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{{Infobox company
{{Infobox company
| name = Audiomachine
| name = Audiomachine
| logo =
| logo = Audiomachine logo black.png
| type =
| type =
| founder = Paul Dinletir<br />Carol Sovinski
| founder = Paul Dinletir<br />Carol Sovinski

Revision as of 09:36, 6 December 2021

Audiomachine
GenreEpic music, symphonic, electronic, instrumental
FoundedAugust 20, 2005 (2005-08-20)
FounderPaul Dinletir
Carol Sovinski
Headquarters,
U.S.
ProductsMusic production
MembersPaul Dinletir
Kevin Rix
Websiteaudiomachine.com

Audiomachine is an American production music company based in Beverly Hills, California. The company was founded by Paul Dinletir and Carol Sovinski in August 2005, producing music composed by Paul Dinletir and Kevin Rix.[1][2]

About the company

Audiomachine mainly produces music for movie trailers and advertisements, but recently its music has also been featured in the 2010, 2012 and 2014 Olympic games official program labeled as Epic Music.[3][4]

Many of Audiomachine's tracks have been featured in theatrical movie trailers, including those of Avatar, The Chronicles of Narnia films, Iron Man, Venom, Avengers: Endgame, and others.

Originally, Audiomachine released albums only for the film industry's professional use, but since 2012 it has released selected albums and compilations for the general public as well. The industry-released albums include Deus Ex Machina, Phenomena, Origins, Leviathan, Awakenings, Millennium, and Monolith.[5][6][7][8][9][10]

Composers

Paul Dinletir

Paul Dinletir initially just played piano and wanted to be a songwriter and jazz pianist. His wife was able to get him into a film and television music UCLA taught by Robert Etoll, who is now a collaborator. This led to him becoming a composer for X-Ray Dog where he composed trailers for cartoons (such as Samurai Jack until season 4) and reality TV shows; from that he saw the enjoyment he got from trailer music and eventually did that full time. Dinletir's influences are Mozart, Beethoven, Debussy; he regularly listens to soundtracks.[11] He used Logic Pro software for 15 years and switched to Steinberg Cubase.[12]

Kevin Rix

Kevin Rix started out playing guitar and was in various rock bands growing up. At music school, where he was introduced to classical music and jazz, he started realizing his interests in composing and in working with different instruments and sounds. After a few years he decided to do it professionally. At first he wanted to get into writing film soundtracks. While he was working on a demo reel, he obtained a job editing and mixing ringtones for a company, where he met Dinletir. He started in the profession as Dinletir's assistant doing sound design. Rix's influences include Mozart, Bach, Debussy, Rush, Mastodon, Soundgarden, Hans Zimmer, and Harry Gregson-Williams.[11]

Discography

Studio Albums

  • Big, Big and Bigger (2005)
  • Tools of the Trade 1 (2005)
  • Atomic Music Station (2006)
  • Trailer Acts (2006)
  • Tools of the Trade 2 (2006)
  • The Platinum Series I (2007)
  • The Lighter Side (2007)
  • Blood, Death & Fears (2007)
  • The Platinum Series II (2008)
  • Tools of the Trade 3 (2008)
  • Terminus (2008)
  • The Platinum Series III: Eterna (2009)
  • Trailer Acts 2 (2009)
  • Maelstrom (2009)
  • The Platinum Series IV: Labyrinth (2010)
  • Deus Ex Machina (2010)
  • The Ensemble Series: Volume 1 (2010)
  • Blood Bath and Beyond (2011)
  • Drumscores (2011)
  • Epica (2011)
  • Tools of the Trade 4 (2012)
  • Leviathan (2012)
  • Helios (2012)
  • Awakenings (2012)
  • Millennium (2013)
  • Origins (2013)
  • Phenomena (2013)
  • Tools of the Trade 5: Tones Textures and Transitions (2014)
  • Monolith (2014)
  • Phantasm (2014)
  • Psychosis (2014)
  • Remixed (2014)
  • Intros (2015)
  • Titan (2015)
  • Decimus (2015)
  • Prototype (2016)
  • Worlds of Wonder (2016)
  • Drumscores 2 (2016)
  • Tools of the Trade: Epic Spaces (2017)
  • Tools of the Trade: Rises (2017)
  • Tools of the Trade: Epic Foley (2017)
  • Modern Tension: Cold Sweat (2017)
  • Pulses: Palpitate (2017)
  • Percussive Mayhem: Anarchy (2017)
  • Eternal Rest (2017)
  • Piano Premontions: Parallels (2017)
  • Life (2017)
  • Tools of the Trade: Submerged (2018)
  • Tools of the Trade: Pings and Powerdowns (2018)
  • Chrome Over Brass (2018)
  • Trailerized: Covers and Originals (2018)
  • Tools of the Trade: Scapes (2018)
  • La Belle Epoque (2018)
  • Synesthesia (2018)
  • Volturnus (2018)
  • The 11th Hour (2018)
  • Percussive Mayhem: Odd Rhythms (2018)
  • Kill Process (2018)
  • The Wicked Will Rot (2018)
  • Ascendance (2018)
  • Exogenesis (2018)
  • Intros 2 (2018)
  • Prototype: Source Code (2018)
  • A Measure of Darkness (2018)
  • Mental Minefield (2018)
  • Banshee (2019)
  • Retrograde (2019)
  • Here and Now (2019)
  • Burn Point (2019)
  • Another Sky (2019)
  • Reimagined (2019)
  • Nomad (2019)
  • Chrome Over Brass 2 (2019)
  • Percussive Mayhem: Modern Rhythms (2019)
  • Prototype: Natural Selection (2019)
  • Insomnia (2020)
  • The Best Things in Life (2020)
  • Lineage (2020)
  • Cinematix (2021)
  • Viscera (2021)
  • Inertia (2021)
  • Promethium (2021)
  • Believe (2021)
  • War for Light (2021)
  • 'Twas the Night (2021)
  • The Fire and the Fury (2021)
  • Ophelia Riddle and the Book of Secret Stories (2021)
  • Decadence (2021)
  • The Devil Doesn't Sleep (2021)
  • Dominion (2021)

