Debbie Wiseman OBE

b. 1963

British

Summary

An award-winning composer of music for stage and screen, Debbie Wiseman’s music is distinguished by its ability to capture emotion and character in an instant. In addition to more than 200 credits for film and television and concert works for audiences of all ages, she has composed music for royal occasions and in her capacity as Composer in Residence at Classic FM. Wiseman is the recipient of the British Academy of Composers and Songwriters' Gold Badge of Merit, a Fellow of the Royal College of Music and, in 2018, was awarded an OBE for services to music. Among her works published by Chester Music are settings of Oscar Wilde’s fairy tales (The Devoted Friend, The Nightingale and the Rose, The Selfish Giant), an introduction to the orchestra for young audiences (Different Voices), orchestral suites inspired by astrology and horticulture (The Musical Zodiac, The Glorious Garden) and Carnival of the Endangered Animals, a 21st century sequel to Saint-Saens’ classic.

Biography

One of the UK’s most successful female music ambassadors, Debbie Wiseman is in demand as a composer and conductor.

Throughout the past 20 years, there are probably few people in the UK who have not heard a theme from one of Debbie’s films or television productions. Whether it is watching Stephen Fry bring to life Oscar Wilde for the big screen, hearing the latest political commentary on a Sunday morning with Andrew Marr, or revelling in the Tudor world of Thomas Cromwell in ‘Wolf Hall’, Wiseman has gifted us iconic themes of beauty and passion, love and laughter.

Her credits, over 200 of them, for the big and small screen, include Wolf Hall, Edie, The Whale, Flood, Warrious, Judge John Deed, Wilde, Haunted, Othello, Land Girls, Joanna Lumley’s Mile, Tom & Viv, Jeckyll, The Inspector Lynley Mysteries, The Passion, The Guilty, Before You Go, Arsene Lupin, He Knew He Was Right, Tom’s Midnight Garden, Lost Christmas, Stephen Fry in America, WPC 56, the Promise, A Poet in New York, The Andrew Marr Show, Father Brown, the Coroner, Shakespeare and Hathaway andDickensian.
 
Debbie has been nominated for two Ivor Novello Awards, for Wildeand Death of Yugoslavia, won a TRIC Award for The Good Guys and an RTS Award for Warriors. In 2016 she was awarded the Best Composer, Drama award for Wolf Hall at the RTS West Awards. She has been awarded the Gold Badge of Merit by the British Academy of Composers & Songwriters.

Debbie is a Visiting Professor at the Royal College of Music in London and regularly gives masterclasses to schools and colleges about the art of composing music for picture. She has composed a new 'Young Person’s Guide to the Orchestra' called Different Voices, which has been performed by school and youth orchestras across the UK. Her album of music to accompany the fairy stories of Oscar Wilde – Wilde Stories, on the Warner Classics and Jazz label – was nominated for a Grammy Award and was then made into a trilogy of animated films for Channel 4 television.

Debbie’s score for Wilde is regularly voted into the top 40 of Classic FM’s Top 100 Movie Music Chart by the station’s listeners. A suite of her music from the film was included in the Great British Film Music Prom concert at the Albert Hall.

As well as her composing work, Debbie appears in concert halls across the country conducting her film scores,and has been a regular guest conductor at the Royal Albert Hall’s annual Filmharmonic concert as well as appearing at the 2014 Cordoba International Cinema Music Festival, becoming the first female conductor in the history of the event. She has also appeared as an expert guest on the BBC broadcasts of The Proms.

Debbie is a regular presence on BBC Radio 3 and 4. She presented a Radio 4 programme on the composer Joseph Horovitz and, in 2013, presented Scoring Father Brown for Radio 4, which followed her process of composing the score for the BBC TV series. In 2014 Debbie was Kirsty Young’s guest on Desert Island Discs and, in 2015, Debbie presented Same Tune, Different Song on Radio 4, as well as a two-hour special of her favourite music on Radio 3’s Saturday Classics.

In 2004 Debbie was honoured in the Queen’s New Year’s Honours list with an MBE for services to the music and film industry and, in 2018, was awarded the OBE for services to music in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list. She was awarded Honorary Fellowships at both colleges where she studied, Trinity College of Music and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, and an Honorary Doctorate at the University of Sussex. In 2020 she was made a Fellow of the Royal College of Music.

Debbie was one of 11 composers chosen to compose music for the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee Pageant in June 2012 when she conducted her movement of New Water Music on The Georgian barge. In 2016 she was commissioned to compose the Overture and Finale music for the Queen’s 90th Birthday Celebration.

Since 2016, Debbie has been Classic FM’s Composer in Residence and has written and recorded several albums for the station. The Musical Zodiac was released in 2016 and was followed by The Glorious Garden, a collaboration with gardener, writer and presenter Alan Titchmarsh, which topped the UK Classical Chart for three weeks.

For more information visit www.debbiewiseman.co.uk or follow her on Twitter @wisemandebbie.

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