歌手资料
Julius Dobos
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性别:男
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A Hungarian-born, international music composer, Julius Dobos is best known for his electronic, ambient & orchestral music releases worldwide, for his music used in major motion pictures such as "You Don't Mess with the Zohan", "Mall Cop" and countless other film- and television scores in Europe and in the United States.\nWith seven albums, including a platinum release and the popular “Mountain Flying”, he became the first Central-European composer of large-scale electronic\u002Forchestral music to receive international attention.\nKnown for its monumental instrumentation, Dobos’ music often involves the combination of electronic, traditional western and ethnic instruments. The extensive and creative use of analog and digital synthesizers and software play a major role in adding both emotional depth and sonic complexity to his works.\nWith a distinctive style, Julius’ “visual” music clearly reveals the composer’s European background, his haunting melodies, harmonies and unique sounds instantly create a deep, intense emotional experience for the listener.\nCurrently living in the United States, he primarily composes instrumental electronic music, exploring the uncharted territories of melody and sound.\n__________________________________________\nFull bio at https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FJulius_Dobos\n__________________________________________\nDobos started playing the piano at the age of five and writing music at nine. It was in these pre-teen years, when his father introduced him to the 70's and 80's electronic music. The young Dobos was greatly influenced by the sounds and musical worlds created by electronic music pioneers like Jean Michel Jarre, Mike Oldfield, Vangelis, Rick Wakeman, and the visual nature of Isao Tomita's Pictures at an Exhibition. Following his dreams of creating musical worlds, or “visible music”, he found himself spending more time with composing than practicing the piano, obsessed with his new interest: electronic musical instruments.\nAfter studying composition and film score composition at various institutions in Europe, he felt limited by classical music. He composed the early "demo" version of “Mountain Flying” at age 19 – the music that brought him international success three years later with the album of the same title.\nIn 1997, Julius Dobos was offered the opportunity to produce a Nokia-sponsored album, which under the title of “Connecting Images”, featured Dobos’ own, original musical style, catchy melodies, monumental instrumentation, a 50-piece choir and Grammy® Awarded vocalist Márta Sebestyén on the track. The CD was well received by listeners and launched Dobos’ career.\nThe success of “Connecting Images” was followed by the large-scale realization of Mountain Flying, the expanded and revised version of the compositions from Dobos’ teenage years. The electronic-orchestral album featured an 130-piece symphonic orchestra and choir, multitude of synthesizers evoking the sonic world of snow-capped mountains, and was an instant hit. The success of “Mountain Flying” quickly spread across and reached the fans of electronic and modern orchestral music worldwide.\nDobos wrote his first major film score at the age of 22, for the action-adventure movie “Europe Express”. He then scored several more movies, a radioplay, and created Musique concrète pieces for exhibitions and movie theaters.\nMotivated by the creative possibilities of motion pictures and music, he relocated to the United States in 2000.\nHe composed music for Aerobatics World Champion pilot Péter Besenyei for the World Championship of Aerobatics, wrote music and programmed sounds for several popular television shows. His work can be heard in “DragonBall Z”, in an award-winning claymation series “Red Planet Blues”, in “The Reality of Speed” and “Your House & Home” television series.\nIn 2003 Julius produced the high-energy electronic music album, “Epic”, which includes nine instrumental electronic tracks and five trance-pop songs. The production of two music library projects, the groovy “Tekno Chemistry” and the ambient “ElectroScapes” followed, both of which featured haunting melodies, extensive sound design and synthesizer programming.\nFocusing exclusively on producing various styles of electronic music, Julius Dobos created music for such international blockbusters as Adam Sandler’s “You Don’t Mess with the Zohan” (2008) and “Paul Blart: Mall Cop” (2009).\nA major change of direction followed in 2010, when Dobos released his 7th album "Transitions", a compilation of twenty, previously unreleased tracks of electronic, ambient and orchestral music. He announced the ongoing production of a new concept album with an expected release date sometime in 2011.
