Nora Rose Tomas May 2026
“You can’t download authenticity,” she says. “AI can generate a ‘door close.’ It can’t generate the door close that makes you miss your childhood home.”
“Sound is the last great invisible art,” Tomas says, leaning forward in her Los Angeles studio. A pair of vintage Neumann headphones hang around her neck like a stethoscope. “The audience notices when it’s bad. They rarely notice when it’s great. That’s the goal: to make them feel without knowing why.” Born in Chicago to a classical pianist mother and an engineer father, Tomas was raised on a paradox: absolute musicality and cold, hard physics. “I learned that a ‘C’ note at 261 hertz is a rule,” she recalls. “But the emotion comes from how you bend it.” nora rose tomas
When asked what sound she would preserve for eternity if she could only keep one, Tomas doesn’t hesitate. “You can’t download authenticity,” she says
After a brief, frustrated stint at a prestigious music conservatory—where she felt composition was too solitary—Tomas fell into film sound almost by accident. A college roommate needed help syncing dialogue for a student short. Within an hour, Tomas had not only fixed the sync but had rebuilt the ambient track using recordings of a campus fountain and a passing freight train. “The audience notices when it’s bad
Her collaborators describe a warm but exacting presence. On set, she is quiet, watching monitors with a stopwatch. In the mix, she is relentless. “She once made me re-record a single footstep 47 times,” laughs actress Sasha Vane. “I was walking across gravel. She said, ‘No—you’re walking across gravel while hiding bad news. ’ She was right.” At 34, Tomas is already mentoring a new generation of sound artists, particularly women and non-binary engineers in a field where, until recently, the re-recording mixer was almost always a man named Steve. “The gear doesn’t have a gender,” she says flatly. “The ears don’t either.”