Boris Claudio "Lalo" Schifrin (born June 21, 1932) is an Argentine pianist, composer, arranger and conductor. He is best known for his large body of film and TV scores since the 1950s, incorporating jazz and Latin American musical elements alongside traditional orchestrations. He is a five-time Grammy Award winner, and has been nominated for six Academy Awards and four Emmy Awards.
Schifrin's best known
compositions include the "Theme from Mission: Impossible",
and the scores to Cool Hand Luke (1967), Bullitt (1968), THX
1138 (1971), Enter the Dragon (1973), The
Four Musketeers (1974), Voyage of the Damned (1976), The
Amityville Horror (1979), and the Rush Hour trilogy
(1998–2007). Schifrin is also noted for his collaborations with Clint
Eastwood from the late 1960s to the 1980s, particularly the Dirty
Harry series of films. He also
composed the Paramount Pictures fanfare used from 1976 to 2004.
In 2019, he received
an Honorary Oscar "in recognition of his unique musical style,
compositional integrity and influential contributions to the art of film
scoring."
Early Life
Schifrin was born
in Buenos Aires, to a Jewish family. His father, Luis
Schifrin, led the second violin section of the orchestra at the Teatro
Colón for three decades. At the age
of six, Schifrin began a six-year course of study on piano with Enrique
Barenboim, the father of pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim. Lalo Schifrin shares a familial link to
American alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin. Schifrin began studying piano with the
Greek-Russian expatriate Andreas Karalis, former head of the Kyiv
Conservatory, and harmony with Argentine composer Juan Carlos Paz. During this time, Schifrin also became
interested in jazz.
Although Schifrin
studied sociology and law at the University of Buenos Aires, it was music
that captured his attention. At age 20, he successfully applied for a
scholarship to the Conservatoire de Paris. At night, he played jazz in the
Paris clubs. In 1955, Schifrin played piano with Argentine bandoneon giant Ástor
Piazzolla and represented his country at the International Jazz Festival
in Paris.
As a Jazz Composer
After returning home to
Argentina in his twenties, Schifrin formed a jazz orchestra, a 16-piece band
that became part of a popular weekly variety show on Buenos Aires TV. Schifrin
also began accepting other film, television and radio assignments. In 1956, Schifrin met Dizzy Gillespie and
offered to write an extended work for Gillespie's big band. Schifrin completed the work, Gillespiana,
in 1958, which was recorded in 1960. Later in 1958, Schifrin began working
as an arranger for Xavier Cugat's popular Latin dance orchestra.
While in New York in
1960, Schifrin again met Gillespie, who had by this time disbanded his big band
for financial reasons. Gillespie invited Schifrin to fill the vacant piano
chair in his quintet. Schifrin immediately accepted and moved to New York City.
Schifrin wrote a second extended composition for Gillespie, The New
Continent, which was recorded in 1962.
On 26 May 1963, he
recorded an album, Buenos Aires Blues, with Duke Ellington’s
alto saxophonist, Johnny Hodges. Schifrin wrote two compositions for the
album; Dreary Blues and the title track B. A. Blues.
In the same year Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer,
which had Schifrin under contract, offered the composer his first Hollywood
film assignment with the African adventure Rhino!. Schifrin
moved to Los Angeles and became a U.S. resident in 1963. He became a
naturalized U.S. citizen in 1969.
Discography and film
scores
One of Schifrin's most
recognizable and enduring compositions is the theme music for the long-running
TV series Mission: Impossible. It is a distinctive tune
written in the uncommon 5/4 time signature. Similarly, Schifrin's theme for the hugely
successful Mannix private eye TV show was composed a year
later in a 3/4 waltz time; Schifrin composed several other jazzy and bluesy
numbers over the years as additional incidental music for the show.
Schifrin's "Tar
Sequence" from his Cool Hand Luke score (also written in
6/4) was the longtime theme for the Eyewitness News broadcasts
on New York station WABC-TV and other ABC affiliates, as well
as Nine News in Australia. CBS
Television used part of the theme of his St. Ives soundtrack
for its golf broadcasts in the 1970s and early 1980s.
Schifrin's score for
the 1968 film Coogan's Bluff was the beginning of a long
association with Clint Eastwood and director Don Siegel. Schifrin's strong
jazz-blues riffs were evident in Dirty Harry. In 1973 He wrote score for "Enter the
Dragon" with funky wah-pedal sound.
Schifrin's working
score for 1973's The Exorcist was rejected by the film's
director, William Friedkin. Schifrin had written six minutes of difficult
and heavy music for the initial film trailer, but audiences were reportedly
frightened by the combination of sights and sounds. As reported by Schifrin in
an interview, Warner Bros executives told Friedkin to instruct Schifrin to
tone it down with softer music, but Friedkin did not relay the message. Schifrin also said that working on the film
was one of the most unpleasant experiences in his life. He later reused
the compositions in other scores.
In 1976 he released a
single called "Jaws", a version of the John Williams theme
from the Universal Pictures film Jaws, on CTI (Creed Taylor Incorporated)
records. The single spent nine weeks in the UK chart, peaking at number 14. He also composed the 1976 fanfare for Paramount
Pictures, which was used mainly for their home video label and was
adapted for the television division 11 years later until it was
renamed to CBS Paramount Television (now CBS Studios) in 2006.
In 1981, he wrote the
music for the 1981 American slapstick comedy film Caveman.
In the 1990s, he wrote
many of the arrangements for The Three Tenors concerts.
In the 1998 film Tango,
Schifrin returned to tango music, with which he had grown familiar while
working as Astor Piazzolla's pianist in the mid-1950s. He brought traditional
tango songs to the film, as well as introducing compositions of his own, in
which tango is fused with jazz elements.
In 1997, the composer founded Aleph Records.
He also wrote the main
theme for Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Pandora Tomorrow.
Schifrin made a cameo
appearance in Red Dragon (2002) as an orchestra conductor.
He is also widely
sampled in hip-hop and trip-hop songs, such as Heltah Skeltah's "Prowl"
or Portishead's "Sour Times". Both songs sample Schifrin's
"Danube Incident", one of many themes he composed for specific
episodes of the Mission: Impossible TV series.
He was commissioned to
compose a work titled Symphonic Impressions of Oman. The
Sultan was particularly enthusiastic about the pipe organ.
On April 23, 2007, Lalo
Schifrin presented a concert of film music for the Festival du Film Jules Verne
Aventures (Festival Jules Verne), at Le Grand Rex theatre in Paris, France –
Europe's biggest movie theater. This was recorded by festival leaders for a
73-and-a-half-minute CD named Lalo Schifrin: Le Concert à Paris.
In 2010, a
fictionalised account of Lalo Schifrin's creation of the "Theme from Mission:
Impossible" tune was featured in a Lipton TV commercial
aired in a number of countries around the world.
Seattle-based alternative
hip hop group Blue Scholars recorded a track titled "Lalo
Schifrin" on their third album Cinemetropolis.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lalo_Schifrin
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