Born in Dublin, Irish musician Paul Huberman is setting the scene for an active role in music composition for television and film. Having composed classical music for some fourteen years, Paul Huberman has displayed amazing intrinsic talent and an incredible ear for detail, despite doubling as his own teacher. Although he has never studied traditional classical repertoire, Paul's original compositions were heard twice weekly at the Newcastle piano bar "Opera" where he played the piano for the year during his final year of academic studies. His influences would be well known masters of composing most notably Chopin and Holst along with today's music industry giants Danny Elfman and John Williams. With compositions also suitably chosen for short motion picture soundtracks, his music has already been sought after by American and Irish producers.
Paul Huberman wrote his first classical piano piece at the age of sixteen called, "The Human of Being", and was used in the short film "Charity" shot in Los Angeles. One track from his first classical piano album has also been used in the behind the scenes program for the film "The Reading Room". His art-inclined family encourages him in his pursuit of music back at home in Dublin, where Paul also operates and records at his studio Thirdfloorstudios© and plays a variety of instruments. Paul has composed the Score and soundtrack for Norton Avenues film "Online" which has been screened in film festivals in both the United States and Canada, the Score for "Crazy", "Sincere", "the House" and "The Monster" for Norton Avenue films as well as music for American production company Dances with Films. Paul has also finished the score for Irish director Rick Larkin's film "The Good Doctor" which was screened in the Cannes Film Festival and in the Galway Film Fleadh.
Paul has also published tracks that have been used for an Irish television drama "The Clinic", for a corporate production for Hennessey Cognac and for an American television commercial for the prevention of gun crime and an Irish online campaign for Parkinson's Disease.