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Hans Zimmer & Benjamin Wallfisch

Blade Runner 2049 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

Hans Zimmer & Benjamin Wallfisch

24 SONGS • 1 HOUR AND 34 MINUTES • OCT 05 2017

  • TRACKS
    TRACKS
  • DETAILS
    DETAILS
TRACKS
DETAILS
1
2049
03:38
2
Sapper's Tree
01:37
3
Flight to LAPD
01:48
4
Summer Wind
Frank Sinatra
02:55
5
Rain
02:26
6
Wallace
05:24
7
Memory
02:33
8
Mesa
03:10
9
Orphanage
01:14
10
Furnace
03:42
11
Someone Lived This
03:14
12
Joi
03:52
13
Pilot
02:17
14
Suspicious Minds
04:23
15
Can't Help Falling in Love
03:02
16
One For My Baby (And One More For The Road)
Frank Sinatra
04:24
17
Hijack
05:33
18
That's Why We Believe
03:37
19
Her Eyes Were Green
06:18
20
Sea Wall
09:53
21
All the Best Memories Are Hers
03:22
22
Tears in the Rain
02:11
23
Blade Runner
10:06
24
Almost Human (from the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Blade Runner 2049)
03:22
Compilation (P) 2017 Alcon Sleeping Giant (ASG) Records exclusively distributed by Epic Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment

Artist bios

One of the most prolific and influential film composers of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, Germany's Hans Zimmer began his music career in London, producing and playing synths for a variety of new wave and punk bands in the early 1980s. After founding a recording studio with film scorer Stanley Myers, their work on films such as 1985's My Beautiful Laundrette fused the traditional orchestral aesthetic of film composition with state-of-the-art electronics and proved influential on countless soundtracks to follow. Founded in Santa Monica, California in 1989, his film, TV, and game-scoring company Media Ventures Entertainment Group -- later rebranded Remote Control Productions -- launched the careers of dozens of specialists in the field, among them Harry and Rupert Gregson-Williams, Klaus Badelt, Henry Jackman, and John Powell. With instrumentation that combined symphonic, electronic, folk, and choral elements, Zimmer won the Academy Award in 1995 for his score to Disney's The Lion King. The demand for his artful blend of electronic and orchestral textures only increased in the decades to come. His many collaborations have included the Golden Globe-winning score for 2001's Gladiator with Lisa Gerrard, his Grammy-winning soundtrack to 2009's The Dark Knight with James Newton Howard, and 2017's Blade Runner 2049 with Benjamin Wallfisch (featuring themes by Vangelis). He also scored director Denis Villeneuve's 2021 adaptation of the classic sci-fi novel Dune.

Hans Florian Zimmer was born in Frankfurt on September 12, 1957. Largely self-taught, he played piano as a child. After relocating to London as a teen, he wrote advertising jingles for music production company Air-Edel Associates. In 1980, he collaborated with the Buggles on their LP The Age of Plastic and its accompanying hit "Video Killed the Radio Star," and co-produced The Black Album for the Damned. The early '80s also included stints with synth pop band Heldon (with Ultravox drummer Warren Cann) and the Italian avant-garde group Krisma as well as further production work. He then formed a partnership with composer Stanley Myers, and together they founded the London-based Lillie Yard recording studio. Zimmer and Myers' work during this period included material for pictures including Moonlighting, Insignificance, and the acclaimed My Beautiful Laundrette, which saw them credited as Ludus Tonalis in honor of the Paul Hindemith piece.

In 1986, Zimmer joined David Byrne and Ryuichi Sakamoto on their Oscar-winning score to The Last Emperor. His work on the apartheid drama A World Apart was his first major solo credit and led to his Academy Award-nominated score for 1988's Best Picture winner Rain Man. The following year, Zimmer again composed the soundtrack for a Best Picture winner, this time Bruce Beresford's Driving Miss Daisy. By the time the '90s dawned, the remarkably prolific composer's music was a Hollywood staple, with a list of hits including Black Rain, Backdraft, Thelma & Louise, A League of Their Own, and Days of Thunder. Zimmer scored his biggest commercial success to that point in 1994 with his work on Disney's The Lion King. The film's soundtrack garnered numerous awards, including an Oscar, a Golden Globe, and two Grammys. Later adapted for the Broadway stage, The Lion King took home the 1998 Tony for Best Musical as well.

In 1995, Zimmer earned another Grammy when Crimson Tide was selected as Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture. Another Academy Award nomination followed for 1996's The Preacher's Wife; that same year, he earned BMI's prestigious Richard Kirk Award for lifetime achievement. Zimmer earned his fourth Oscar nomination for his work on the James L. Brooks comedy As Good as It Gets in 1997, repeating the feat for the third consecutive year in 1998 with his score for Terrence Malick's The Thin Red Line. His contributions to The Prince of Egypt earned a Golden Globe bid that same year.

