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    <title>Stu Phillips</title>
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    <description>This BMI RSS feed contains news articles, events, and musicworld articles for a specific affiliate or group.</description>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
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    <dc:rights>Copyright 2008</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2008-09-05T13:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
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	<item>
      <title>BMI Honors Composers of Top Movies, TV Shows and Cable Programs at 2005 Film/TV Awards</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/news/entry/234452</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Artists, Anka, Paul, Counting Crows, Edelman, Randy, Elfman, Danny, Eubanks, Kevin, Gamble, Kenneth, Gari, Frank, Goldsmith, Jerry, Hagen, Earle, Huff, Leon, Kamen, Michael, Keane, Kent, Rolfe, Kloser, Harald, Menken, Alan, Mothersbaugh, Mark, Newman, Thomas, Phillips, Stu, Post, Mike, Revell, Graeme, Schifrin, Lalo, Sherman, Robert, Sideways, Townshend, Pete, Williams, Patrick, Awards, BMI Awards, BMI Film TV Awards, Musical Styles, Film&#45;TV</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<STRONG>Composer Graeme Revell Receives Richard Kirk Award For Outstanding Career Achievement </STRONG> <P> BMI honored the composers and songwriters of the music from this year's top-grossing films, top-rated prime-time network television series and highest-ranking cable network television series at its annual Film & Television Awards dinner. Held May 18 at the Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Beverly Hills, the black-tie gala was hosted by BMI President and CEO Del R. Bryant and BMI Vice President Film/TV Relations, Doreen Ringer Ross. More than 100 awards were announced during the ceremonies. </P>

<div align="center"><P><TABLE width="450" border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" bgcolor="#000000"> <TBODY><TR><TD><IMG src="/news/200505/images/film_moreinfo.jpg" width="450" height="62"></TD></TR><TR><TD height="5"></TD></TR><TR><TD class="awards-extras-text"><A href="#" onClick="window.open('/images/news/2005/filmtv/pages/01 LES_3050.html','mywindow','width=600,height=400')"><FONT color="#FFFFFF">BMI Film/TV Awards Photo Slideshow</font></A></TD></TR><TR><TD class="awards-extras-text"><A href="/news/entry/534310"><FONT color="#FFFFFF">2005 BMI Film/TV Awards Winners List</FONT></A></TD></TR><TR><TD class="awards-extras-text"> <A href="/news/entry/534311"><FONT color="#FFFFFF">Graeme Revell: Feature</FONT></A></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></p></div>

