Bios
Tom Phillips
Tom Phillips' credits include over 400 films for PBS, ABC, CBS, Discovery Channel, TLC, Lifetime, A&E and HBO.
His score for the PBS film "The Murder of Emmett Till" contributed to both a national primetime Emmy award and the Special Jury Award at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival. His score for "The Pill", a PBS film, contributed to winning the Best Historical Documentary Emmy in 2004.
He has scored dozens of multimedia shows for planetariums and museums, films for universities including Harvard, Yale, Cornell, and the University of Chicago, and national and local television advertising campaigns.
His scores are regularly heard on national television, including the Antiques Roadshow theme (PBS), programs for American Experience, and for Nova (PBS).
Tom Martin
Tom Martin has scored over 200 films, presentations, and games for clients including The Discovery Channel, the Boston Museum of Science, WGBH, and independent film and video game companies.
His work was featured in “Engineering the Impossible,” the pilot episode for The Discovery Channel’s Extreme Engineering series, many episodes of Discovery Magazine, and all the games developed by Vipah Interactive, whose clients include Houghton Mifflin and AOL.
A Berklee College of Music alumnus, Martin began collaborating on film scores with Tom Phillips in 1994.