Puneet Varma (Editor)

Audiomachine

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Products
  
Music production

Headquarters
  
Beverly Hills

Website
  
audiomachine.com

Founded
  
20 August 2005

Audiomachine httpswriterlysamfileswordpresscom201407au

Genre
  
Epic music, Symphonic, electronic, instrumental

Members
  
Paul Dinletir Kevin Rix

Founders
  
Paul Dinletir, Carol Sovinski

Profiles

The best of audiomachine 3 hours epic music mix epic hits epic music vn


audiomachine is a production music company based in Los Angeles, California founded by Paul Dinletir and Carol Sovinski in August 2005, producing music composed by Paul Dinletir and Kevin Rix.

Contents

Audiomachine decimus full album powerful action orchestral epic music


About the company

audiomachine mainly produces music for movie trailers, but recently their music has also been featured, for example, in the 2010, 2012 and 2014 Olympic games official program labeled as Epic Music.

Many of audiomachine's tracks have been featured in numerous theatrical movie trailers, including those of Avatar, The Chronicles of Narnia films, Iron Man and others.

Originally audiomachine released albums only for film industry's professional use, but since 2012 they have released selected albums and compilations for general public as well. The industry release albums include Deus Ex Machina, Phenomena, Origins, Leviathan, Awakenings, Millennium, Monolith and many others.

audiomachine has released tracks for YouTube usage and announced a special YouTube usage policy on their website, allowing the use of their music in non-monetized YouTube clips.

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. Gregson-Williams did work on the franchise before when co-composing the soundtrack for Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare.

In November 2014, audiomachine announced their entire catalog of industry tracks would be available to the public for micro licensing on their official website. The license tiers available for purchase currently include personal use, monetizing of YouTube videos, crowdfunding campaigns, student film and film festival use, podcasting, book trailers, and licenses for videos on your small business website.

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 writing class at UCLA taught by Robert Eetall(sp?), who is now a collaborator. This led to him becoming a composer for X-Ray Dog where he composed trailers for cartoons 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. He used Logic Pro software for 15 years and switched to Steinberg Cubase..

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.

Studio albums

  • Chronicles (2012)
  • Epica (2012)
  • Helios (2012)
  • Tree of Life (2013)
  • Existence (2013)
  • Phenomena (2014)
  • Magnus (2015)
  • Decimus: The Abbey Road Sessions (2015)
  • Remix albums

  • Remixed (2014)
  • Soundtracks

  • Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare - Soundtrack (2014)
  • Extended plays

  • Trilogy (2013)
  • Blood and Stone (2013)
  • Champions Will Rise: Epic Music from the 2014 Winter Olympics (2014)
  • References

    Audiomachine Wikipedia