<P> One of the highlights of the evening was the presentation of the BMI Richard Kirk award for Outstanding Career Achievement to composer Graeme Revell. Named after late BMI Vice President Richard Kirk, the prestigious award is given annually to the composer who has made significant contributions to <A href="/filmtv/">film and TV music</A>. Past recipients include John Barry, <A href="/musicworld/features/200412/redelman.asp">Randy Edelman</A>, <A href="/awards/2002/spiderman.asp">Danny Elfman</A>, Charlie Fox, <A href="/news/200407/20040722a.asp">Jerry Goldsmith</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200203/ehagen.asp">Earle Hagen</A>, <A href="/news/200311/20031119a.asp">Michael Kamen</A>, <A id="f2360" class="f2360" href="/affiliate/C2360">Alan Menken</A>, <A href="/news/200405/20040513a.asp">Mark Mothersbaugh</A>, <A href="/musicworld/features/200006/tnewman.asp">Thomas Newman</A>, <A id="f853" class="f853" href="/affiliate/C853">Mike Post</A>, Lalo Schifrin, Alan Silvestri, Richard and <A href="/musicworld/musicpeople/200503/rsherman.asp">Robert Sherman</A>, <A href="/news/200105/20010517a.asp">W.G. "Snuffy" Walden</A>, John Williams and <A id="f810" class="f810" href="/affiliate/C810">Patrick Williams</A>. </P><P align="center"> </P><TABLE width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="150" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/film_grevell.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD><TD class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/film_countingcrows.jpg" width="300" height="150"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="150" class="photo-td">Graeme Revell</TD><TD class="photo-td">Counting Crows</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P></P> <P> Revell, a New Zealand native, is in the midst of a historical career in film and television music. With credits including "Sin City," "Shark Boy and Lava Girl in 3-D," "Dead Calm," "The Crow," "The Insider," "CSI: Miami," "The Negotiator," "Blow," "Open Water" and more, he has become known for his blending of traditional ethnic music and ambient sounds. He started his scoring career after picking up on rhythms in patient vocalizations at an Australian hospital for the mentally ill, where he worked as an orderly. His experiments with recordings of human and insect sounds and industrial machinery led him to create the early industrial band SPK. His first score was for director Philip Noyce and producer/director George Miller with "Dead Calm," for which he won an Australian Film Industry Award for Best Score. </P><P align="center"> </P><TABLE width="450" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="152" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/film_keubanks.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD><TD width="152" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/film_lschifrin.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD><TD width="146" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/film_sphillips.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="152" class="photo-td">Kevin Eubanks</TD><TD class="photo-td">Lalo Schifrin</TD><TD class="photo-td">Stu Phillips</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P></P> <P> Honoring Revell at the dinner via video messages were directors Robert Rodriguez, Phillip Noyce, Danny Cannon, David Twohy and Carl Franklin, as well as journalist Jon Burlingame. Chucky, the star of the "Chucky" film series for which Revell scored "The Bride of Chucky," narrated the video salute to Revell. </P><P> Calling Revell, "...the best secret weapon a director can ever have," director Noyce described working with him on the film "Dead Calm." "Graeme immediately sparked at the material and the opportunity. He hadn't scored a film before, but he had that great composing sense. We wanted a composer who would bring a completely different score to a very elemental movie. Graeme started at the idea of taking sounds that were part of the movie and incorporating them into the score; sound of wind, sound of water. </P><P align="center"> </P><TABLE width="304" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="photo-box"> <TBODY><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="152" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/film_mpost.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD><TD width="152" class="photo-td"><IMG src="/news/200505/images/film_ptownshend.jpg" width="150" height="150"></TD></TR><TR align="center" valign="top"><TD width="152" class="photo-td">Mike Post </TD><TD class="photo-td">Pete Townshend</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE> <P> "The movie was completely different once we put Graeme's score in," he added. "He added tension, he added pace, he created drama, and he gave the film a unique aural quality." </P><P> Revell's skill at collaboration with the director was a theme that permeated throughout the evening. "Honest," "innovative," "soulful" and "a true renaissance man" were just some of the descriptions that the directors offered. His vast range of musical talents were lauded, including his use of a wide array of ethnic sounds and voices, atmospheric noises and wide ranging knowledge of obscure percussion and voice styles. His encompassing musical style constantly delivers a fresh new sound and approach to each score he has done. Cannon said, "Graeme is modern and he is up to date. That's what is great about him. He is so willing to use new techniques, new inspirations and is always willing to try something different, move the goalposts." </P><P> BMI also gave out the award for the Most Performed Song From A Motion Picture to <A href="/musicworld/features/200210/counting_crows.asp">the Counting Crows</A> and their publishing companies for the "Shrek 2" song, "Accidentally in Love." BMI also recognized this year's Emmy Award winners for music. </P><P> The first BMI Spotlight Award was given to television composer <A id="f1077" class="f1077" href="/affiliate/C1077">Frank Gari</A> and the inaugural BMI Classic Contribution Award was presented to the creators of "The Tonight Show" themes, composed by Johnny Carson, <A id="f1080" class="f1080" href="/affiliate/C1080">Paul Anka</A> and <A href="/musicworld/features/200008/keubanks.asp">Kevin Eubanks</A>. </P><P> With a nod to the digital music age, BMI handed out its first Ringtone Awards for the TV music themes that have become the most-performed songs in the mobile space; the awards went to Stu Phillips for the theme to &#65533;Knight Rider&#65533; and Lalo Schifrin for the theme to &#65533;Mission Impossible.&#65533;</P><P> Taking home multiple awards at the dinner were past Richard Kirk recipient Mike Post with four Television Awards for the "Law & Order" series "Law & Order," "Law & Order: SVU," "Law & Order: CI" and "Law & Order: Trial By Jury." Pete Townshend picked up three awards for "CSI," "CSI: Miami" and "CSI: NY." Double winners included Harry Gregson Williams for the films "Shrek 2" and "Man On Fire"; <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200205/rkent.asp">Rolfe Kent</A> for the films "<A id="f690" class="f690" href="/affiliate/C690">Sideways</A>" and "Mean Girls"; <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200409/hkloser.asp">Harald Kloser</A> for "The Day After Tomorrow" and "Alien vs. Predator"; Thomas Newman for "Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events" and "Six Feet Under"; <A href="/musicworld/onthescene/200405/jkeane.asp">John </A><A id="f428" class="f428" href="/affiliate/C428">Keane</A> for "CSI" and "The Amazing Race 7"; and <A id="f2353" class="f2353" href="/affiliate/C2353">Kenneth Gamble</A>, <A id="f2354" class="f2354" href="/affiliate/C2354">Leon Huff</A>, Anthony Jackson, Jeff Lippencott and Mark T. Williams for "The Apprentice 2" and "The Apprentice 3."</P>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2005-05-18T18:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

