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Michael Abels
Michael Abels
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Michael Abels (born October 8, 1962) is an American composer best known for the opera Omar, co-written with Rhiannon Giddens, and his scores for the Jordan Peele films Get Out, Us and Nope. The hip-hop influenced score for Us was short-listed for the Oscars and was even named "Score of the Decade" by TheWrap. Other recent media projects include the films Bad Education, Nightbooks, Fake Famous, and the docu-series Allen v. Farrow. His most recent releases include Beauty which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival and is now streaming on Netflix, Breaking (formerly 892) which premiered at Sundance, and his third collaboration with Jordan Peele, Nope.

Key Information

Abels' works also includes many concert works, such as At War With Ourselves for the Kronos Quartet,[1] Isolation Variation for Hilary Hahn, and the opera Omar co-composed with Grammy-winning singer/songwriter Rhiannon Giddens.[2][3] Some of these pieces are available on the Cedille Records, including Delights & Dances and Winged Creatures. Recent commissions include a work for the National Symphony Orchestra and a guitar concerto for Mak Grgić.[4]

Abels is co-founder of the Composers Diversity Collective, an advocacy group to increase visibility of composers of color in film, gaming and streaming media.[5]

In 2023, the opera Omar, co-written by Abels and Rhiannon Giddens, won the Pulitzer Prize for Music.[6]

Early life

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Abels was born in Phoenix, Arizona. He spent his early years on a small farm in South Dakota, where he lived with his grandparents.[7] Introduced to music via the family piano, he began showing an innate curiosity towards music at age 4.[8] His music-loving grandparents convinced the local piano teacher to take him on as a student despite his age. At age 8, Abels began composing music, and by age 13, his first completed orchestral work was performed.[9]

Upon graduating from high school, Abels attended the University of Southern California Thornton School of Music in Los Angeles. Abels, who is mixed race,[7] eventually studied West African drumming techniques at California Institute of the Arts, and sang in a predominantly black church choir to further explore his African-American roots.[10]

Filmography

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Composer

Additional music

Other works

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  • Global Warming (1990) (commissioned by the Phoenix Youth Symphony)
  • I'm Determined (1991) for orchestra
  • How Majestic (1992) for orchestra
  • American Variations on Swing Low Sweet Chariot (1993) (premiered by Doc Severinsen and the Phoenix Symphony)
  • Frederick's Fables (1994, 1996) four pieces for orchestra, based on selected stories of Leo Lionni
  • Dance for Martin's Dream (1998) for orchestra (commissioned by the Houston Symphony and the Nashville Symphony)
  • You're a Grand Old Flag (1995) for orchestra
  • More Seasons (1999)
  • Limitless (2000) for choir, or soloist with choral accompaniment, and piano
  • Homies & Popz (2001) opera
  • Tribute (2001) for orchestra
  • Affectionate Objects (2004) for orchestra
  • Outburst (2005) for orchestra
  • Delights & Dances (2007) for string quartet and orchestra[11]
  • Urban Legends (2008) for string quartet and orchestra (commissioned by the Sphinx Organization)
  • Aquadia (2009) for orchestra (co-commissioned by the Chicago Sinfonietta and the Shedd Aquarium)
  • Be the Change (2015) for choir, or soloist with choral accompaniment, and piano
  • The Open Hand
  • Victory Road (2017) for orchestra
  • Iconoclasm (2017) for piano
  • Liquify (2017) for orchestra
  • Twilight Drive for piano
  • Winged Creatures (2018) for flute, clarinet and orchestra (commissioned by Cedille Records[12]) written for Anthony and Demarre McGill
  • Pensivity for piano
  • Life in a Day
  • Struck by Enlightenment
  • Falling Sky (for concert band) (2019)
  • Falling Sky, ballet (2020)
  • Anguish (from Falling Sky) (2020) for piano
  • Gift of the Machine (2020)
  • Isolation Variation (2020) for unaccompanied violin (for Hillary Hahn)
  • At War with Ourselves, oratorio - libretto by Nikky Finney, commissioned for the Kronos Quartet
  • Omar, an original opera on the life of Omar ibn Said co-composed by Rhiannon Giddens[13]
  • Get Out, in concert (2020)
  • Emerge (2021) for orchestra (co-commission from Detroit Symphony Orchestra)
  • Guitar Concerto "Borders" (2022) Commissioned by ROCO & Quad City Symphony, written for Mak Grgić

