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Hugo Friedhofer - Barbarian and the Geisha

Barbarian and the Geisha
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Album Details: Barbarian and the Geisha

Release Date:01/01/1958
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Pro Reviews: Barbarian and the Geisha

  • All Music Guide

    The movie The Barbarian and the Geisha was not something of which either its star (John Wayne) or anyone else associated with it, onscreen at least, was terribly proud it was a poor fit for director John Huston, as well, and ended up as a "noncredit" (in the sense of being to no one's credit) for most of the parties involved. The only exception was composer Hugo Friedhofer, whose work here was exemplary Wayne might have been miscast and Huston the wrong man to direct him, or a movie about its subject a 19th century crosscultural romantic encounter between an American diplomat and a geisha but Friedhofer wrote a memorable score that stands well on its own, and Intrada Records has assembled the complete original stereo film scoring sessions into a complete account of the music. Friedhofer's music is a fascinating amalgam of western orchestral and Japanese sounds, all achieved with a conventional array of western instruments, including pizzicato violins emulating the sound of the koto... and other Japanese instruments and timbres well, and represented mostly in well developed and elaborate themes that stay with the listener, quite separately from the movie for which they were conceived. - Bruce Eder, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Hugo Friedhofer

Despite the fact that he came to prominence in the heyday of Hollywood's great film scores, Hugo Friedhofer never achieved the recognition enjoyed by his contemporaries Miklos Rozsa, Alfred Newman, Bernard Herrmann, and Franz Waxman. This may have been a result of the fact that he tended to score movies that were more noted for their stars than their dramatic content. H... Read more