Michael Giacchino
Biography
Michael Giacchino (pronounced "Juh-KEEN-oh") (b. 10 October 1967, Riverside Township, New Jersey) started venturing into music at the age of ten, where he spent his time between the cinema and his basement. Creating his own stop motion animation films on his brother's pool table, he found the most enjoyable part of the process was putting music to the pictures.
He later joined the School of Visual Arts in New York where he received a major in film production and a minor in history. During his time there he took an unpaid internship at Universal Pictures as well as working at a department store to pay the rent.
He graduated in 1990 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts and began studying music at the Juilliard School at the Lincoln Center. He worked day jobs at the publicity offices for Universal and Disney. Two years later he moved to Disney Studios in Burbank, working in their feature film publicity department as well as taking night classes in music at UCLA.
His work at Disney involved interacting with various people from the film industry, including producers who hire composers. When a role became available for a producer at Disney Interactive, Michael took the job, allowing him to hire himself to write music for their games. His first major composition came in 1997 when newly formed DreamWorks Interactive asked him to score their video game adaptation of The Lost World: Jurassic Park. It became the first PlayStation game to have a live orchestral score.
Michael continued writing for video games including Small Soldiers, Warpath: Jurassic Park, and in 1999, the first in the Medal Of Honor franchise, on which he would eventually score four further sequels.
In 2001, rising director J.J. Abrams, a fan of Michael's Medal Of Honor scores, hired him to write for his new show, Alias. It also led to Michael's largest project, Lost, on which he scored all 120 episodes of the show from 2004-2010, as well as writing a symphonic concert of the music which debuted in Hawaii in 2007. The final recording session for the show took place on May 7th 2010, and a farewell concert was held a week later which was attended by many fans, cast and crew.
During his period on Lost, Michael continued writing for video games including Call Of Duty and Secret Weapons Over Normandy, and also launched his career into feature films in 2004 when he was asked to score Pixar's The Incredibles, directed by Brad Bird. In 2006 Michael scored J.J. Abrams' first feature film, Mission: Impossible III and continued to work with him on Cloverfield, Star Trek and Super 8, as well as providing music for the pilot episodes of Fringe and Alcatraz.
Michael also continued his work with Pixar, scoring Ratatouille which earned him an Oscar nomination, and Up on which he won two Grammys, a Golden Globe, a Bafta and an Oscar.
Michael is also an advisory board member of Education Through Music Los Angeles, an oganization that promotes the integration of music into the curricula of disadvantaged schools. His latest projects have been John Carter and Star Trek Into Darkness. Michael has also been involved in several concerts of his work performed in the USA and Europe.
Works for Winds
Adaptable Music
- The Incredibles (Flex instrumentation) (arr. Murtha) (2004/2007)
All Wind Works
- Highlights from "Ratatouille"
- Highlights from "Star Trek into Darkness" (arr. Brown) (2009)
- The Incredibles (arr. Morse)
- The Incredibles (arr. Murtha) (2004/2005)
- The Incredibles (Flex instrumentation) (arr. Murtha) (2004/2007)
- Into the Future from "Tomorrowland" (arr. Simonec)
- Le Festin (arr. Condon) (2007/2020)
- Married Life (arr. Stopa)
- Medal of Honor Suite (arr. Simonec) (1999/)
- Music from "The Incredibles" (arr. Bocook) (2004/2006)
- Selections from "Incredibles 2" (arr. Murtha) (2004/2018)
- Selections from "Up" (arr. Brown) (2009)
- Soundtrack Highlights from "Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom" (arr. Brown) (2015)
- Symphonic Suite from "Jurassic World" (arr. Bocook) (2015/2017)
- Symphonic Suite from "Star Trek" (arr. Bocook) (2009)
Resources
- Michael Giacchino website Accessed 12 December 2021