Compilation Albums

  • Chronicles (2012)
  • Uplifting and Inspiration Volume One (2012)
  • Tree of Life (2013)
  • 50,000 Likes Fan Appreciation Compilation (2013)
  • Existence (2013)
  • Summer Blockbuster Volume 1 (2014)
  • Suspence and Horror Volume 1 (2014)
  • Magnus (2015)
  • Magnus B-Sides (2016)

Singles, EPs

  • Trilogy (2013)
  • Blood and Stone (2013)
  • Champions Will Rise: Epic Music from the 2014 Winter Olympics (2014)
  • We Are Gods (2020)

Studio Series

  • Human (2020)
  • Touchstone (2020)
  • True Crime (2020)
  • Ohms (2020)
  • Body Beats (2020)
  • Criminal Underground (2020)
  • Replicant (2020)
  • Exit Strategy (2020)
  • Scorched Earth (2020)
  • Black Tie (2020)
  • Timber and Tumbleweeds (2020)
  • Ministry of Silly Strings (2020)
  • Analog Prophecies (2020)
  • The Road Back (2020)
  • Percussive Pacesetters (2020)
  • Fragmented Reality (2020)
  • Punchline (2020)
  • Lucid (2020)
  • State of Grace (2020)
  • In a Daydream (2020)
  • Inside Joke (2020)
  • The Face of Light (2020)
  • Storytellers (2020)
  • Dawn Patrol (2020)
  • Stricks and Bones (2020)
  • Emergence (2020)
  • Strummin' Summer (2020)
  • Ultra (2020)
  • Dyad (2020)
  • Living Dust (2020)
  • Kicks and Shakers (2020)
  • The Measure of Moments (2020)
  • Dark Web (2020)
  • Ritmo de la Gente (2020)
  • Axiom (2021)
  • Ecosystem (2021)
  • Sora (2021)
  • Kaleidoscope (2021)
  • Be Yourself (2021)
  • Strung Out (2021)
  • Rise of a Champion (2021)
  • Get Down (2021)
  • Be Free (2021)

Placements

Along with Harry Gregson-Williams, Audiomachine is responsible for the soundtrack of the 2014 video game, Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare, the first game in the Call of Duty series to be developed by Sledgehammer Games.[13][14]

Music from its albums was used in:

See also

References

  1. ^ "Film Trailer Music, Pt 1: An Interview with audiomachine". The DIY Musician Blog. July 16, 2012.
  2. ^ "Video Interview with Audiomachine". Trailer Music News.
  3. ^ "The Growing Success of Trailer Music in Various Shows". Trailer Music News.
  4. ^ "Official Olympic Album by Audiomachine". New Age Music World.
  5. ^ "Audiomachine: Deus Ex Machina". Trailer Music News.
  6. ^ "audiomachine: Phenomena". Trailer Music News.
  7. ^ "Audiomachine: Origins". Trailer Music News.
  8. ^ "Audiomachine: Leviathan". Trailer Music News.
  9. ^ "audiomachine: Millennium". Trailer Music News.
  10. ^ "Audiomachine: Awakenings". Trailer Music News.
  11. ^ a b "Interview with audiomachine (1/2)". YouTube.
  12. ^ "Interview: Paul Dinletir". Michael St. James.
  13. ^ "Information about the "Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare" Collector's Editions including the digital OST". IGN.
  14. ^ Spacey, Kevin; Baker, Troy; Emery, Gideon; M'Cormack, Adetokumboh (November 4, 2014), Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare, retrieved March 20, 2017
  15. ^ "Soundtrack.Net Trailers audiomachine". www.soundtrack.net. Retrieved March 20, 2017.
  16. ^ "Behind That Screaming, Spooky Track In The "Prometheus" Trailers". Co.Create. May 24, 2012. Retrieved March 20, 2017.
  17. ^ a b c "audiomachine". audiomachine.com. Retrieved March 20, 2017.
  18. ^ "Audiomachine and Dean Valentine featured in "The Martian" trailer". Soundtracks and Trailer Music. June 10, 2015. Archived from the original on April 22, 2017. Retrieved March 31, 2017.
  19. ^ "What Is The Song In The Avengers 4 Trailer?". ScreenRANT. December 8, 2018. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  20. ^ "Porsche wins the FIA WEC 2016 - Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG". Mission Report - Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG. Retrieved March 20, 2017.
  21. ^ Porsche (June 21, 2016), Porsche at Le Mans 2016., retrieved March 20, 2017
  22. ^ IGN (July 21, 2010). "StarCraft II Launch Trailer" – via YouTube.
  23. ^ "SAS: Who Dares Wins - All 4". www.channel4.com.
  24. ^ https://www.jw.org/en/library/videos/#en/mediaitems/VODBibleTeachings/pub-jwbcov_201605_11_VIDEO
  25. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Mass Effect™ Legendary Edition Official Reveal Trailer (4K)". YouTube.

External links