Loading details…
Loading details…
Artist
David Holmes is a Northern Irish DJ, musician and composer. Holmes was born on 14 February 1969, the youngest of ten children. Holmes began DJing in the pubs of his native Belfast from the age of 15. His first hit was the song "DeNiro", with Ashley Beedle, in 1992. In the early to mid 1990's he ran two highly acclaimed and successful club nights in the Belfast Art College known as Sugar Sweet and Shake Yer Brain. Famously, the dance group Orbital wrote the track "Belfast", released on their debut album Orbital, after playing at Sugar Sweet. Holmes released This Film's Crap Let's Slash the Seats, in 1995, and it received acclaim for being very scenic and chaotic dance music. One of the songs on the album was used in the soundtrack to the film Pi (Pi). At the time he described the album as being inspired by movies and movie soundtracks, a recurring theme throughout the album and of Holmes' work as a whole. The opening track, "No Man's Land," was reportedly inspired by the Daniel Day-Lewis film In the Name of the Father. In the same year, he also provided the ambient links between the songs on the album Infernal Love by the Northern Irish rock band Therapy?. In 1997, Holmes released Let's Get Killed, described by some as the soundtrack to an imaginary film. Many of the tracks feature people talking in the streets of New York, recorded by Holmes using a dictaphone. In 1998, Danny Devito commissioned him to do the score for Steven Soderbergh's film Out of Sight (Out of Si

Let's Get Killed

The Holy Pictures

Music From The Motion Picture Ocean's Thirteen

Bow Down to the Exit Sign

This Film's Crap, Let's Slash The Seats

The Dogs Are Parading - The Very Best Of

Come Get It I Got It

Late Night Tales: David Holmes

Ocean's Eleven

Music From The Motion Picture Ocean's Eleven

Music From The Motion Picture Ocean's Twelve

Ocean's Twelve