Andy Hill(II)
- Music Department
- Composer
- Writer
Andy Hill was born in Chicago and studied filmmaking under Haig P.
Manoogian at New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. From
1987-1996, he served as vice-president of music production for Walt
Disney Pictures, overseeing music production on a roster of films which
included The Lion King, Beauty and the Beast, and Sister Act, and
working closely with composers and songwriters such as Alan Menken,
Howard Ashman and Hans Zimmer. Films for which Hill supervised music
under the aegis of the Disney music department have earned nine Academy
Awards in music categories. Subsequent to his term at Disney, Hill
opened Andy Hill Film + Music under the auspices of Modern Music and
supervised projects which included Message In A Bottle, Ed Wood, James
and the Giant Peach and Happy Feet, winning a Grammy Award in 2000 as
producer of the Best Musical Album for Children for Elmo In Grouchland.
In 2003, Hill began offering summer scoring workshops via the Los Angeles extension of Columbia College Chicago, and this led in 2006 to his appointment as director of the college's first full MFA program, Music Composition for the Screen. The boutique program graduated more than 50 composers and became a pioneer in the use of post-graduate professional internships as an entrée to the highly competitive world of motion picture scoring. In 2011, he was engaged to oversee preparation and launch of a similar program, Scoring for Film, TV and Videogames, for the international campus of the Berklee College of Music in Valencia, Spain. There, Hill developed professional relationships with leading Spanish film composers such as Alberto Iglesias and Javier Navarrete. This established a base in Europe, and in 2013, he formed Cinemuse VOF for music supervision and production services and affiliated himself with the Galaxy Studio Group in Mol, Belgium, where he now serves as executive soundtrack producer and pilots the post-production facility's drive to develop international business in scoring.
Hill continues to compose, produce, and supervise music for film and other media. He has also authored a trilogy of "metaphysical detective novels," the "Stephan Raszer Investigations," published by Carroll & Graf and Counterpoint Press. The first of these, "Enoch's Portal," was optioned by Paramount Studios and Alphaville for director Alex Proyas, but has not been produced.
In 2003, Hill began offering summer scoring workshops via the Los Angeles extension of Columbia College Chicago, and this led in 2006 to his appointment as director of the college's first full MFA program, Music Composition for the Screen. The boutique program graduated more than 50 composers and became a pioneer in the use of post-graduate professional internships as an entrée to the highly competitive world of motion picture scoring. In 2011, he was engaged to oversee preparation and launch of a similar program, Scoring for Film, TV and Videogames, for the international campus of the Berklee College of Music in Valencia, Spain. There, Hill developed professional relationships with leading Spanish film composers such as Alberto Iglesias and Javier Navarrete. This established a base in Europe, and in 2013, he formed Cinemuse VOF for music supervision and production services and affiliated himself with the Galaxy Studio Group in Mol, Belgium, where he now serves as executive soundtrack producer and pilots the post-production facility's drive to develop international business in scoring.
Hill continues to compose, produce, and supervise music for film and other media. He has also authored a trilogy of "metaphysical detective novels," the "Stephan Raszer Investigations," published by Carroll & Graf and Counterpoint Press. The first of these, "Enoch's Portal," was optioned by Paramount Studios and Alphaville for director Alex Proyas, but has not been produced.