logo
Games music composer with ambition to define an artform

Games music composer with ambition to define an artform

Iraqi News28-01-2025

Paris – Far from the bleep-driven video game soundtracks of yesteryear, French composer Olivier Deriviere is determined to help craft the audio sensation of a medium he believes is still finding a voice of its own.
Deriviere's twin passions for music and gaming have driven a career creating music for massive-selling games including Ubisoft's 'Assassin's Creed', sometimes managing projects equal in scope to a film soundtrack.
'I think we need to get away from the reflex that we need to look at our 'big brother' cinema and say that we're going to do the same thing,' Deriviere told AFP.
'If you compare what video games offer in artistic terms, it's vast compared to the cinema or theatre,' he adds.
Deriviere's personal journey with games began very early in life.
'I've never left the house without a console since I was six years old,' the 46-year-old says.
That passion has borne him up to creating music for one instalment in the massively popular 'Assassin's Creed' series, or million-selling 'A Plague Tale: Innocence', released by Asobo in 2019.
But his current project, 'South of Midnight' by Canadian developer Compulsion Games is 'my biggest creation yet,' Deriviere says.
The tracks he plays back borrow their sound from the American South setting of the adventure game, set for release on April 8.
More than 100 recording sessions have gone into the work, split between Nashville in the US, London's legendary Abbey Road studios and the composer's own workspace in the Paris suburbs.
– 'Set off a revolution' –
Deriviere enjoyed 'a musical childhood' growing up in Nice with his businessman father and choir-leader mother.
'When I was five years old, I was getting into U2 and Pink Floyd thanks to my dad, while my friends were listening to French songs,' he remembered.
It was at the same time that he was first exposed to video games.
'The day someone first showed me a Commodore 64 moving a pixel around, it set off a revolution in my brain,' Deriviere said.
He went as far as learning to code so that he could write music on the machine.
Deriviere struggled to find his niche, making false starts into several music and computing courses before securing a scholarship to the Berklee College of Music across the Atlantic in Boston.
A regular at the city's Symphonic Orchestra, he struck up a friendship with John Williams, writer of soundtracks to many Steven Spielberg movies and the 'Star Wars' saga.
Deriviere says that the film legend became an 'example' for him, teaching him to be patient.
Back in France, his first work on a game came with 2004's 'Obscure', developed by a small studio.
Since then, he has worked on around 20 releases including the mega-blockbuster 'Assassin's Creed' series.
'I got started in a tiny little room. A computer, two speakers and that was it,' he remembered with a smile.
Now in demand from international developers, he employs six people in his 300-square-metre (3,200 square feet) studio).
– No substitute –
Percussion fan Deriviere clutches a pair of drumsticks as he wanders from the recording booths to the editing suites to keep up with multiple projects, some of which are still under wraps.
But in his spare minutes, he allows himself a few rounds of tennis game 'Top Spin' in a room stuffed with consoles going back decades.
'I've always played, I've never stopped,' the composer says.
For Deriviere, creating a piece of music has two stages: first writing a score, but then integrating it into the game to reflect the player's input.
The second task would normally be tackled by a game's music designer, rather than the composer.
But 'I do both', Deriviere said. 'Since I play video games, I understand this language and that's an advantage.'
In 'South of Midnight', Deriviere is attentive to the actions of protagonist Hazel, accompanied by a choir of girls' voices, as well as developing the tracks connected with the vast creatures that inhabit the game's universe.
He isn't a one-trick pony, having composed the music for 2023 horror movie 'The Deep Dark' and for an episode of TV series 'Star Wars: Visions', in another tie back to mentor Williams.
But linear film-making can't keep him away from the 'unique experience' of games for long.
'It's up to us to bring new experiences to players,' Deriviere said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Nour Al-Waili's debut solo exhibition Number 9 opens at French Institute in Baghdad
Nour Al-Waili's debut solo exhibition Number 9 opens at French Institute in Baghdad

Iraqi News

time05-06-2025

  • Iraqi News

Nour Al-Waili's debut solo exhibition Number 9 opens at French Institute in Baghdad

Baghdad ( – The French Institute in Iraq – Baghdad is currently hosting Number 9 (الرقم ٩), the first solo exhibition by promising Iraqi visual artist Nour Al-Waili. The exhibition opened on May 22, 2025, and will run for two weeks, offering a unique window into the artist's creative evolution. Number 9 invites visitors to explore Al-Waili's artistic journey through nine distinct paintings and nine intricate collage works. These pieces are said to reflect a decade of her personal and creative development, presenting the world through her honest, spontaneous, realistic, and unfiltered perspective. The French Institute in Iraq – Baghdad, known for promoting French culture and fostering Franco-Iraqi artistic exchange, provides a prestigious platform for Al-Waili's debut. The exhibition's opening was notably attended by the French Ambassador for Human Rights, Ms. Isabelle Rome, highlighting its cultural significance.