Awards and nominations

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Year Award Category Nominated work Result
2017 Fright Meter Awards Best Score Get Out Nominated
World Soundtrack Awards Discovery of the Year Nominated
International Online Cinema Awards Best Original Score Won
2018 International Film Music Critics Awards Best Original Score for a Fantasy/Science Fiction/Horror Film Nominated
Black Reel Awards Outstanding Score Won
2019 Washington DC Area Film Critics Association Award Best Original Score Us Won
World Soundtrack Awards Discovery of the Year Won
Indiana Film Journalists Association Best Musical Score Won
Greater Western New York Film Critics Association Awards Best Score Nominated
Chicago Film Critics Association Award Best Original Score Nominated
Phoenix Critics Circle Best Score Nominated
Seattle Film Critics Society Awards Best Original Score Nominated
Hollywood Music in Media Awards Best Original Score- Horror Film Won
Fright Meter Awards Best Score Won
2020 51st NAACP Image Award Outstanding Soundtrack/Compilation Album Nominated
Critics Choice Awards Best Score Nominated
Black Reel Award Outstanding Score Won
Latino Entertainment Journalists Association Film Award Best Music Nominated
Music City Film Critics' Association Award Best Score Nominated
North Carolina Film Critics Association Best Music Nominated
Online Film & Television Association, OFTA Film Award Best Music, Original Score Nominated
Society of Composers and Lyricists Awards Outstanding Original Score for a Studio Film Nominated
Austin Film Critics Association Awards Best Score Nominated
International Film Music Critics Award Best Original Score for a Fantasy/Science Fiction/Horror Film Nominated
Central Ohio Film Critics Association Best Score Won
Chicago Independent Film Critics Circle Award Best Original Score Won
Georgia Film Critics Association Original Score Nominated
Gold Derby Awards Original Score Nominated
Hawaii Film Critics Society Best Original Score Nominated
Hollywood Critics Association Best Score Nominated
Houston Film Critics Society Awards Best Original Score Nominated
Online Film Critics Society Awards Best Original Score Won
2021 73rd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards Outstanding Original Score for a Documentary Series or Special (Original Dramatic Score) Allen v. Farrow Nominated
73rd Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music Allen v. Farrow Nominated
2023 Pulitzer Prize Music Omar Won
2025 56th NAACP Image Awards Outstanding Original Score for Television/Motion Picture The Acolyte Won
56th NAACP Image Awards Outstanding Original Score for Television/Motion Picture The American Society of Magical Negroes Nominated

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Michael Abels is an American composer renowned for his genre-defying film scores, particularly for director Jordan Peele's Get Out (2017), Us (2019), and Nope (2022), as well as for co-composing the opera Omar with Rhiannon Giddens, which won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Music.
Born in Phoenix, Arizona, and raised in rural South Dakota by his grandparents, Abels began piano lessons at a young age and developed an early interest in composition. He studied composition at the University of Southern California under James Hopkins and Robert Linn, and later pursued studies in West African music at the California Institute of the Arts.
Abels' breakthrough in film scoring came with Get Out, blending orchestral elements with electronic and spiritual influences to underscore themes of racial tension, earning acclaim for its innovative sound design; his work on Us secured a World Soundtrack Award and an Academy Award shortlist nomination. Earlier in his career, he composed orchestral pieces such as Global Warming (1991), which has received over 200 performances, and Delights and Dances (1992), establishing his reputation in contemporary classical music. Abels has also contributed scores to television series like Star Wars: The Acolyte and received Emmy nominations for his broader oeuvre.

Early life and education

Childhood and early musical exposure

Michael Abels was born in Phoenix, Arizona, and relocated as a young child to his grandparents' farm in rural South Dakota, where he was raised amid a landscape of sheep, cornfields, and relative isolation from urban cultural centers. This sparse environment, lacking immediate access to extensive musical institutions, shaped his initial encounters with music through family resources and personal exploration rather than structured programs. Abels' earliest musical exposure came via the family piano on the farm, where he began playing independently around age 4, demonstrating an innate curiosity toward sound and melody. His grandparents, recognizing this interest, arranged for local piano lessons despite his tender age, as teachers were initially reluctant to accept such a young pupil in the remote setting. These lessons, conducted with limited professional infrastructure available in rural South Dakota, emphasized self-directed practice and basic technique over advanced pedagogy. By age 8, Abels had progressed to composing his first pieces, drawing from accessible influences like recordings of heard in preschool years, which sparked his engagement with melody and orchestration concepts through direct, unmediated listening. This phase highlighted self-driven initiative, as the farm's seclusion necessitated reliance on household instruments and sporadic media rather than communal ensembles or urban performances, fostering an independent creative process grounded in immediate surroundings.

