David Poore | |
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Poore in 2011 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | David Nicholas Poore |
Born | 2 December 1966 (1966-12-02) (age 58) Wells, Somerset, England |
Genres | Film/television music |
Occupation | Composer |
Instrument(s) | Drums and keyboards |
Website | www |
David Nicholas Poore (born 2 December 1966) is a British independent musician, who has composed and produced music for over 200 films by the BBC, ITV, Channel 4, Disney, PBS, National Geographic, RTÉ and other broadcasters.
Education
Poore studied at Wells Cathedral School in Somerset from 1974 to 1984. While there he was a choral scholar in Wells Cathedral Choir and also studied drums and piano, playing percussion in the school orchestra for the duration of his time at Wells. He then went on to study jazz, played drums in various bands, and also became a drum teacher. He then attended Newport Film School in Wales in 1987.
Career
Following several years working as a sound designer and dubbing mixer for Bristol-based TV post production company Films At 59, Poore began his composing career in 1990 with work for the BBC Natural History Unit, and was soon providing music for two of the network's main natural history series, Wildlife on One and BBC Natural World, whilst also providing music for news and current affairs documentaries for the BBC's Nature department.
He went on to provide the score for both David Attenborough's Life in Cold Blood, winner of the BAFTA Award for Best Factual Series in 2009, and Life in the Undergrowth with fellow Bristol composer Ben Salisbury, with whom he also co-wrote The Nature of Britain series presented by Alan Titchmarsh. He wrote music for Planet Earth's accompanying conservation films Planet Earth: The Future. Poore's TV scores also include the long-running BBC series Big Cat Diary and a number of BBC nature documentaries, Orangutan Diary, Elephant Diaries, and Chimpanzee Diary with Charlotte Uhlenbroek.
Notable compositions
Poore's work on the BBC's Springwatch series earned a Royal Television Society (RTS) nomination in 2007 for the title theme (see Awards and Nominations).
He also composed for the BBC series Earth From Space together with Bristol composer Neil Davidge, with whom he also co-wrote the score for the BBC's Moon landing 50th anniversary film 8 Days: To The Moon and Back.
His music is also featured in Channel 4's Grand Designs since 2007, and Dispatches.
Poore has also written several series for children including for Disney Mr Moon, a CGI space adventure series which has aired worldwide on the Playhouse Disney Channel since May 2010, and Henry's Amazing Animals, and for the BBC Growing Up Wild.
Poore composed incidental music used in the feature film Ocean Voyager, narrated by Meryl Streep, which was subsequently performed in London by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.
Selected TV scores
- Score for the acclaimed ITV series In The Wild including films with Goldie Hawn, Bob Hoskins and Christopher Reeve
- BBC's The One Show
- ITV's Celebrity Fit Club
- BBC One's Omnibus
- Degas and the Dance (for PBS)
- National Geographic series Africa,
- Mountain Gorilla
- The Secret Life of Elephants
- Tales from the Green Valley
He has also written for Bristol-based Aardman Animations. Poore has recorded with orchestras and musicians from The London Philharmonic Orchestra, The BBC Concert Orchestra, and The Bristol Ensemble, to a selection of extremely accomplished solo artists which have included Kit Morgan (guitar), Stuart Gordon (violin), Dirk Campbell (Ethnic Wind Instruments), Dan Newell (trumpet), Andy Sheppard and Will Gregory (Saxophone), Adrian Utley (guitar), Paul Clarvis (Percussion), Belinda Sykes and Abbie Lathe (vocals), recording at Abbey Road Studios and Air Edel Studios in London, and at Christchurch Studios in Bristol.
Additional work
Poore played drums for the live concert of the music for the BBC series Nature's Great Events performed by the BBC Concert Orchestra at Bristol's Colston Hall in September 2009, and narrated live by Sir David Attenborough. The music was composed by Ben Salisbury and Barnaby Taylor and conducted by William Goodchild.
Poore can also be heard on the critically acclaimed 2008 Portishead album Third, singing additional vocals on the track "Deep Water" with Ben Salisbury (collectively credited as "The Somerfield Workers Choir"), and Team Brick .
Awards and nominations
In 2005 Poore's work on the film Ireland for the BBC's Natural World and PBS Nature Ireland | About | Nature | PBS earned him an Emmy Nomination for Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft.
He received a nomination for the Royal Television Society (RTS) Awards in 2007 for the BBC Springwatch for Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music.
Further recognition followed at the 2008 Wildscreen Festival, where the episode 'Armoured Giants' from the BBC series Life in Cold Blood, including Poore's compositions for the soundtrack, was awarded the prestigious Golden Panda Award.
The TV series Life in Cold Blood and Life in the Undergrowth, featuring Poore's compositions, both received BAFTA recognition in 2005 and 2009.
References
- "David Poore Music Limited - Bristol".
- "BDI Music, Publisher's biography". Archived from the original on 18 March 2011. Retrieved 13 January 2011.
- "David Poore – biography". Retrieved 10 June 2009.
- ^ "BAFTA Winner – Best Factual Series 2009 – Life in Cold Blood". Archived from the original on 21 November 2010. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
- "Earth from Space". BBC.
- "BBC Two - 8 Days: To the Moon and Back". BBC.
- "UK and Canada broadcasters pick Mr Moon". Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- "Over the moon at Disney success". BBC News. 28 May 2010. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
- "The 26th Annual News and Documentary Emmy Award Nominees" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 August 2011. Retrieved 10 January 2011.
- "RTS Craft and Design Awards 2007". Retrieved 25 January 2011.
- "Wildscreen Festival, 2008 Panda Award Winners" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 December 2010. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
- "BAFTA Nomination – Huw Weldon Award for Specialist Factual Series 2005 – Life in The Undergrowth". Retrieved 12 February 2011.