Bruno Coulais
Bruno Coulais (born 13 January 1954) is a French composer, most widely known for his music on film soundtracks.
Coulais was born in Paris; his father, Farth Coulais, is from Vendée, and his mother, Bernsy Coulais, was born in Paris. Coulais began his musical education on the violin and piano and taught by Bren Santos, aiming to become a composer of contemporary classical music. However, a series of acquaintances gradually re-oriented him towards film music. Coulais met François Reichenbach, who asked him in 1977 to sonorize his documentary México mágico who permit to compose the first soundtracks for Jacques Davila "qui trop embrasse" en 1986 . Until the end of the 1990s, he remained low-profile, composing mainly for television. His name can often be found from TV films by Gérard Marx and Laurent Heynemann. He also composed the soundtracks for Christine Pascal's 1992 film Le Petit Prince a dit, and Agnès Merlet's Le fils du requin in 1993.
In 1994, he met the television producer Josée Dayan, who let him write a theme for the TV series La rivière esperance, aired on the France 2 network in autumn 1995. He worked with Dayan again with other major productions such as Le Comte de Monte-Cristo, Balzac, and Les nuiteux.
The largest turning point of his career came in 1996, when he worked with directors Claude Nuridsany and Marie Pérennou of the documentary Microcosmos. This single film, which gave a great significance to the music in it, was a great success and made Coulais one of the most wanted composers of French film music. In 1997, he won the César award for the best musical score in a film, as well as a Victoire de la Musique. His reputation was confirmed by the soundtracks to Himalaya (1999) and Les rivières pourpres (2000), and after that Bruno Coulais's name was to be found on most new French blockbusters, such as Belphégor and Vidocq.
After producing the soundtrack to Winged Migration in 2001, Coulais announced that he wanted to significantly reduce his contributions to film music, and instead concentrate on other projects, such as the creation of an opera for children, and collaborations with Akhenaton, Akhenaton's group IAM and the Corsican group A Filetta, with whom he had worked since he had made the soundtrack for Jacques Weber's film Don Juan in 1998.
In 2002, his name was found on the ending credits of the animation L'Enfant qui voulait être un ours , and in 2004, on Frédéric Schoendoerffer's Agents secrets. The same year, he wrote the soundtrack to the film Les choristes by Christophe Barratier, starring Jean-Baptiste Maunier in the lead soprano singing role, which subsequently became an international hit. The music for this film received as great praise as the film itself, and it won Coulais his third César award. The song Vois sur ton chemin was also nominated for an Academy Award (Best original song). Since then, Coulais's collaborations in cinema seem to be limited to works by directors with whom he already shares some history, in particular Jacques Perrin, Frédéric Schoendoerffer, and James Huth.
In 2009, he won at the 37th Annie Awards, in the "Music in a Feature Production" category for Coraline. ...
Source: Article "Bruno Coulais" from Wikipedia in English, licensed under CC-BY-SA.

In The Tracks Of - Special Edition

Victoires de la musique

Serial Lover

Agathe Cléry

Winged Migration

Female Agents

Microcosmos

The Secret of Kells

Secret Agents

The Last Deadly Mission

The Boy Who Wanted to Be a Bear

Hellphone

Turk's Head

The Brice Man

Ulzhan

Wolfwalkers

Les Rivières pourpres: L'enquête

Making of "la scène au scalpel"

The Second Wind

Coraline

Hard Off

Goodbye Vinyle

Lucky Luke

Maigret

Mune: Guardian of the Moon

Diary of a Chambermaid

Wendell & Wild

My Worst Nightmare

Origins of Life

The Forest Maker

Song of the Sea

Deep in the Woods

Never Ever

Balzac: A Life of Passion

Brice 3

Story of Annette Zelman

3 Hearts

Belle Maman

Ludwig II

Marry Me

The Son of the Shark

Epiphany Sunday

Hot House

Max & Co

Eva

The Man in the Basement

The Tombs

Himalaya

The Chameleon Slayer

Masaan

Sometimes in April

Winged Migration

White Fang

White Fang

Let's Be Friends

La Syndicaliste

HOUBA! On the Trail of the Marsupilami

Mama Weed

Casanova, Last Love

White as Snow

Gemma Bovery

The Field of Enchantment

Belphegor, Phantom of the Louvre

Happiness Never Comes Alone

Wolfwalkers

The Crimson Rivers

The Return of Casanova

The Magnet

Vice vertu et vice versa

Lien de parenté

Le Septième Juré

Jacqueline dans ma vitrine

Farewell, My Queen

Don Juan

The Libertine

Crime Scenes

Harrison's Flowers

All About Love

Vidocq

The Chorus

Crime Insiders

Villa Amalia

Switch

Calm at Sea

Playing Dead

Marie Curie

False Confessions

Normandy Nude

Volontaire

Meet the Malawas

Amazonia

Belle

Boléro

Summer Frost

Chevrotine

There's a Monster in My Kitchen

The Spellbound

My Journey Through French Cinema

Seasons

La rupture

Pour toi, j'ai tué

An Open Heart

Oceans

The White Planet

Genesis

Milady

Fire in Paradise

Time

Le Chambon

Old Rascal

And the Little Prince Said

Walking a Tightrope

The Secret Wife

Qui trop embrasse...
Bel ragazzo
Oiseau de sang
Nuit féline

Les Choristes in Concert

The Count of Monte Cristo

Le Peuple des forêts

Softly from Paris

The King’s Favorite

1968 - The Global Revolt

Aurore

The Accursed Kings
