Nigel Stanford
Nigel Stanford (full name: Nigel John Stanford) is a New Zealand composer,[1][2][3][4] best known for his soundtrack for the movie TimeScapes directed by Tom Lowe,[5] as well as his music videos Cymatics and Automatica.[6][7][8][9][10]
Nigel Stanford | |
---|---|
Born | 4 October |
Origin | Wellington, New Zealand |
Occupation(s) | Composer |
Website | nigelstanford |
In January 2019, a Huawei commercial was accused to be plagiarizing Stanford's Cymatics video; Huawei eventually removed the video.[11]
Discography
Albums
- Deep Space (1999) (as John Stanford)
- Timescapes (2012)
- Solar Echoes (2014)
- Automatica (2017)
Singles
- "Cymatics" (2014)
- "Automatica" (2017)
- "One Hundred Hunters" (2018)
- "Forever" (2018)
Remixes
- Last Night on Earth (Celldweller) (Nigel Stanford Remix) (2018)
Filmography
Nigel contributed in the film TimeScapes directed by Tom Lowe. This is an English language documentary about arts, nature with no narration published in 2012 .
gollark: Real OS dev is very hard. Bodging together other work is ez.
gollark: Anyway, I don't think most of the comments are very passive aggressive, though I'm always up for improvements.
gollark: A Linux distribution bundling Xorg, java and some autologin thing, so it can run CCEMUX on boot.
gollark: I have an idea for that actually.
gollark: <@111569489971159040> potatOS doesn't work?
References
- "Nigel Stanford (@nigelstanford) • Instagram photos and videos". Instagram.com. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
- "Nigel Stanford". Facebook.com. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
- "Nigel John Stanford". Retrieved 2 March 2019 – via YouTube.
- "Information from Sony" (PDF). smehost.net. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
- "It's Full of Stars: Behind Tom Lowe's Stunning TimeScapes". Fast Company. 29 December 2011.
- "Nigel Stanford makes sound visible for Cymatics music video". Dezeen. 15 November 2014.
- Davis, Lauren. "All Special Effects in This Music Video Show Off Scientific Concepts". Gizmodo.
- "nigel stanford's automatica shows mechanical arms that rock and revolt". DesignBoom. 9 October 2017.
- "In explosive new music video, real-world robots revolt". CNET. 15 September 2017.
- "Watch this robot rock band destroy their instruments". techcrunch.com.
- "Huawei plagiarized a music video and turned it into a tablet ad". Engadget.
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