* En anglais uniquement
Using the pseudonym
Deru, American composer, music producer, and sound designer Benjamin Wynn creates cinematic and highly textured experimental electronic music. While Wynn's many works under his own name make up a significant part of his canon, some of his
Deru highlights include the music for the 2007 ballet Genus, albums like 2010's
Say Goodbye to Useless and 2014's 1979, and his 2018 original score for the YouTube sci-fi series Impulse.
Following a degree in music technology from the California Institute of the Arts, the Chicago native made his
Deru debut with the experimental electronic album Pushing Air in 2003 via the Neo Ouija label.
Trying to Remember followed on Merck Records in 2004, the same year Wynn and composer
Jeremy Zuckerman co-founded the Emmy-winning music and sound design partnership the Track Team. The pair went on to contribute to the animated series Avatar: The Last Airbender (2005-2008), Kung Fu Panda: Legends of Awesomeness (2011-2016), and The Legend of Korra (2012-2014). In the meantime, under the
Deru moniker, Wynn collaborated with British composer
Joby Talbot on music for the 2007 ballet Genus. Based on Darwin's On the Origin of the Species, the ballet was commissioned by the Paris Opera Ballet. A recording of their ballet music arrived on Ant-Zen and Dear Oh Dear Records in 2009. Back with
Zuckerman, Wynn also co-composed the score for the film Just Peck, released that same year. The
Deru album
Say Goodbye to Useless followed on Mush Records in 2010.
In October of 2011, Wynn traveled to Iceland with a group of filmmakers and photographers, resulting in the film Outliers, Vol. 1: Iceland. Its score was grounded in Wynn's field recordings from the trip. A soundtrack including Wynn's score and songs by artists including
Ryuichi Sakamoto,
Son Lux, and
Shigeto was released in the summer of 2012. Wynn and
Zuckerman then teamed up again for the film A Leading Man in 2013. Inspired by a flea market box of personal artifacts,
Deru's 1979 was released by
Friends of Friends in June of 2014, accompanied by nine short films by filmmaker Anthony Ciannamea.
1979: Remixed followed in 2016, and Genus had its North American premiere by the National Ballet of Canada in March 2017. Two months later,
Deru released Territories, his debut on the audiovisual label 79Ancestors, co-founded by Wynn, Ciannamea, and software designer Yaniv De Ridder. His score for the YouTube sci-fi series Impulse was released in July 2018, followed in October by Torn in Two, his full-length follow-up to 1979. ~ Marcy Donelson