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Legend has it that composer Lalo Schifrin was moved to write the score for Bruce Lee's American screen debut after he grudgingly took his oldest son to see a martial arts movie that used his theme to 'Mission Impossible' without permission! The result was one of the key soundtracks of the '70s, a masterful blend of brass, traditional Chinese music and that early-'70s wah-wah guitar sound, punctuated by Bruce Lee s fighting screams in what may have been the first use of sampling by a musician. Jeff Bond contributes notes that explore Schifrin's work and also how this 1973 film 'kicked' the career of Bruce Lee and the entire martial arts genre up to a whole new level. A Collectors' Choice Music exclusive.
This Collector's Choice Music CD soundtrack for Lalo Schifrin's music score to Enter the Dragon is superb. Schifrin is a good musician; his score gave a big, sweeping, epic feel to a US/Hong Kong produced kung fu movie made on a limited budget of approximately $700,000. Schifrin is the same guy who wrote the Mission: Impossible theme music, he wrote an underrated score for The Concorde: Airport '79, he scored the Rush Hour action comedies starring Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker, among other works. Schifrin is from Argentina, I think.Most Hong Kong movies, especially kung fu movies, use a lot of stock music cues from a library of music. You may hear stock music cues from Superman, Live and Let Die, Shaft, Once Upon a Time in the West, Rambo, Star Trek The Motion Picture, etc. in Shaw Brothers and Golden Harvest produced movies starring Wang Yu, Bruce Li(a Bruce Lee imitator), Li Ching, Ti Lung, Dragon Lee, Gordon Liu, etc. It's nice to hear a good, original music score in a Hong Kong movie. Even with its flaws, Enter the Dragon is a seminal, martial arts movie classic. Even though it did well commercially throughout most of the world, Chor Yuen's The House of 72 Tenants outgrossed Enter the Dragon in 1973 at the Hong Kong box offices. Years later, Lalo Schifrin wrote an underrated music score for Jackie Chan's first Hollywood film, The Big Brawl/Battle Creek Brawl. I like the Enter the Dragon score, even if it sounds too "Western" and too"70's ish" by today's standards.