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Here is a great truth that no one really wants to say Hugo Friedhofer is a tough sell in the current market. Of course I don't know how Intrada's more recent Paramount-sourced Friedhofer offerings sold, but what Intrada released of his Fox stuff tended to be a pretty quick sell! Of course that was 8-12 years ago now I think, but I recall quite a few 1500-copy (and maybe the occasional 2000-copy) Friedhofer releases selling out fairly promptly from them, on a consistent basis. And of course Kritzerland's 1000-copy release of the complete One-Eyed Jacks sold so well that Bruce produced an Encore edition! Bruce has repeatedly said that he would release any Friedhofer he can get his hands on, no matter the sales, so I have a feeling that most of what can be affordably released has been released. I hope I'm wrong and more comes out though. Maybe there are a few things left in those Paramount vaults. I hope Doug will ignore the pundits of gloom and make JOAN OF ARC his next kickstarter. It's a great score and I know he has talked about doing it for years. With our contributions and hopefully the Friedhofer family,I am sure such a project would be a success. The nice thing about Kickstarter is that if there really isn't enough interest in a product, it just doesn't happen and the label isn't out any money (as far as I know Kickstarter only takes their cut after a project successfully funds). So Intrada could give it a shot, and if Joan of Arc doesn't fund they say "oh well" and move on to another potential recording. It's worth pointing out that Friedhofer's Joan of Arc managed a fourth place (out of eight, so in the top half!) finish in Intrada's unofficial "next recording" poll: http://www.intrada.net/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=7967&sid=ae66a4b6b217a031d38208c5d0991e18 I would submit that if Friedhofer really did sell as terribly as you say, Ford, they probably wouldn't have bothered including him in the poll at all. (They didn't include an option for a score by Alex North, or my beloved Roy Webb, or even the great Alfred Newman!) They know better than anyone recently how Friedhofer sells, because of the Paramount scores of his they put out. And somehow Friedhofer managed a fourth place finish in that poll behind heavy hitters Goldsmith (Black Patch/Face of a Fugitive twofer), Rozsa (The Jungle Book), and Herrmann (Man Who Knew Too Much). So...no surprise there I guess, right? But somehow with Joan of Arc, Hugo still handily beat scores by supposedly more popular composers like Tiomkin (Strangers on a Train) and Waxman (Suspicion) -- and those also being well known Hitchcock films, one cannot argue that the titles and music are unfamiliar to film music fans. Yavar
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Clearly some hamburger bun impostor is trying to capitalize off Hugo Friedhofer's famous name... but they messed up by leaving out the "d". Yavar
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I seem to recall from an old lp boot that The Bandit of Sherwood Forest was a pretty good score.
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I know that FSM released Earle Hagen's I Spy scores, but didn't Friedhofer score a number of episodes? If so, I don't think they have ever been released in any formt.
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I know that FSM released Earle Hagen's I Spy scores, but didn't Friedhofer score a number of episodes? If so, I don't think they have ever been released in any formt.
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I know that FSM released Earle Hagen's I Spy scores, but didn't Friedhofer score a number of episodes? If so, I don't think they have ever been released in any formt.
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Nuff caffeine, villagardens
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I've been watching some old Warner Bros./Max Steiner movies on TCM, and seeing Hugo Friedhofer listed as his arranger. This as late as 1946 (A Stolen Life -- good movie, btw). I'll bet Friedhofer did some ghostwriting for Steiner on those projects.
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I'm a fan, too! Did you happen to notice how much more music was in the film? I know that most of the Paramount Friedhofer materials Intrada had available to use for those releases were incomplete, alas. Friedhofer seems to have had bad luck at multiple studios in terms of many of his greatest scores surviving only partially (or sometimes not at all, like White Feather). Yavar
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