iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Dirty Harry (The Original Score) by Lalo Schifrin, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Dirty Harry (The Original Score)

Lalo Schifrin

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Despite his classical training, Lalo Schifrin had worked with Dizzy Gillespie and was something of a jazz enthusiast. His groundbreaking score for Don Siegel's Dirty Harry was initially inspired by Miles Davis' electronic excursions in "A Tribute to Jack Johnson" and Bitches Brew. Allowed to follow his musical instincts by veteran director Siegel, Schifrin orchestrates the score's driving percussion, restless electric bass, and eerie wordless vocals (as pioneered by Edda Dell'Orso under the direction of Ennio Morricone and his peers in Italy) into an organic mix that could best be described as acid jazz some 25 years before that genre began. The music cues for Clint Eastwood's Harry Callahan are energetic and exciting, but what kicks the score to a level all its own is Schifrin's theme for the serial killer, Scorpio, whom Callahan tracks through the bulk of the film. Its offbeat fusion combines modern classical music in a brilliant manner with Sally Stevens' creepy, ethereal vocals overlaying psychedelic rock of the time. This is perhaps best exemplified on the CD in the two opening cuts: "Prologue — The Swimming Pool" and "Main Title." The shifting tempos and the sinister, childlike vocals were directly emulated by dozens of Italian Poliziottechi and Giallo films of the '70s, and a sterilized incarnation of this style has become the bane of 21st century television scoring, a full three decades after Schifrin's seminal work. The only criticisms of the release are aesthetic and specific to the conventions of published film scores. This CD is missing the brilliant 7" edit of "Scorpio's Theme," which admittedly never appears in the film in this form, but which captures the excitement of the score in a three-minute jazz/rock opera. Also, some of the slight source music — such as the comic "Harry's Hot Dog" and the cheesy "The Strip Club" — will benefit the CD most when left off the play list. There is merit in presenting a "complete" soundtrack, even in order of appearance within the film; but given that these pieces wreck the mood set by the immediately preceding music, it could be argued that the best place for them is at the tail-end of the recording as bonus tracks. Outside of these misgivings, the primary score is one of the first truly modern action film scores. Less immediate than his popular theme songs for Mission Impossible or The Man from U.N.C.L.E., the score for Dirty Harry succeeds through Schifrin's experimental nerve and ability to draw ideas from current trends to meld them in a way both unique and timeless. Its influence is paramount, heard daily in movies, on television, and in modern jazz and rock music.

Customer Reviews

Dirty Harry

I love the whole 70's thing and these sounds hit it right between the eyes.

Do you feel lucky?

Listening to this album brought back some great memories of when I first saw the film. If you liked the movie, you will love the sound track. Clearly, the music has been remastered. The instruments come though clear and crisp compared to other versions of the main title that are available on other sound track compilations. Some of my favorite tracks are The Main Title (of course), The Strip Club, and Scorpio’s view. The Strip Club track almost makes me want to find a GoGo club. Most of the tracks don’t have those 2 seconds of silence between them, making for a better listening experience as the pieces of music are relatively short being 1 to 3 minutes in length. The whole album price is “right on, man”. The tracks are a bit too short for the .99 cent price, making buying the whole album worth while. Overall, a nice piece of work by Lalo Schifrin.

Will send a chill up your spine!

Lalo Schifrin's scores from this era are to me the ultimate fusion of musical styles. Take R&B, big band swagger, cutting edge Jazz improv, blended perfectly with the sonic pallete only a full symphony orchestra can provide. This is my high water mark for hip film scores! For casual listening, the Bullitt soundtrack has more peppy tracks that work, away from the movie. But the Dirty Harry score cuts much deeper. It's profoundly creepy and haunting. It definitely helps cement Dirty Harry as THE best cop thriller of all time. If you're a die-hard fan of the movie, you should really have this soundtrack. Some of the tracks are, frankly, very hoakey. There's really no need for Harry's Hot Dog or No More Lies, Girl. The "meat" is contained in The Swimming Pool, Main Title, Scorpio's View, Scorpio Takes The Bait and The School Bus and most of these tracks are restating the main theme. The Cross, Goodbye Callahan, The Stadium Grounds, Floodlights, Dawn Discovery and the End Titles are important mood pieces, necessary to complete the experience of the film. If you're going this deep, you might as well get the whole album. The alternate takes are cool and Off Duty, Liquor Store Holdup and City Hall are all worth having. If you're into the movie and into cool music, for $8 this is a no-brainer.

Biography

Born: June 21, 1932 in Buenos Aires, Argentina

Genre: Soundtrack

Years Active: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s

Best known for his "Mission: Impossible" theme song, Lalo Schifrin is an Argentinean-born composer, arranger, pianist, and conductor, whose jazz and classical training earned him tremendous success as a soundtrack composer. Born Boris Claudio Schifrin in Buenos Aires on June 21, 1932, his father was a symphonic violinist, and he began playing piano at age six. He enrolled in the Paris Conservatoire in 1952, hitting the jazz scene by night. After returning to Buenos Aires, Schifrin formed a 16-piece...
Full Bio

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.