A Hungarian-born, international music composer, Julius Dobos is best known for his electronic, ambient & orchestral music releases worldwide, for his music used in major motion pictures such as "You Don't Mess with the Zohan", "Mall Cop" and countless other film- and television scores in Europe and in the United States.\nWith seven albums, including a platinum release and the popular “Mountain Flying”, he became the first Central-European composer of large-scale electronic\u002Forchestral music to receive international attention.\nKnown for its monumental instrumentation, Dobos’ music often involves the combination of electronic, traditional western and ethnic instruments. The extensive and creative use of analog and digital synthesizers and software play a major role in adding both emotional depth and sonic complexity to his works.\nWith a distinctive style, Julius’ “visual” music clearly reveals the composer’s European background, his haunting melodies, harmonies and unique sounds instantly create a deep, intense emotional experience for the listener.\nCurrently living in the United States, he primarily composes instrumental electronic music, exploring the uncharted territories of melody and sound.\n__________________________________________\nFull bio at https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FJulius_Dobos\n__________________________________________\nDobos started playing the piano at the age of five and writing music at nine. It was in these pre-teen years, when his father introduced him to the 70's and 80's electronic music. The young Dobos was greatly influenced by the sounds and musical worlds created by electronic music pioneers like Jean Michel Jarre, Mike Oldfield, Vangelis, Rick Wakeman, and the visual nature of Isao Tomita's Pictures at an Exhibition. Following his dreams of creating musical worlds, or “visible music”, he found himself spending more time with composing than practicing the piano, obsessed with his new interest: electronic musical instruments.\nAfter studying composition and film score composition at various institutions in Europe, he felt limited by classical music. He composed the early "demo" version of “Mountain Flying” at age 19 – the music that brought him international success three years later with the album of the same title.\nIn 1997, Julius Dobos was offered the opportunity to produce a Nokia-sponsored album, which under the title of “Connecting Images”, featured Dobos’ own, original musical style, catchy melodies, monumental instrumentation, a 50-piece choir and Grammy® Awarded vocalist Márta Sebestyén on the track. The CD was well received by listeners and launched Dobos’ career.\nThe success of “Connecting Images” was followed by the large-scale realization of Mountain Flying, the expanded and revised version of the compositions from Dobos’ teenage years. The electronic-orchestral album featured an 130-piece symphonic orchestra and choir, multitude of synthesizers evoking the sonic world of snow-capped mountains, and was an instant hit. The success of “Mountain Flying” quickly spread across and reached the fans of electronic and modern orchestral music worldwide.\nDobos wrote his first major film score at the age of 22, for the action-adventure movie “Europe Express”. He then scored several more movies, a radioplay, and created Musique concrète pieces for exhibitions and movie theaters.\nMotivated by the creative possibilities of motion pictures and music, he relocated to the United States in 2000.\nHe composed music for Aerobatics World Champion pilot Péter Besenyei for the World Championship of Aerobatics, wrote music and programmed sounds for several popular television shows. His work can be heard in “DragonBall Z”, in an award-winning claymation series “Red Planet Blues”, in “The Reality of Speed” and “Your House & Home” television series.\nIn 2003 Julius produced the high-energy electronic music album, “Epic”, which includes nine instrumental electronic tracks and five trance-pop songs. The production of two music library projects, the groovy “Tekno Chemistry” and the ambient “ElectroScapes” followed, both of which featured haunting melodies, extensive sound design and synthesizer programming.\nFocusing exclusively on producing various styles of electronic music, Julius Dobos created music for such international blockbusters as Adam Sandler’s “You Don’t Mess with the Zohan” (2008) and “Paul Blart: Mall Cop” (2009).\nA major change of direction followed in 2010, when Dobos released his 7th album "Transitions", a compilation of twenty, previously unreleased tracks of electronic, ambient and orchestral music. He announced the ongoing production of a new concept album with an expected release date sometime in 2011.