Formal training and development

Abels enrolled at the University of Southern California's Thornton School of Music to study composition, initially intending to build on his piano background while transitioning to writing music. There, he worked under faculty members James Hopkins and Robert Linn, focusing on technical aspects of orchestration and form that formed the foundation of his professional output. He completed his bachelor's degree in 1984, earning designation as the outstanding senior composer among his peers, a recognition reflecting proficiency in crafting cohesive ensemble pieces. Post-graduation, Abels refined his skills through targeted exploration of non-Western traditions, including Western African music at the California Institute of the Arts, which informed his blending of rhythmic complexity into orchestral structures. This phase yielded early commissions demonstrating advanced control over choral and symphonic elements, such as the gospel-prelude for chorus composed between 1991 and 1992, emphasizing layered vocal textures without reliance on external narratives. His orchestral work Global Warming (1991), premiered amid post-Cold War optimism, marked a milestone in sustaining large-scale forms with thematic cohesion, performed by ensembles like the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. These pieces evidenced progression from academic exercises to independent works capable of engaging professional performers, prioritizing structural rigor over stylistic experimentation.

Professional career

Early classical compositions and orchestral works

Abels began producing orchestral works in the early 1990s, with Global Warming (1991), an orchestral poem commissioned and premiered by the Phoenix Youth Symphony. The piece employs layered textures and dynamic contrasts to evoke momentum, drawing on precise orchestration techniques that build tension through accelerating rhythms and brass fanfares, independent of its titular inspiration from geopolitical shifts. Subsequent works like I'm Determined (1991) and How Majestic (1992) for orchestra further showcased his command of symphonic form, utilizing idiomatic string writing and percussive drives to achieve structural cohesion without reliance on external narratives. By the 2000s, Abels expanded his output to over 20 orchestral pieces, emphasizing rhythmic propulsion and timbral variety derived from American vernacular influences such as blues and jazz, integrated via causal motivic development rather than superficial pastiche. Delights & Dances (2007), commissioned by the Sphinx Organization for its tenth anniversary and premiered at Carnegie Hall with the Harlem Quartet, exemplifies this through its septet-concerto format, where syncopated ostinatos and idiomatic solo interactions generate infectious momentum across movements. The work's technical demands on ensemble coordination, including polyrhythmic overlays and coloristic woodwind effects, were validated by subsequent performances from groups like the Chicago Sinfonietta, highlighting orchestration efficacy over programmatic intent. Commissions from youth and chamber ensembles underscored the viability of these innovations in live settings, prioritizing audible clarity and performer feasibility.

Transition to film and media scoring

Abels, having established a three-decade career in orchestral and choral composition following his 1984 graduation from the University of Southern California, initially pursued opportunities in film scoring without success, focusing instead on concert works and educational roles, such as heading the music department at a Santa Monica private school. By the mid-2010s, his portfolio of symphonic pieces, including the concerto Urban Legends, gained visibility through online platforms like YouTube, attracting attention from filmmakers seeking distinctive orchestral voices grounded in empirical craftsmanship rather than established industry connections. This merit-based discovery marked the pivotal entry into media scoring, as his pre-existing recordings demonstrated the technical proficiency needed for large ensembles under constrained timelines. The shift demanded rapid adaptation from the autonomy of concert composition—where cues emerge from abstract concepts—to the precision of synchronizing music with visual narratives and director feedback, a process Abels approached by applying his conducting experience to dissect temporary tracks and iterate scores efficiently. His orchestral expertise facilitated practical problem-solving, such as aligning rhythmic structures to on-screen action while preserving structural integrity, evidenced in early media cues that prioritized causal alignment with plot beats over purely artistic elaboration. This transition, occurring without prior incidental or television work, underscored the value of verifiable compositional output in securing Hollywood entry, bypassing traditional networking in favor of demonstrable skill.

