I've heard Ramin's work in countless things yet this is the first interview I have watched of him. Such an incredible composer and easily the best thing about the Fallout show
Ramin is crazy! Its still really fun to play with Fallout Music ( I am currently making it myself on my channel) Its not as close as the real deal ofcourse! xD
Please release the score from the final scene of House of the dragons season 2 episode 3 with Rhaenyra and Alicent meeting in secret It’s so beautiful and I can’t find it anywhere it gave me goosebumps and your work is beautiful
Don't get me wrong he's great but it would've been better if I Inon Zur did the soundtrack for the show, the Fallout 3 main theme still gives me chills
Besides being an example like Hans Zimmer. Do I need a degree to become a successful film music composer? After all, I won't be an instrumentalist... What kind of opportunities could be a turning point for a film music career?
You also need to be in the right place and at the right time. Film Music is more of a buisness in who you know than what you know. Obviously you need to work your way around a DAW and compose "really good" music, but that itself is a minimum. The hard part is branching out, finding the right contacts and then getting recommended to, by others. What you can work on from now though: 1. Practice, Practice and Practice composing music: Dedicate some time every day composing. Roughly Film Composers I believe make 2 minutes of music per day, Television is on another level since the turnaround is shorter. For the Vikings series, Trevor Morris composed 6 minutes of music per day. It's a challenge but you get better the more you do it. 2. When not composing, create your own sounds. Stuff like synth patches, transitions, hits, FX etc. It's rewarding and will be unique to you. 3. Reach out to student directors on forums or in person at events and ask if they need music for their upcoming film etc, and then show your portfolio. I found events and work opportunites on Facebook for example.
Ramin Djawadi, the prince that was promised ❤
incredible how composers can build around what's happening in the scene itself. straight art
I've heard Ramin's work in countless things yet this is the first interview I have watched of him. Such an incredible composer and easily the best thing about the Fallout show
I remember the BoS theme really jumping out at me. Super happy to get this behind the scenes on it 👀
Fallout and HOTD in the same year. Ramin has definitely knocked it out of the park! Roll in the Emmys already!
I'm so ready for Emmys
And 3 body problem
His use of strings and percussion are very signature to his sound. What an amazing musician!
Person of Interest has one of my favorite themes, he's one of the most best composers out there right now
Wow, we need more Ramin content like this!
It's great seeing his studio and his process. I'd love to see more videos like this!
We need this theme in the game!
Amazing! Thank you for sharing such great backstage music production!
LOVE THIS! He's such a creative force!
FINALLY SOME RAMIN DJAWADI BREAKDOWN VID
Oh have loved his music. From Game of Thrones to Westworld to House of the Dragon to Fallout. :)
Killed it with the music in Fallout and in the first episode of season 2 of House of the Dragon.
The Guy Who Did The Score For Game Of Thrones And Legendary Pictures Logo!
Love this guy
Ramin is crazy! Its still really fun to play with Fallout Music ( I am currently making it myself on my channel) Its not as close as the real deal ofcourse! xD
Actually Ramin got inspired from Game of Thrones Score, Especially *Dracarys theme* 2:37
Pretty sure he wrote that too 😅
If you don’t feel the Brotherhood of Steel,
join the Brotherhood of Brass.
Please release the score from the final scene of House of the dragons season 2 episode 3 with Rhaenyra and Alicent meeting in secret It’s so beautiful and I can’t find it anywhere it gave me goosebumps and your work is beautiful
Don't get me wrong he's great but it would've been better if I Inon Zur did the soundtrack for the show, the Fallout 3 main theme still gives me chills
ALL HAIL THE ONE TRUE KING
He is a genius
Out here looking like a hot ass Dornish Prince.
The GOAT
Was humming this for weeks after hearing it, pitched vocals always go hard
A person working on the show did research by playing the game?? Maybe other video game adaptations should do that. Crazy thought
Yea, cool. And now listen to the Brotherhood theme from the 1st game. No even comparable.
That Dune rattle, those slowing down drums are everywhere now)
epic
This man is so goated
MY SENIOR RAMINNNN
MORE OF RAMIN! SUPERSTAR BEHIND THE SCENES
all my love from Cairo king
You definitely nailed the Brotherhood of Steel better than the game did. Very monastic, very literally metallic monks.
best composer ever ❤
What about danny elfman, john williams etc? This guy is good but uhhh..
@@Sattlen your mom is my favorite composer
Besides being an example like Hans Zimmer. Do I need a degree to become a successful film music composer? After all, I won't be an instrumentalist... What kind of opportunities could be a turning point for a film music career?
It’s not a requirement. Knowing a little bit of theory definitely helps when writing, but it is not a requirement from what I know.
Guys like Djawadi prove…it’s not about musical talent. If you can just create noise, you’re golden.
You also need to be in the right place and at the right time.
Film Music is more of a buisness in who you know than what you know. Obviously you need to work your way around a DAW and compose "really good" music, but that itself is a minimum. The hard part is branching out, finding the right contacts and then getting recommended to, by others.
What you can work on from now though:
1. Practice, Practice and Practice composing music:
Dedicate some time every day composing. Roughly Film Composers I believe make 2 minutes of music per day, Television is on another level since the turnaround is shorter. For the Vikings series, Trevor Morris composed 6 minutes of music per day. It's a challenge but you get better the more you do it.
2. When not composing, create your own sounds. Stuff like synth patches, transitions, hits, FX etc. It's rewarding and will be unique to you.
3. Reach out to student directors on forums or in person at events and ask if they need music for their upcoming film etc, and then show your portfolio. I found events and work opportunites on Facebook for example.
@@connorbowen8867 Not really. It depends on the project.
@@connorbowen8867 eh?
to me it doesn't sound very Fallout-y
Iron Man theme