The 2000s marked an auspicious time in the composer's career, as he continued scoring some of the biggest A-list films of the era, averaging two or three blockbusters a year, including Hannibal, Gladiator, The Last Samurai, and The Da Vinci Code. In 2007, Silva Screen Records released Film Music of Hans Zimmer, a double-disc set highlighting his achievements. Later in 2007, he reworked Danny Elfman's zany Simpsons theme into a traditional symphonic film score on The Simpsons Movie.

As the 2000s came to a close and the 2010s began, Zimmer's name remained synonymous with blockbusters as he scored later installments in the Sherlock Holmes, Pirates of the Caribbean, and Batman franchises, including 2012's The Dark Knight Rises. His score to Christopher Nolan's 2010 film Inception was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Music and Original Score, and also earned a Saturn from the Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films for Best Music. Devastated by the Aurora, Colorado shootings in 2012, Zimmer composed a choral arrangement of the Dark Knight Rises theme, simply entitled "Aurora," to help raise money for the victims of the tragedy.

In 2014, the score for The Amazing Spider-Man 2 was issued under the moniker Hans Zimmer & the Magnificent Six, which included Johnny Marr (the Smiths), Junkie XL, Michael Einziger (Incubus), Andrew Kawczynski, Pharrell Williams, and Steve Mazzaro. Early the next year, Zimmer learned he'd been nominated for another Academy Award, this time for his work on Christopher Nolan's sci-fi hit Interstellar. Among other franchise entries, he went on to provide music for 2016's Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice, which was co-written with Junkie XL; the BBC nature documentary series Planet Earth II; and the award-winning Hidden Figures, which saw Zimmer working once again with Pharrell Williams. He rejoined Nolan for 2017's Dunkirk, which became his 11th score to be nominated for an Oscar. Following the original animated film by 25 years, Zimmer signed on as composer for the 2019 computer-animated remake of The Lion King, earning two Grammy nominations in the process. He also composed the score for 2020's Wonder Woman 1984. His 2021 scores spanned the animated sequel The Boss Baby: Family Business, Army of the Dead prequel Army of Thieves, the James Bond outing No Time to Die, and Denis Villeneuve's Dune, which saw Zimmer incorporate ancient bagpipe alongside electronic, orchestral, vocal, and rock instrumentation. In 2022, he embarked on an ambitious international tour, reworking some of his classic material in celebratory new suites -- a two-hour LP of tour recordings was issued in early 2023 as Hans Zimmer Live. ~ Marcy Donelson & Jason Ankeny

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Benjamin Wallfisch is a composer, keyboardist, conductor, and orchestrator primarily of film and television music. Known more for his eclectic output than a trademark style, his work has ranged from eerie and suspenseful to jazzy and playful to lush and dramatic. After scoring the 2005 crime film Dear Wendy, he was enlisted to work on movies as diverse as the Turkish action epic Conquest 1453 (2012), the award-winning Kennedy-era drama Hidden Figures (2016), and the sci-fi noir Blade Runner 2049 (2017). Wallfisch received Grammy nominations for the latter two films, both of which he scored with Hans Zimmer.

Born in London, England in 1979 to professional classical musicians (violinist Elizabeth Wallfisch and cellist Raphael Wallfisch), he began playing piano at the age of five and composing at six. Wallfisch went on to study composition at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, the University of Manchester, and, as a postgraduate, the Royal Academy of Music. Subsequent work involved the BBC, a commissioned ballet, the Netherlands Radio Philharmonic Orchestra, and the English Chamber Orchestra, just to name a few of his affiliations.

Wallfisch made his debut as main composer on a feature film in 2005 with Lars von Trier's Dear Wendy. Between that film and his next composing credit, 2008's The Escapist, he worked as an orchestrator and conductor on such arthouse and mainstream hits as Pride & Prejudice, V for Vendetta, and Atonement. After penning scores for a handful of shorts, documentaries, and TV movies, the 2012 feature Conquest 1453 was followed by projects including the Steven Spielberg-produced documentary short Auschwitz (2015), Gore Verbinski's A Cure for Wellness (2016), and the supernatural drama Lights Out (2016). During that period, he also composed additional music for the likes of 12 Years a Slave and The Little Prince.

In 2017, Best Picture Oscar nominee Hidden Figures earned a Golden Globe nomination in the category of Best Original Score for the team of Wallfisch, Zimmer, and Pharrell Williams; the soundtrack was nominated for a Grammy. The year 2017 also saw the release of films and accompanying score recordings for Wallfisch's Bitter Harvest (Varèse Sarabande), Annabelle: Creation (Silva Screen), It (WaterTower Music), and Blade Runner 2049 (Epic), the latter of which resulted in his second Grammy nomination (with Hans Zimmer). The independent films Night Hunter and Serenity were among his output in 2018, and in 2019 he returned to the It franchise for It Chapter Two in addition to scoring the more lighthearted Shazam! and the documentary TV series Hostile Planet. ~ Marcy Donelson

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