Camille Awards
{{short description|Belgium television awards}}
{{Infobox award
| name = Camille Awards
| former name = Grand Scores
| subheader = European Film Composer Awards
| image = Camille Awards logo.jpg
| image_size =
| caption = The logo
| awarded_for = European film music and its composers
| presenter = ECSA
| country = Belgium
| director = Bernard Grimaldi
| year = 2014
| website = {{url|camilleawards.eu}}
}}
Camille Awards - European Film Composer Awards, are Brussels-based film awards created in 2014, named in tribute to Camille Saint-Saëns, composer of the first music to be scored for the movie The Assassination of the Duke of Guise (1908), as a celebration of European film music and its composers.{{cite web|url=https://camilleawards.eu/about/history/|title=Camille Awards - History|publisher=camilleawards.eu|accessdate=22 April 2020}}
Editions
=2016=
The 2016 edition took place in Berlin, Germany on 10 February 2016.{{cite web|url=http://composeralliance.org/grand-scores-2016/|title=ECSA - GRAND SCORES 2016|publisher=composeralliance.org|accessdate=22 April 2020}}
;Best Orchestral Score
- Bruno Coulais (France) for Le chant de la Mer (Song of the Sea)
- Pascal Gaigne (Spain) for Loreak (Flowers)
- Gary Yershon (United Kingdom) for Mr Turner
;Best Electro-Acoustic Score
- Timo Hietala (Finland) for Aikuisten Poika (Boy Upside Down)
- Trond Bjerknes (Norway) for Operasjon Arktis (Operation Arctic)
- Jonas Struck (Denmark) for Idealisten (The Idealist)
=2017=
The 2017 edition took place in Berlin, Germany on 2 February 2017.{{cite web|url=http://composeralliance.org/cultural-activities/camille-awards/|title=ECSA - GRAND SCORES 2017|publisher=composeralliance.org|accessdate=22 April 2020}}
==Winners==
- Best Orchestral Score – Gaute Storaas for En Man Som Heter Ove (A Man Called Ove)
- Best Orchestral Score – Clint Mansell for High Rise
- Best Electro-Acoustic Score – Sophia Ersson for Pojkarna (Girls Lost)
- Best Original Music for a Series – Víctor Reyes for The Night Manager
=2018=
The 2018 edition took place in Pula, Croatia on 19–21 October 2018.{{cite web|url=https://soundtrackfest.com/en/news/first-edition-of-the-camille-awards/|title=First edition of the Camille Awards|publisher=soundtrackfest.com|accessdate=22 April 2020}}
;Best Orchestral Score:
- Ginge Anvik (Norway) for Askeladden: I Dovregubbens hall
- Lasse Enersen (Finland) for The Unknown Soldier
- Dario Marianelli (United Kingdom) for Paddington 2
;Best Electro-acoustic Score:
- Ola Fløttum (Norway) for Thelma
- Adrian Foulkes & Lucio Godoy (Spain) for La niebla y la doncella
- Jonas Struck (Denmark) for QEDA
;Best Original Music for a Series:
- Lorne Balfe & Rupert Gregson-Williams (United Kingdom) for The Crown second season
- Jacob Groth (Denmark) for Modus second season
- Ivan Martinez Lacámara & Manel Santisteban (Spain) for La casa de papel
=2020=
2019 edition not was disputed, 2020 took place in Brussels, Belgium on 3 February 2020.{{cite web|url=https://camilleawards.eu/archive/2020-2/|title=Camille Awards 2020|publisher=camilleawards.eu|accessdate=22 April 2020}}
- Lifetime Achievement: Ennio Morricone
= 2021 =
The 2021 edition took place online, due to the Covid-19 pandemic, on 8 April 2021. The ceremony premiered live on [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_9P5zW7F0nE ECSA’s YouTube channel].
==Winners==
- Best Orchestral Score – Johan Ramström (Sweden) for “Sara with All Her Being”
- Best Electro-Acoustic Score – John Gürtler (Germany) for “Systemsprenger”
- Best Original Music for a Series – Labrinth (United Kingdom) for “Euphoria”
= 2022 =
The 2022 edition took place in Split, Croatia on 27 September 2022.
==Winners==
- Best Film Score – Johan Söderqvist (Sweden) for “Utvandrarna (The Emigrants)”
- Best Score for a Feature Documentary – Nainita Desai (UK) for “The Reason I Jump”
- Best Original Music for a Series – Manel Santisteban & Iván Martínez Lacámara (Spain) for “La Casa de Papel” (Season 5)
The Lifetime Achievement Award was awarded to renown Croatian film, theatre and TV music composer Alfi Kabiljo.
= 2024 =
The 2024 edition of the Camille Awards will take place in Paris, France, on 13 November 2024.
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- {{Official website}}
{{Camille Saint-Saëns}}
{{Cinema of Belgium}}