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John Clifford White

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Clifford White is an Australian composer.[1] His film credits include Romper Stomper.[2] The Heartbreak Kid,[3] Metal Skin,[4] and Macbeth.[5]

Accolades

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Australian Film Institute Awards

Won. 1992 Best Original Music Score for Romper Stomper[6]
Nominated. 2006 Best Original Music Score for Macbeth[7]

ARIA Award

Won. 1993 ARIA Award for Best Original Soundtrack, Cast or Show Album for Romper Stomper[8]

Film Critics Circle of Australia Awards

Won. 1995 Best Music Score for Metal Skin[9]
Nominated. 2006 Best Music Score for Macbeth

IF Awards

Nominated. 2006 Best Music for Macbeth[10]

Screen Music Awards

Won. 1993 Best Film Score for Romper Stomper[11]
Nominated. 2002 Best Television Theme for John Callahan's Quads[12]
Nominated. 2002 Best Original Song Composed for a Feature Film, Telemovie, TV Series or Mini-Series for John Callahan's Quads[12]

References

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  1. ^ Carlsson, Mikael (18 August 2006), "Modern 'Macbeth' gets score by White", Film Music Magazine
  2. ^ Scott, Tim (4 November 2014), "Is The "Romper Stomper" Soundtrack the Best Racist Punk Ever Performed By Non Racist Session Musicians?", Noisy. Vice
  3. ^ Stratton, David (4 June 1993), "The Heartbreak Kid", Variety
  4. ^ Zetlin, Monica (1 June 1995), "Reviews. Metal Skin", Filmnews
  5. ^ Kuipers, Richard (10 September 2006), "Reviews. Metal Skin", Variety
  6. ^ "AFI Award details", The Age, 17 October 1992
  7. ^ Chai, Paul (19 October 2006), "'Mayhem' rules Oz AFI nominations; Pic scores 11 noms, including actress, helmer", Daily Variety
  8. ^ Cochrane, Peter (15 April 1993), "Rock awards and applause roll into town", Sydney Morning Herald
  9. ^ Holgate, Ben (15 December 1995), "Angel Baby Cleans Up The Critics", Sydney Morning Herald
  10. ^ "IF Awards 2006 - Nominations", Urban Cinefile, 12 October 2006
  11. ^ "1993 APRA Music Award Winners", Apra Amcos, archived from the original on 5 July 2019, retrieved 28 May 2018
  12. ^ a b "Major nominations for the Screen Music Awards", The Age, 29 October 2002
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