May 1st, 2024

Composer Hans Zimmer is bringing his blockbuster-inspired live shows to Canada

By Sonja Puzic, The Canadian Press on March 14, 2024.

Award-winning composer and music producer Hans Zimmer, shown in a handout photo, is bringing his high-energy live shows to Canada. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Frank Embacher **MANDATORY CREDIT**

Oscar-winning German composer Hans Zimmer has produced some of Hollywood’s best-known film scores, written countless pieces of music and recently put on sold-out live shows across Europe.

But decades into his illustrious career, he says the same fleeting thought still enters his mind every time he walks towards the stage: “It’s going to be a disaster. I am going to fail.”

The idea that something might go “horribly, horribly wrong” is borne out of stage fright that everyone has, Zimmer said in an interview from New York.

“But ultimately, the experience of making the connection with all those people “¦ is so much more rewarding and so much more wonderful in a very different way than making a movie. The movie only works once,” said the 66-year-old, who won his second Academy Award for his work on Quebec director Denis Villeneuve’s “Dune.”

“I can’t help it,” Zimmer said. “I have to put on a show.”

He is bringing the high-energy Hans Zimmer Live tour to North America later this year, including stops in three Canadian cities.

It will kick off in Duluth, Ga., on Sept. 6 and end in Vancouver on Oct. 6. There will also be stops in Montreal on Sept. 17 and Toronto on Sept. 19.

Zimmer’s band and the orchestra will perform a selection of some of his most beloved scores, including music from blockbusters “Gladiator,” “The Lion King,” “Pirates of the Caribbean,” “The Dark Knight,” “Interstellar” ““ and of course, “Dune.”

He said the shows will feature “extraordinary” musicians who make up what he believes to be “the best band in the world” right now.

“I have about as much stagecraft as a dead lobster. They know what they’re doing,” Zimmer said. “I just treat the whole thing as if it was a dinner party.”

Zimmer, whose work also earned him four Grammys, said he was partly driven to live performances after his friends “badgered” him about spending his career in a dark room, behind a computer screen. But he also wanted to see if the music he created for the big screen could “stand on its own two feet,” which is why not a single movie frame is featured in the shows.

“It’s very much a rock ‘n’ roll attitude,” Zimmer said of the tour, noting that the music moves audiences differently, depending on the generation ““ and location.

“I look out and I see a grandma with her grandson sitting next to a punk with a mohawk, sitting next to a guy in a business suit, sitting next to two little girls. And it’s fabulous because it means something different to everybody who was there.”

Zimmer said he’s especially thrilled about the upcoming tour dates in Canada.

“What I love about Canadian audiences is: You’re polite. Until I unleash you. And then you guys go crazy,” he said. “And I love that.”

Zimmer recalled performing “two very sort of average shows” years ago and then heading to Montreal, where the reception was very different.

“It was like, whoa “¦ hold on to your hat,” he said. “It was absolutely brilliant.”

Zimmer’s affinity for Canada is also rooted in his successful collaborations with Villeneuve. The composer also created the score for the recently released “Dune: Part Two” and is poised to keep writing more music for an anticipated third instalment of the sci-fi franchise.

“Do you ever get to do things with your best friend? That’s what it’s like (working with Villeneuve),” Zimmer said.

“It’s impossible to describe music, and it’s impossible to describe some of the images he’s creating. So I just start playing “¦ and sometimes I get from him: “˜Oh, yeah, that’s sort of what I heard in my head.'”

In a way, Zimmer has a similar relationship with his live audiences, describing them as his music collaborators and “co-conspirators.”

“We’re figuring out in this crazy language of music that doesn’t need words, that we can connect in an extraordinary way,” he said.

Tickets for the Hans Zimmer Live tour in U.S. and Canada, presented by Semmel Concerts and Concerts West, go on sale March 22 at http://www.hanszimmerlive.com.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 14, 2024.

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