Company Co-Founder and R&D Manager to be Recognized for the Innovative Development of the Brand’s High-Performance Miniature Mic Technology
ALLEROED, DENMARK – DPA Microphones is proud to announce that Co-founder Jens-Jørn Stokholm and R&D Manager Ole Moesmann will soon be bestowed with an Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences’ Technical Achievement Award for the innovative development of the brand’s high-performance, miniature lavalier microphone technology. The pair’s accomplishment is among 17 scientific and technical achievements to be honored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in a virtual Scientific and Technical Awards presentation on Saturday, February 13. The ceremony will be available on the OSCARS website starting at 1 p.m. PT.
The Academy’s Scientific and Technical Awards honor those whose discoveries and innovations have contributed in significant and lasting ways to motion pictures. First developed by Stokholm in 1996, DPA’s 4060 Omnidirectional Miniature Microphone continues to be a preeminent solution for sound designers and film sound engineers around the world.
Since its development, DPA has expanded its miniature microphone into a complete product line.
It now also includes the 4061, 4062, 4063 and 4071 miniature mics, as well as the 6060 and 6061 subminiature mics. Each solution is tailored to a specific application based on sensitivity, voltage and placement needs. Recently updated to include CORE by DPA technology, the miniature microphones feature increased audio clarity and openness, minimized distortion and expanded dynamic range.
An expert in the miniaturization of electronic and electro-mechanical devices, Stokholm initially began developing miniature microphone technology for the hearing aid industry. Later, he and his business partner Dan Ingemann Jensen, joined forces with DPA Microphones Co-founders Ole Brøsted Sørensen and Morten Støve to develop a miniature microphone for the professional audio industry based on his original hearing aid technology.
“I want to express our most sincere gratitude to the Academy for this notable honor,” says Stokholm.
“DPA’s miniature technology has long been one of my proudest achievements, and I am so excited for it to be recognized by such an exceptional organization within our industry. I am thrilled to share this award with Ole, as well as with every member of the DPA team, and I look forward to where the brand will venture into the future.”
A former apprentice of Stokholm, Moesmann first joined DPA to work on a university project focused on the use of interference tube technology to improve the function of directionality. With more than a decade under Stokholm’s guidance, Moesmann was able to gain first-hand knowledge of DPA’s miniature microphone technology, ensuring that all future mics would be built on the design heritage of the original 4060. Throughout his time with DPA, Moesmann has contributed to the development of all DPA miniature mics, based largely on his interference tube technology research, which are among the best on the market today.
“Thank you to all of the members of the Academy who took the time to recognize the long history that DPA has had in the film industry over the past several decades,” says Moesmann.
“We are incredibly grateful for and humbled by this achievement, which would not have been possible without Jens-Jørn’s technology nor the dedication of all DPA R&D team members throughout the years. Everyone here at DPA Microphones looks forward to continuing to develop groundbreaking solutions to benefit filmmaking for many more years to come.”
DPA miniature microphones are deployed on the sets of major motion pictures and cinematic-style television series every year. Included among these are Yesterday, Spiderman – Homecoming, Mission: Impossible – Fallout, Paddleton, Dora and the Lost City of Gold, Près de Moi and Altitude. The brand has also been used on True Memoirs of an International Assassin, Alien: Covenant, Lucy, Mad Max: Fury Road and Guardians of the Galaxy, among many others.
First established in 1931, the Academy’s Scientific and Technical Achievement Award honor companies and individuals who have influenced the advancement of the industry, as well as for high-level of engineering or technical merit.