Iconic composer Lalo Schifrin, who is best known for composing the memorable theme from Mission: Impossible as well as over 100 film and TV scores, has died at the age of 93. His sons, William and Ryan, said he died on Thursday in Los Angeles, of complications of pneumonia.
21 hours Ago By Oskar Malec
A Jewish native of Buenos Aires who grew up in a musical household — his father was the concertmaster of the city’s local philharmonic — Schifrin was born Boris Claudio Schifrin.
He studied music and law in Argentina and then pursued classical training at the Paris Conservatory. Schifrin went back to his adopted country and started a symphony orchestra, but jazz great Dizzy Gillespie found him and asked him to play with his quintet.
Mr. Schifrin, an Argentine who arrived in the United States in 1958, embarked on an extended, cross-genre career in music.
A Legacy of Classic Tunes and International Acclaim
Among Scbifrin’s amazing records are four Grammy awards and six Academy Award nominations for his original scores for Cool Hand Luke, The Fox, Voyage of the Damned, The Amityville Horror, and The Sting II.
In 2018, he was given an honorary Oscar for lifetime achievement, and Clint Eastwood, one among a galaxy of stars he worked with in a lengthy career, was dispatched to do the honors.
Surely his most famous composition, Mission: Impossible music, in 5/4 time, and written to be played over a visual of a fuse burning from one edge of the screen to the next, is a lasting testament to the talents of an unsung hero of music in films. The song was called one of the most memorable tunes ever written for TV.
It won Grammys for Best Instrumental Theme and Best Original Score and was eventually inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2017.
His score has defined the entire Mission: Impossible franchise, to the point that creative disputes have broken out between filmmakers and composers over its very inclusion.
At the time of the first film adaptation, original director Brian De Palma fought to keep thematic content and replaced John Williams with Danny Elfman to retain it. Hans Zimmer and Michael Giacchino came later and even personally asked Schifrin for his blessing before they scored his films.
WOMAD founder Festival of a man from many places that I will remember most is his voice, sonorous and rich with the color of other worlds. A man of many parts, it will be his voice, summoning meus, engaging meus, appealing to meus, committing meus.40.He spoke a truth he had found, hard-won but irrefutable for all that, because it was about what could be, not what is.
Although it was an issue for Sam like it is for all of us standing with our feet in different worlds. Of course, everything had to change – hard but good, inevitable like Day to the Night, fewer friends lying to you like convenient soft friends, those friends who stab you in the front, the nice guys, the plausible, the understanding, the weak man enemies, the co-conspirators of tomorrow in the frightened stupid strategy of the gutless.44.It was a testament to his extraordinary ability as an artist that he could have the most eclectic musical tastes imaginable and yet create such a unified album.
His music embraced and celebrated the diversity of the world while also lovingly translating and transcending that diversity.his light on our pathway.64Sam always found his way.
Outside the world of film and TV, Schifrin even composed the concluding spectacle at the 1990 World Cup in Italy, headlined by the Three Tenors.
It was one of the best-selling moments in classical music history. He also wrote for orchestras such as the London Symphony, Vienna Symphony, and Israel Philharmonic, and was music director of the Glendale Symphony Orchestra from 1989 and 1995.
Schifrin’s range of work stretched across jazz, classical, and film music. He worked with Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie, and Sarah Vaughan, and won a Grammy for his Jazz Suite on the Mass Texts. Some of his other significant film scores include those of: Tango, Dirty Harry; Rush Hour and its sequels, and Bringing Down the House.
He is survived by his wife, Donna; his daughter, Frances; and sons, William and Ryan. In a statement on his legacy, Schifrin previously stated, “Getting an honorary Oscar is the end of a dream. It is mission accomplished.”
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