Major film collaborations

Abels first collaborated with director Jordan Peele on the score for Get Out (2017), pioneering a "gospel horror" approach that fused familiar African-American spirituals with dissonant distortions and Swahili-language chants to generate unease rooted in cultural recognition subverted by threat. The opening cue, "Sikiliza Kwa Wahenga" ("Listen to the Ancestors"), deploys choral African-American voices alongside harp glissandi, atypical percussion strikes, and string sustains to convey ghostly ancestral warnings, causally amplifying the protagonist's escalating peril by layering auditory premonitions that parallel the plot's hypnosis-induced hypnosis and bodily invasion mechanics. In Us (2019), Abels extended motifs from Get Out—such as recurring choral swells—into a post-modern orchestral framework emphasizing thematic duality, where a gothic anthem for the tethered family unit employs layered strings and brass fanfares to underscore identity fractures, driving narrative causality by sonically binding surface normalcy to subterranean violence through escalating harmonic tension. Abels' score for Nope (2022), Peele's third film with him, utilized a full orchestra blending adventurous brass motifs with dissonant woodwind clusters and percussive anomalies to propel spectacle as a causal force in the story's UFO predation arc, where vocal choir interjections heighten the ranch siblings' confrontations with the unknown by mimicking extraterrestrial mimicry and human hubris in rhythmic escalation. For the HBO series Lovecraft Country (2020), Abels provided select musical contributions amid its episodic structure, adapting orchestral palettes to shift between historical dread and eldritch incursions, with versatile string and percussion cues facilitating causal transitions from 1950s racial terror to cosmic horror without fixed thematic anchors.

Opera and recent concert works

Abels co-composed the opera Omar with Rhiannon Giddens in 2022, with Giddens also authoring the libretto based on the 1831 autobiography of Omar Ibn Said, a Senegalese Muslim scholar enslaved in the American South after his capture in 1807. The work premiered on June 3 at the Spoleto Festival USA in Charleston, South Carolina, where Abels handled the orchestration to support the narrative's historical realism, integrating folk-inspired melodies with orchestral forces to evoke the protagonist's experiences without heavy stylization. Omar won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Music, recognizing its portrayal of identity preservation through writing amid enslavement. Subsequent stagings of Omar took place at the Los Angeles Opera in November 2022, Carolina Performing Arts in February 2024, Boston Lyric Opera in April 2024, and San Francisco Opera in fall 2024, each production maintaining the opera's focus on Said's faith, literacy, and forced labor under enslavement. Abels' orchestral contributions, scored for full symphony including percussion evoking African rhythms, underscore the libretto's direct engagement with primary sources like Said's manuscript, prioritizing causal fidelity to 19th-century events over operatic exaggeration. Post-2020, Abels has pursued orchestral commissions emphasizing structural innovation in concert formats. Named Composer-in-Residence for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra's 2025–2026 season, he premiered Unbound—a 20-minute work for orchestra exploring thematic liberation—on October 9–11, 2025, under Music Director Jader Bignamini in Orchestra Hall. The residency continues with Frederick's Fables on February 28, 2026, a narrated orchestral suite drawn from Leo Lionni's children's stories, blending illustrative scoring with live storytelling for family audiences. Earlier, in May 2024, the DSO performed Abels' More Seasons, a 25-minute postmodern remix of Antonio Vivaldi's The Four Seasons incorporating humorous distortions and contemporary idioms to recontextualize Baroque concertos. Abels has adapted select film scores for standalone concert presentations, translating screen-synchronized cues into autonomous orchestral experiences. For instance, Get Out in Concert features his score from Jordan Peele's 2017 film, performed with projected visuals by ensembles such as the National Symphony Orchestra in 2018 and San Francisco Symphony in 2019, where Abels conducted to highlight the music's suspenseful motifs independent of cinematic timing. These adaptations demonstrate the scores' structural self-sufficiency, with motifs like the "Sunken Place" theme sustaining tension through harmonic progression alone in the hall.

