Renowned composer, musician and producer Benson Taylor has become the University of Huddersfield’s first Composer in Residence.
Bradford-born Benson, who lived in Huddersfield for several years, now divides his time between Yorkshire, Italy and Los Angeles.
Benson, 38, has earned a reputation as one of the most exciting talents working in music for film, television and streaming services.
His recent credits include the film Chick Fight where he worked with Huddersfield entrepreneur Prof Graham Leslie, who was executive producer on the movie.
Benson’s songs have also featured in shows such as Suits, Grey’s Anatomy and Orange is the New Black.
His first feature film score, for Fear of Water in 2014, won ‘Best Original Music’ at the Monaco Film Festival and as producer he has worked with Mercury-shortlisted Maximo Park, Bloc Party, GRAMMY-nominated Bones UK and Bat For Lashes among many others.
Benson said: “The university has incredible facilities that maybe people are not aware of such as academics studying spherical 360-degree sound.
“I am really passionate about these specialisms and there are great people working on the hows and whys of these kinds of things in Huddersfield.
“There are some great minds here and I’d love to explore them. I also think there is a huge benefit for the university to work closely with innovation and tech in the commercial world.”
Prof Monty Adkins, dean of the graduate school, said: “We are extremely excited about this partnership.
“Benson, as a world-leading musician, producer and entrepreneur, will work closely with our film music and music technology students on a number of mentoring, composition, recording and spatial sound research projects.
“His presence will help continue our commitment to providing our students with the very best academic learning combined with industry-focused perspectives and opportunities.”
Benson’s passion for film music stems from his love of the ‘high concept’ action movies he watched while growing up in the 1990s, and an ambitious decision to study music at UCLA meant he was able to quickly develop a network of contacts in Hollywood.
READ MORE: How Prof Graham Leslie collaborated with Benson Taylor on Chick Fight
“I had always loved films but specifically bombastic, ridiculous high-concept Hollywood films,” he said. “I loved the ridiculousness of the storylines of something like Con Air and one of my mentors is Mark Mancina, who did the music for that film, Bad Boys, Speed and many more.
“I figured that making music for films was what I wanted to do, and maybe being from Bradford you wouldn’t think in-depth about music production for Hollywood but I was very aware there was music in these films, and I wanted to be a musician. I thought there had to be a way of combining the two.”
His time at UCLA enabled Benson to start cultivating contacts that have proved invaluable since, and it is this aspect, aside from their studies, that he wants students at Huddersfield to understand.
Collaboration is key for Benson, who admits that composing can be a lonely business and that he “really hated” having to work long distance on Amazon’s Chick Fight due to the pandemic. That collaborative approach helped when he was working on London Fields in 2018.
“The first edit I saw was four hours long,” he said. “So I had to think about music for scenes that, with someone chopping it up back in Los Angeles, may not even remain in the film.
“But the people you work with at that stage are very engaged and understand that you have an input.
“It always comes back to working with people, because being a film composer is a service for someone else’s art form.
“Developing those relationships are crucial so that directors understand the music you are creating and why.”
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