Northwest Vision and Media, create the bigger picture
The Northwest is Alive with the Sound of Music!
RICHARD Bodgers always knew he wanted to be a composer.
From the age of nine. It’s not every kid who can claim that.
But Richard can.
And it’s not everyone who can claim to have
composed music for global advertising campaigns and computer games,
such as Sony Erickson, Lemsip and Tomb Raider.
And how many musicians can boast that their music eventually found
its way on to top-rated TV like Lost and Desperate
Housewives, via the EMI music library?
Richard can count himself among that elite band, too. He’s
also written the music for over 1,100 TV commercials.
“I guess you could say I’ve been pretty busy!”
smiles Richard, 34, sitting in the recording studio he’s
creating in his Stockport home, which he shares with wife, Julie,
and children Joshua, six and eight-month-old Charlotte.
Since launching his own company, Theme, 11 years ago,
Richard’s business has gone from strength to strength.
It’s about to enter a new phase, with the introduction of an
on-line, royalty-free, music library.
“I’m setting up an on-line library in the next month or
so, which will be a complete library of all my music – around
1,200 clips, which is increasing all the time as I add music from
other composers, all cleared for use anywhere in the world.
I’m really, seriously excited about this new venture,”
he says.
“I hand out library CDs and people are emailing every week
saying they want a certain piece of music from the CD, but with the
on-line library I’ll be able to show them say 10 examples of
music, and they can pick which suits them.”
And this month, Richard has also been awarded the accolade of being
named Crew Of The Month by Northwest Vision and Media.
“This year has been my best year ever, there’s not been
a week when I haven’t had work, and the phone is ringing all
the time with people wanting to buy my music,” says Richard.
“It’s great to know that people like what I’m
doing, and being awarded Crew of the Month is another brilliant
bonus.”
Music has always played a part in Richard’s life. He first
started writing his own songs when he was nine, and just a few
years later set up his first band.
“I was always a musician, the sort who played by ear as well
as being trained,” he explains. “At school we started a
rock band, which everyone loved, especially the roadies –
because they had an excuse to get out of lessons!”
Richard then went on to study at Huddersfield University – as
a concert pianist. Within a year, however, he realized he
wasn’t concert pianist material.
“My nerves were terrible,” he confides. “I
couldn’t cope with the pressure of performing. Added to that,
I had so many hand strains and injuries, because you had to
practice for five or six hours a day.”
Fortunately for Richard, however, the course he changed to was to
carve out his future career – composing music for film and
TV.
“I was able to apply the technical knowledge I had to an
electronic format, which was brilliant . I got some fantastic
results,” says Richard. And it’s those fantastic
results which are now so much in demand by the TV world.
Particularly commercials.
“When I started Theme in 1996, I began by putting my
knowledge of writing rock songs to orchestral pieces. From there, I
got a show reel of my music together showing the huge variety of
styles I had,” explains Richard.
Getting his first big break wasn’t easy, but Richard was
persistent, constantly knocking on doors.
“I became the most mythering sod you could ever meet! And I
soon got over the ‘I’m sorry to bother you’
feeling – this was my business and I needed it to work.
Besides, I knew that if I didn’t keep reminding people who I
was and what I did, then they’d soon forget me,” he
says.
Once agencies and production companies began to remember his name,
however, they kept coming back for more of Richard’s
wonderful works.
“The whole thing just snowballed really, I didn’t know
what was happening! I was doing something that I loved, something I
was good at, and people were paying me for doing it. – not
always on time, but they were paying!” he laughs.
Richard’s first big break came when he won a contract with
Time Computers, who were so impressed with the music he composed
for their TV adverts, that they kept him in work with additional
projects for over a year.
To date, Richard’s recorded music for around 1,100
commercials such as Toyota, Mercedes, Alton Towers and Vidal
Sassoon. He’s also composed music for several art house
films, some of which have gone on to win awards.
When necessary, he books studio space, but usually he works alone,
at home, in the fully digital, analogue recording studio he’s
built up from scratch. “I have the same sort of set up that
modern day film composers use. The sounds are top quality, film
score sounds, on a small basis,” he says.
With so much experience in commercials, Richard is used to
second-guessing what production companies want. “Creatively
speaking they want a piece of music by say, Jimi Hendrix, which
would cost them £30,000 but they come to me instead and offer
me £3,000 to do a Jimi Hendrix sound-alike piece!” he
says.
Richard is given a brief to follow. Although as he confides:
“Music is usually the last thing on their mind, so sometimes
you get an almost finished version of an advert or a TV programme,
and they usually have a specific idea about the sort of sound they
want, which I give them. But if I’ve got the time and a
better idea, I give them my version as well, and more often than
not they go with my version!” he says.
One of the highlights of his career, he says, was working as
musical director at Manchester’s Library Theatre in 2000,
composing the original scores for Angels in America and
The Glass Menagerie. “It was the best experience
I’ve had so far,” he says.
“I was able to leave my studio and get out there for eight
weeks, sit down at a grand piano and have the cast around me
learning their lines, and the director telling me what he wanted,
and I composed the music for their plays. I also got to work with
humans for 12 months, which was fantastic, if a little
grueling!
“It was the nearest thing I’ve done to composing a film
score, and it’s made me really want to do a feature film in
the near future.”
Although he still does commercials, Richard admits he’s ready
for the next challenge. “A thirty second commercial only has
so much to offer,” he says, which is why Richard has now set
his sights on film.
“In my 10 year plan I wanted to meet directors of commercials
who would eventually become film directors. But it hasn’t
quite happened like that because those directors are still
directing commercials! But I’m working on it!” says
Richard.
And when Richard sets his mind to something, he usually makes it
happen. So keep an ear to the ground – for the sound of
something very special coming to a film score soon.
Contact Theme Music
To access Richard’s on-line music library, visit his website
www.thememusic.net or
telephone 0161 432 3113 and 07976 605 682.





