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Dimitri Tiomkin
Born: May 10, 1894; Kremenchuk, Ukraine   Died: November 11, 1979; London, England  
Dimitri Tiomkin was one of the most successful European emigre musicians in Hollywood. He studied at the St. Petersburg Conservatory under Alexander Glazunov and Felix Blumenfeld and, fleeing post-revolutionary Russia, moved to Berlin, where he studied with Busoni and established a duo-piano act with fellow St. Petersburg alumnus Michael Kariton. He made his debut as a concert pianist with the Berlin Philharmonic in Liszt's Concerto for piano in ...
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Dimitri Tiomkin titles in:
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Works
A President's Country (1)
Friendly Persuasion ("Thee I Love"), song (from the film) (1)
Friendly Persuasion: Love Scene in the Barn (1)
Friendly Persuasion: Main Theme (1)
Green Leaves of Summer (1)
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral: Main Theme (3)
High Noon: Do Not Forsake Me (3)
High Noon: Excerpt(s) (1)
High Noon: High Noon (5)
It's a Wonderful Life: Excerpt(s) (1)
Lost Horizon (1)
Rawhide, song (1)
Red River (1)
Return To Paradise, song (1)
Search for Paradise: Choral Finale (1)
The Alamo: The Green Leaves of Summer (3)
The Big Sky: Prelude - Forest at Night - The Wide Missouri (1)
The Four Poster: Overture (1)
The Great Waltz: Final Sequence (1)
The Great Waltz: Main title (1)
The Guns of Navarone: Main Theme (1)
The Guns of Navarone: Prelude (2)
The High and the Mighty (theme from the film) (1)
The Need for Love (theme from The Unforgiven) (1)
The Prince and Princess Waltz (The Grace Kelly Wedding Waltz), for orchestra (1)
The Thing: Suite (1)
Biography by Bruce Eder
Dimitri Tiomkin was one of the most successful European emigre musicians in Hollywood. He studied at the St. Petersburg Conservatory under Alexander Glazunov and Felix Blumenfeld and, fleeing post-revolutionary Russia, moved to Berlin, where he studied with Busoni and established a duo-piano act with fellow St. Petersburg alumnus Michael Kariton. He made his debut as a concert pianist with the Berlin Philharmonic in Liszt's Concerto for piano in A major in 1923, after which Tiomkin came to America on a vaudeville tour. That led to work with a dance company directed by Albertina Rasch, whom he subsequently married. He immersed himself in the music of Richard Rodgers, Irving Berlin, Jerome Kern, and George Gershwin, and a meeting with Gershwin led to Tiomkin's playing the European premiere of the latter's Concerto in F at the Paris Opera in 1928. By 1929, the couple had moved to Hollywood, and Tiomkin joined the movie industry. His early assignments were generally unsatisfying and all connected with failed pictures. In 1937, he saw his first success with Frank Capra's Lost Horizon -- the hit movie was enhanced by Tiomkin's rich melodies and thick-textured orchestral and choral writing, evocative of late Russian romanticism. Although he was familiar with the developments of twentieth century music, Tiomkin was most successful working in a late Romantic idiom. In 1948, he scored Howard Hawks' Red River, his first western -- by this time, Tiomkin was so steeped in American music that his melodies seemed as old as the plains. His music for another western, Stanley Kramer's production of High Noon (1952), literally saved the movie, which had tested terribly in previews without music -- the title song became a hit single twice, and the song and score earned Tiomkin two Academy Awards. In contrast to High Noon was his harsh, dissonant score for Hawks' The Thing (1951), which was groundbreaking in its use of distorted instrumentation, setting the tone for science fiction music for 50 years. Tiomkin spent the rest of his career dividing his time between epic dramas, including Hawks' Land of the Pharaohs (where he reprised his Lost Horizon score) and George Stevens' Giant, and westerns, including Hawks' Rio Bravo (where he reprised his Red River score with words), and John Wayne's The Alamo, taking a detour into television for the theme from Rawhide. His last major scores were for the European-made epics 55 Days at Peking and Fall of the Roman Empire.
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