Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Events

Show all calendar items

Alexandra Hamilton-Ayres - Film Composer

- Export as iCalendar

Alexandra Hamilton-Ayres is a British-Belgian film composer, rising in the neoclassical scene as one of the UK’s upcoming artists. Her work blends sound worlds with her love for the piano, orchestrated into a rich palette of electronica and classical music. She has been nominated for ‘best score’ for three of her soundtracks, winning an award for ‘best music’ for the surreal art and dance film Divided We Scroll (commissioned by the Barbican, London). Alexandra’s critically-acclaimed debut album 2 Years Stranger was described by BBC Radio 6’s Mary Anne Hobbes as “hauntingly beautiful” and The Guardian as having a “devastating emotional effect”. Alexandra has released with several labels including Piano & Coffee Records and Icelandic new classical label INNI founded by film composer Atli Örvarsson and sees merging her film scores and artist work as fundamental to her love of combining sound worlds and story-telling through music. She has performed alongside artists such as TSHA, Throwing Snow and Gabriel Ólafs and studied continuous piano techniques with Lubomyr Melnyk. Alexandra has an ongoing collaborative relationship with Her Ensemble, releasing an arrangement of Coma to celebrate International Women’s Day, joining them on stage and working on soundtrack and solo releases together. Her love of collaboration has also led to projects with artists such as violinist and composer Anna Phoebe on film score Until We Touch. Alexandra is known for reworking other artists tracks including a rework for Vanbur releasing on Human Reworked alongside Mogwai and Katie Gately and Hector Plimmer’s Next to Nothing - remixed alongside artists such as Matthew Herbert. Her first collaboration EP Ciara released at the end of 2022 with producing artist and songwriter Mara Simpson. Her most recent film collaborations extend her artist work collaborating with BAFTA Scotland-winning team Melt The Fly to create the score for Long Live My Happy Head and BAFTA Scotland-winning director Emma Davie on The Oil Machine.

More…

Show all calendar items