Compositional style and techniques

Core elements and innovations

Abels' compositions often feature an eclectic integration of orchestral textures with rhythms from popular and vernacular traditions, such as blues, jazz, and bluegrass, which manifests in heightened polyphonic density through layered string, wind, and percussion ensembles alongside syncopated ostinati. This approach generates timbral shifts via rapid sectional contrasts—alternating sustained bowed strings with pizzicato or muted brass interruptions—that perceptually disrupt auditory continuity, fostering a sense of textural instability measurable in score reductions by the superposition of disparate metric grids, as seen in orchestral works where up to four rhythmic strata overlap within a single measure. A signature innovation appears in Abels' "gospel horror" technique, particularly in film scoring, where familiar gospel chord progressions and call-response patterns are acoustically distorted through detuned voicings, whispered vocal incantations in non-Western scales (e.g., Swahili-derived phrases), and amplified low-frequency sustains blended with high-register dissonances. These manipulations exploit principles of auditory roughness, wherein inharmonic partials from detuned intervals produce beating frequencies around 20-50 Hz, perceptually registering as tactile unease rather than melodic tension, evident in hypnosis sequences where layered choral sustains deviate from just intonation by semitonal clusters. In classical forms, Abels incorporates structural remixing by embedding rhythmic surprises—such as metric elisions or hemiola insertions—within dance-like movements, prioritizing percussive articulations over motivic development to yield unpredictable pulse hierarchies that engage listener entrainment through violations of established groove expectations. This is quantifiable in scores like Delights and Dances, where binary forms yield to ternary overlays, shifting timbral focus via instrumental substitutions (e.g., harp glissandi interrupting woodwind runs) to create perceptual accents independent of harmonic progression.

Influences and genre blending

Abels' early exposure to African American musical traditions, including gospel and spirituals, profoundly shaped his integration of vernacular elements into concert and film works, as he has credited these ancestral influences for informing his rhythmic and melodic vocabulary following his composition studies at the University of Southern California. This foundation manifests in pieces like Global Warming (1991), where folk motifs from Irish and Arabic traditions are layered into orchestral textures to underscore thematic contrasts, reflecting a deliberate causal link between cultural source materials and symphonic form. In his genre-blending approach, Abels fuses these roots with orchestral classical frameworks, drawing on popular music's accessibility to expand symphonic expression, evident in works such as Delights & Dances that incorporate dance-like rhythms akin to ragtime and habanera into broader ensemble writing. For film scoring, this evolves into hybrid styles like "gospel horror," where distorted gospel harmonies and Swahili vocal elements amplify psychological tension in Get Out (2017), prioritizing narrative propulsion over mere stylistic novelty by adapting familiar spiritual idioms to horror's dissonant demands. Subsequent collaborations extend this blending to hip-hop rhythms and electronic textures, as in Nope (2022), where eerie hip-hop-inflected percussion merges with symphonic swells to drive sci-fi spectacle, while Omar (2022) incorporates Senegalese griot traditions into operatic scoring for historical authenticity. Such syntheses stem from Abels' stated intent to mediate cultural idioms, yielding scores that causally enhance storytelling through genre fusion rather than superficial eclecticism.

Reception and impact

Critical responses to key works

Critics widely praised Michael Abels' score for Get Out (2017) for its innovative creation of tension through distorted familiar sounds, often described as "gospel horror" that blended whispered Swahili incantations with orchestral elements to evoke an alien unease. The New York Times highlighted its redefinition of horror tropes via African undertones, contributing to the film's chilling atmosphere. Reviewers noted the score's effective propulsion of dread without relying on conventional stings, though some observed the soundtrack album's fragmented presentation as a minor structural weakness. Reception for the Us (2019) score was generally positive but comparatively tempered, with praise for its hard-hitting avant-garde techniques and balance of tonal passages that sustained an uneasy tone akin to Get Out's "Satan spiritual" motifs. Critics appreciated Abels' nuanced storytelling in evoking terror alongside empathy, yet some found the motifs less consistently innovative, relying more on elevated operatic horror elements that echoed prior work without equivalent breakthrough impact. Reviews of the opera Omar (2022, co-composed with Rhiannon Giddens) emphasized its dramatic propulsion through richly textured music and singable vocal lines that avoided extremes, fostering strong libretto-music synergy in depicting historical narrative. The Los Angeles Times lauded its simplicity in prayer-like passages for emotional depth, while OperaWire noted effective contemporary resonance. However, the San Francisco Chronicle critiqued it as vague and unfocused in portraying slavery's legacy, suggesting overwrought elements diluted thematic clarity despite appealing harmonies. Abels' concert works, such as More Seasons (reworking Vivaldi), received acclaim for vivid coloristic orchestration and accessible impressionism that adapted popular structures deftly. Critics highlighted his ear for musical color in blending genres, though isolated responses noted eclecticism occasionally bordering on derivative familiarity without deeper innovation.

