CBS’ The Late Late Show With James Corden might not be airing new episodes anymore, but the music lives on: The house band for the show was among the honorees at this week’s Film and Television Composer Awards.
The awards are presented annually by Sesac, one of the nation’s three leading performing-rights organizations. This year’s event was held Thursday in Santa Monica, and honors composers and publishers for their music in network, cable, streaming and local TV.
Among the award recipients were Late Late Show band members and composers Reggie Watts, Hagar Ben-Ari, Guillermo Brown, Steven Scalfati and Tim Young.
Corden announced in 2022 that 2023 would be his final year for The Late Late Show. The series finale aired on April 27; the show is currently airing reruns.
Other Sesac honorees this year were François Hasden (48 Hours), Danny Lux and Gabriel Mann.
Also receiving awards were:
Nathalie Bonin (Women Warriors: The Voices of Change) Devin Powers (Beyond the Edge) Evan Frankfort Jason Derlatka, Jon Ehrlich (The Resident) Paul Buckley (Odd Squad)
For a complete list of winners, visit the Sesac website.
The awards are presented annually by Sesac, one of the nation’s three leading performing-rights organizations. This year’s event was held Thursday in Santa Monica, and honors composers and publishers for their music in network, cable, streaming and local TV.
Among the award recipients were Late Late Show band members and composers Reggie Watts, Hagar Ben-Ari, Guillermo Brown, Steven Scalfati and Tim Young.
Corden announced in 2022 that 2023 would be his final year for The Late Late Show. The series finale aired on April 27; the show is currently airing reruns.
Other Sesac honorees this year were François Hasden (48 Hours), Danny Lux and Gabriel Mann.
Also receiving awards were:
Nathalie Bonin (Women Warriors: The Voices of Change) Devin Powers (Beyond the Edge) Evan Frankfort Jason Derlatka, Jon Ehrlich (The Resident) Paul Buckley (Odd Squad)
For a complete list of winners, visit the Sesac website.
- 6/2/2023
- by Greg Evans
- Deadline Film + TV
Surprises dotted the visual media categories at Tuesday morning’s Grammy Awards nomination announcements, with television dominating the original-score category but new movies ruling the compilation-soundtrack list.
As expected, H.E.R. was nominated for best song written for visual media for “Fight for You” from “Judas and the Black Messiah,” which won the Oscar earlier this year. Her fellow Oscar nominee, Leslie Odom Jr.’s “Speak Now” from “One Night in Miami,” was also nominated.
H.E.R. and her fellow “Fight for You” songwriters Dernst Emile II (aka D’Mile) and Tiara Thomas also notched a song of the year nomination, and H.E.R. earned a nod in the traditional R&b performance category for that song.
Three of the six song nominees were from television projects: the Emmy-winning “Agatha All Along” from “WandaVision,” “All Eyes on Me” from “Inside Bo Burnham” and “All I Know So Far” from the Pink documentary by that title.
As expected, H.E.R. was nominated for best song written for visual media for “Fight for You” from “Judas and the Black Messiah,” which won the Oscar earlier this year. Her fellow Oscar nominee, Leslie Odom Jr.’s “Speak Now” from “One Night in Miami,” was also nominated.
H.E.R. and her fellow “Fight for You” songwriters Dernst Emile II (aka D’Mile) and Tiara Thomas also notched a song of the year nomination, and H.E.R. earned a nod in the traditional R&b performance category for that song.
Three of the six song nominees were from television projects: the Emmy-winning “Agatha All Along” from “WandaVision,” “All Eyes on Me” from “Inside Bo Burnham” and “All I Know So Far” from the Pink documentary by that title.
- 11/23/2021
- by Jon Burlingame
- Variety Film + TV
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