Iran summons French diplomat over Cannes tribute to dissident filmmaker
Iran summons French diplomat over Cannes tribute to dissident filmmaker

Shafaq News

time26-05-2025

  • Shafaq News

Iran summons French diplomat over Cannes tribute to dissident filmmaker

Shafaq News/ Iran summoned France's chargé d'affaires in Tehran on Sunday in protest over what it described as 'insulting' remarks by French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot following the Cannes Film Festival's top prize being awarded to dissident Iranian director Jafar Panahi. According to the state-run IRNA news agency, the Iranian Foreign Ministry reacted sharply after Barrot posted criticism of Iran's human rights record on X, following Panahi's receipt of the Palme d'Or for his latest film A Minor Incident. Dans un geste de resistance contre l'oppression du régime iranien, Jafar Panahi emporte une Palme d'Or qui ravive l'espoir pour tous les combattants de la liberté, partout dans le monde. — Jean-Noël Barrot (@jnbarrot) May 24, 2025 The politically charged film tells the story of a former prisoner who abducts his torturer in a journey that interweaves other victims, blending dark humor with themes of resistance. It was hailed by the jury as a bold act of cinematic defiance. Panahi, known for his frequent clashes with Iranian authorities and past imprisonment, told reporters he intends to return to Iran despite uncertainties. 'Iran is my country,' he said. 'I don't know how to make films anywhere else.' While international critics praised the film as an act of artistic courage, Iranian officials condemned the award as a politicized gesture, adding it to the growing list of diplomatic strains between Tehran and Paris.

Iraqi filmmaker says sanctions amplified Saddam Hussein's dictatorship
Iraqi filmmaker says sanctions amplified Saddam Hussein's dictatorship

Iraqi News

time18-05-2025

  • Iraqi News

Iraqi filmmaker says sanctions amplified Saddam Hussein's dictatorship

Cannes – Hasan Hadi, the first filmmaker from Iraq to be selected for the prestigious Cannes Festival, said economic embargoes like those imposed in his childhood under Saddam Hussein did not work. 'Sanctions empower dictators,' he told AFP, as they concentrate scant resources in their hands and only make them 'more brutal'. 'In the history of the world, there was no one time when they (imposed) sanctions and the president couldn't eat.' Hadi's first feature film, 'The President's Cake', has received very good reviews since premiering Friday in the Directors' Fortnight section. Cinema publication Deadline said it was 'head and shoulders above' some of the films in the running for the festival's Palme d'Or top prize, and 'could turn out to be Iraq's first nominee for an Oscar'. The film follows nine-year-old Lamia after she has the misfortune of being picked by her school teacher to bake the class a cake for the president's birthday, or be denounced for disloyalty. It is the early 1990s, the country is under crippling UN sanctions. She and her grandmother — with whom she shares a reed home in Iraq's southern marshlands — can barely afford to eat. As they set off into town to hunt down unaffordable ingredients, with Lamia's pet cockerel and their last meagre belongings to sell, the film plunges into the social reality — and everyday petty corruption — of 1990s Iraq. The near-total trade and financial embargo imposed on Iraq after it invaded Kuwait 'demolished the moral fabric of society', Hadi said. It sent the country 'hundreds of years back'. – 'Selling their door frames' – The filmmaker said he did not taste cake until he was in his early teens, after the US-led invasion in 2003 toppled Saddam and sanctions were lifted. Instead, with processed sugar and eggs out of reach, there was 'date cake' — whose main ingredient was squished dates, sometimes with a candle on top. 'As a kid you're sad that you're not getting your cake,' he said. But as you grow up, you realise what your parents must have gone through to put food on the table. 'Not only my family, but all of these people had to sell literally everything,' he said. 'There were people that were even selling their door frames.' Hadi and his team shot the film entirely in Iraq. It beautifully captures the ancient wetlands in the south of the country, listed as a World Heritage Site since 2016 and reputedly the home of the biblical Garden of Eden. Saddam drained them in the 1990s, trying to flush out rebels hiding in the reeds. But after the US-led invasion, authorities opened up the valves and the wetlands flourished again — even if they are now threatened by climate change. Hadi said he chose the location partly to make the point that 'the marshes stayed and Saddam went away'. – Infamous eatery – To re-create the Iraq of his youth, Hadi and his crew paid close attention to detail, amassing vintage clothes and bringing a barber on set to trim the hair and moustaches of everyone down to the extras. They scouted out the best locations, shooting one scene in a small eatery reputed to have been frequented by Saddam himself. They chose non-actors to play ordinary Iraqis under the ever-present eyes of the president in posters, pictures frames and murals. Hadi said hearing US President Donald Trump say recently that he planned to lift sanctions on Syria after Islamists toppled president Bashar al-Assad last year was 'amazing'. 'I don't think the sanctions helped in any way to get rid of Bashar, but definitely empowered him to kill more people, and torture more people,' he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store