LSO Live presents Dimitri Tiomkin’s greatest film scores, the first of a new occasional LSO Live series of the greatest film music composers of all time.
The LSO’s association with the film industry stretches all the way back to Arthur Bliss’s music for Things to Come, the first time an orchestra had recorded a movie soundtrack. Since then the LSO has recorded music for major blockbusters, including Star Wars and Harry Potter.
Russian-born Tiomkin is one of the most highly regarded Hollywood film composers. A versatile composer who could create memorable scores for almost any story, Tiomkin recieved a staggering 22 Academy Award nominations, winning four awards. His most famous film scores include High Noon, The High and the Mighty, The Alamo, Hitchcock’s Dial ’M’ for Murder and the theme song for Rawhide. He was a gifted songwriter, writing standards such as the theme from Wild is the Wind, and High Noon, which won a Oscar for ’Best Song’(Do Not Forsake Me). Tiomkin’s strong ties with the ’master of suspense’, Alfred Hitchcock, resulted in the celebrated film scores for Shadow of a Doubt, Strangers on a Train, I Confess and Dial ’M’ for Murder.
Grammy Award winner Richard Kaufman has devoted much of his musical life to conducting and supervising music for film and classical music in concert halls. He regularly conducts the Pacific Symphony and Chicago Symphony Orchestras and 2012 he conducts the San Diego Symphony, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic and Atlanta SYmphony Orchestras.