bomb tests. Interestingly, the score contains no drum or percussion elements.
Göransson, with his careful choice of projects and his tendency to be completely involved in each project, has become one of the most sought-following composers of our time. His work includes films such as “Fruitvale Station,” “Creed” I and II, the animated “Turning Red,” as well as “Tenet,” his first film for Nolan. His career journey began with composing music for the television series “Community” in 2009.
Oscar voters continue to give recognition to composers from outside America, and Göransson is now one of the few Swedish-born artists to win more than one Oscar. (variety/Z-3)
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