British composer Simon Fisher Turner (born 1954 in Dover) is known for his film scores, notably those he conceived for
Derek Jarman (from
Caravaggio in 1986, also marking the beginning of a long relationship with the British Film Institute, to Jarman's last work
Blue in 1993), but also for a series of remastered silent films (
Un Chant d'amour by Jean Genet, 1950,
The Great White Silence by Herbert Ponting, 1924,
The Epic of Everest by Captain John Noel, 1924, for which he received the Ivor Novello Award), for the film
Nadja (1994), produced by David Lynch, for the last two films by Mike Hodges, for a documentary on William Eggleston, or for an exhibition by Alyson Shotz. In parallel to his acting career, Turner is the author of a vast discography (film music, solo projects under the name SFT, or in collaboration, notably with Colin Llyod Tucker with the project
Deux Filles), mainly on the Mute label, but also on
Editions Mego, Soleilmoon,
Optical Sound, Tapeworm, or
Robin Rimbaud's Sulphur label.
See also
Deux Filles.