A versatile composer, Daum has worked on music for film, television series, commercials, and video games in Germany and the US and has won awards for his work. Of the numerous television series Daum has composed music for, highlights include
Forsthaus Falkenau, Die Garmisch-Cops, and German cult TV series
Tatort. He gained recognition through his scores for independent feature films such as
Reflex Action,
Hollywood Kills,
Prince of Swine and most notably for the Hollywood action drama
Felon, starring
Val Kilmer,
Sam Shephard, and
Stephen Dorff. The music from the movie was performed by the
Bavarian Radio Symphony Orchestra at the Film Music Night in
Munich in 2009. His music for the image film
Every Child Counts won the NTVA Music Competition Gold Award in 2001 Daum also made a name for himself with his scores for documentaries, in particular the soundtrack to the German documentary
Hindenburg & Hitler – The Making of a Führer and the US film
That Which I Love Destroys Me, which won the Voice Award 2015 at
UCLA's
Royce Hall. In addition to film music, Daum has produced several solo CD projects. His debut album, a world music project titled
Mental Voyager – A Music Journey, was released in 1993 on the label ToneWorks Records and was re-released in 2014. A second album followed in 1996,
Mental Voyager – Voiceland, which was one of few
Dolby Surround releases at the time. The album comprises seven songs, a
postmodern,
neoclassical crossover between epic, symphonic elements, classical solo voices and rock, combined with electronic sound design. The songs feature vocals by members of the Bayerischer Rundfunk Choir, Cambridge Consort Voices and Historisches Ensemble Regensburg. Daum released a further solo project on ToneWorks Records in 2015,
Epic Drama, which includes epic tracks for orchestra, electric guitars, drums, solo voices and choirs in a postmodern neo-classic rock symphonic style.
Film Music Suites, released on ToneWork Records in 2017, presents a collection of suites, re-orchestrated from Daum's recent original compositions for film and TV. All of the pieces were recorded with the
Brandenburger Symphoniker under the direction of Hannes Ferrand. Since 2001, Daum has also composed and produced industrial releases for film, television and games for the Gerhard Daum Music Edition/ToneWorks Records, first in Los Angeles and now in Berlin. These include
Explosive Choirs (2007),
Green Evolution (2008),
Storm Guitars (2009), and
3D-Scoring (2012). ==Filmography==