Contributions to diversity and industry change

Abels co-founded the Composers Diversity Collective (CDC) in 2017 following the success of his score for Get Out, aiming to address underrepresentation of composers of color in film, television, gaming, and streaming media by fostering a network for industry professionals to connect with diverse talent. The organization provides resources such as directories of underrepresented composers, advocacy for inclusive hiring practices, and educational initiatives to dispel stereotypes about stylistic limitations tied to racial or ethnic backgrounds. CDC initiatives emphasize visibility through events, partnerships with guilds like the Society of Composers & Lyricists, and public campaigns highlighting scores by composers of color, with membership growing to include hundreds of professionals by 2022. Proponents, including Abels, credit such efforts with elevating opportunities post-2017, citing examples like increased commissions for non-white composers in high-profile projects. However, empirical data on film scoring diversity shows limited aggregate change; for instance, among composers for the top 100 grossing films in 2017, over 95% were male, with ethnic minorities comprising a small fraction, and subsequent years like 2022 recorded only 8.2% female composers overall—a modest peak amid persistent underrepresentation of people of color. Critiques of diversity-focused advocacy in film composing, including CDC's model, argue that emphasis on demographic quotas over merit-based selection risks prioritizing identity markers at the expense of artistic excellence, as evidenced by stagnant hiring patterns where top scores continue to favor established networks rather than broad diversification. Recent industry reports indicate regression in inclusion priorities since around 2015, with CDC members noting diminished emphasis on diversity hiring amid economic pressures, suggesting causal factors like budget constraints and proven track records outweigh advocacy-driven changes. Despite these efforts, verifiable shifts in scoring assignments attributable to CDC remain anecdotal, with broader data underscoring that underrepresentation persists due to competitive barriers like prior credits and director preferences rather than solely systemic exclusion.

Broader legacy and influence

Abels' pioneering "gospel horror" technique, which fuses sacred choral elements with dissonant orchestration and cultural motifs in scores like Get Out (2017), has reshaped horror film scoring by demonstrating how ethnic and spiritual traditions can heighten psychological tension without relying solely on conventional synth-driven dread. This approach, blending whispered incantations, gospel voices, and orchestral distortion, has encouraged subsequent media composers to incorporate syncretic cultural layers, as evidenced by the genre's post-2017 trend toward hybrid scores that evoke ancestral unease through folk-derived harmonies rather than generic stings. In classical composition, Abels has advanced the integration of humor and popular idioms into orchestral works, countering the field's historical aversion to levity by treating wit as a structural device on par with solemnity. Pieces like his remixing of Vivaldi motifs exemplify this, reinvigorating concert music with accessible, genre-blending techniques—such as infusing blues, jazz, and rock into symphonic forms—that prioritize emotional immediacy over abstraction, thereby broadening appeal and influencing peers to experiment with narrative-driven playfulness in ensemble writing. Through residencies, including his 2025–2026 role as composer-in-residence with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, Abels facilitates direct transmission of these practices by curating programs featuring eclectic premieres and interacting with emerging musicians, as seen in his visiting artist engagements at institutions like the San Francisco Conservatory of Music. This positions his output as a catalyst for successors adopting versatile, culturally attuned methods in both concert and media realms.

Awards and honors

In 2023, Abels co-composed the opera Omar with Rhiannon Giddens, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Music. The work chronicles the life of Omar Ibn Said, an enslaved Muslim scholar. Abels received the World Soundtrack Award for his score to Us (2019). He also won the Jerry Goldsmith Award for the same film. For Nope (2022), Abels earned the Society of Composers and Lyricists Award for Outstanding Original Score for a Studio Film. Scores for Us and Nope were shortlisted for the Academy Award for Best Original Score. Abels has been nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Music Composition in 2021. He is also Grammy-nominated. In 2022, the Vancouver International Film Festival honored Abels' film music contributions. He received a Career Achievement Award at SoundTrack_Cologne in 2022. In 2024, Abels was honored at USC Thornton's commencement.

References

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