    <item>
      <title>On the popularity of ringtones</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/podcasts/container/135919</link>
      <description>Stu Phillips discusses On the popularity of ringtones</description>
      <dc:subject>Phillips, Stu, Film&#45;TV, In Their Own Words, Video, 2005, BMI Film TV Awards</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2005-05-17T18:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>


    <item>
      <title>Hiis book &#8220;Stu Who?&#8221;</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/podcasts/container/133463</link>
      <description>Stu Phillips discusses Hiis book &#8220;Stu Who?&#8221;</description>
      <dc:subject>Phillips, Stu, Film&#45;TV, In Their Own Words, Video, 2004, BMI Film TV Awards</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2004-05-11T18:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
    </item>

	<item>
      <title>Stu Phillips</title>
      <link>http://www.bmi.com/musicworld/entry/233769</link>
      <description></description>
      <dc:subject>Artists, Phillips, Stu, Musical Styles, Film&#45;TV, Pop, Musicworld, Hitmaker</dc:subject>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<P>Multiple-choice quiz: <A id="f610" class="f610" href="/affiliate/C610/">Stu Phillips</A> is...</P> <P>      a) A gold-record-winning producer of such classic '60s pop as "Blue Moon," "Goodbye Cruel World" and "Johnny Angel";<BR>      b) A composer who has written such movie scores as <EM>Beyond the Valley of the Dolls and Macon County Line</EM>;<BR>      c) A television composer with hundreds of credits, including "The Monkees," "Knight Rider," "Battlestar Galactica" and "The Fall Guy";<BR>      d) The Grammy-nominated arranger-conductor of the Hollyridge Strings;<BR>      e) All of the above.</P> <P>The answer, of course, is "e," and if any of this surprises you, you are cordially invited to discover the details in Phillips's newly published autobiography, "Stu Who? Forty Years of Navigating the Minefields of the Music Business" (Cisum Press).</P> <P>Phillips' candid, enlightening memoir has already won praise from such luminaries as movie critic Roger Ebert ("worth the price of admission") and Broadway composer Cy Coleman ("it's pure `Witchcraft'").</P> <P>Phillips may have written his life story, but he's far from retired. In addition to speaking about his career at a July 17 seminar sponsored by the Society of Composers & Lyricists in Los Angeles, he is scheduled to lecture in October at the Berklee College of Music in Boston and at the LaGuardia School of Performing Arts in New York.</P> <P>His music continues to turn up in record stores. Punjabi MC's "Beware of the Boys," which recently topped <EM>Billboard</EM>'s Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Single charts, is a reworking of Phillips' classic "Knight Rider" theme. Not long ago, Lutricia McNeal had a worldwide hit with a cover of "Ain't That Just the Way That Love Goes Down," which Phillips co-wrote in 1974 and was originally waxed by Barbi Benton.</P> <P>And Phillips' original score for the 1969 Omar Sharif film <EM>The Appointment</EM> is about to be released as a limited-edition CD by Film Score Monthly. "Stu Who?" indeed.
</P>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:date>2003-06-29T18:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
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