A three-time Oscar nominee, Jerry Fielding was among the boldest and
most experimental of all Hollywood film composers. His music typically
utilized advanced compositional procedures, producing dense, often
richly dissonant orchestral textures, sometimes flavored with jazz.
Fielding's film music career was marked by enduring and rewarding
collaborations with
Sam Peckinpah,
Michael Winner and
Clint Eastwood.
Born Joshua Feldman in Pittsburgh in 1922 to immigrant Russian parents,
Jerry Fielding was brought up in a music-loving but non-musical
household. As a home-bound, somewhat sickly teenager, Fielding derived
early inspiration from the radio productions of
Orson Welles, with their groundbreaking
Bernard Herrmann scores. He was
also fascinated by the increasingly advanced orchestrations being done
for the swing bands of the time, with their heavy reliance on aspects
of classical music. The young Fielding joined the studio of Max Adkins,
the noted director of theatrical music who also included
Henry Mancini and
Murray Gerson among his students. After
picking up vital arranging skills, Fielding toured with some of the
leading dance bands of the 1940s. This led to Hollywood, where his
radio and television assignments included conducting and arranging for
many of the most popular variety shows of the time, including those of
Groucho Marx.
At this time the shadow of McCarthyism was looming over America and
Fielding, a self-confessed "loud-mouthed crusader", found himself among
its many victims. His hiring of black musicians for his television
orchestra (unheard of in those days) brought criticism and threats. His
progressive affiliations brought him to the attention of the FBI and
HUAC. Despite his strong liberal beliefs, Fielding said that McCarthy's
men were probably more interested in getting him to name Groucho Marx
as a "fellow traveler". He took the Fifth Amendment and promptly found
his Hollywood career in ruins. He eventually found employment in the
safe haven of Las Vegas, where he became musical director for the stage
shows of
Bud Abbott and
Lou Costello,
Debbie Reynolds,
Eddie Fisher and others. He also
began recording the first of many pop and swing LPs, such as
"Fielding's Formula", "Sweet With A Beat" and "Hollywood Brass".
The approach of the 1960s saw the end of McCarthyism and Fielding's
return to Hollywood. In 1962, at the suggestion of his writer friend
Dalton Trumbo, Fielding was hired by
Otto Preminger for the film
Advise & Consent (1962), a tale
of political intrigue amid the halls of Washington, DC. It was a
remarkable debut score that combined light orchestral lyricism with
hints of the richer, almost ethereal textures of his later work. It was
also drenched in Fielding's own brand of dark irony--a trademark of the
composer.
Around this time Fielding, hungry to expand his compositional
technique, enrolled as a student of the venerated composer and teacher
Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco,
who, incidentally, had given similar instruction to
Jerry Goldsmith and
John Williams. More television
work followed, including scores to
Mission: Impossible (1966)
and
Star Trek (1966). In 1967
Fielding scored
Noon Wine (1966),
a contemporary western for television directed by
Sam Peckinpah. It was the first in a
legendary though sometimes tumultuous partnership. In 1969 came
The Wild Bunch (1969). This
landmark western was Peckinpah's and Fielding's breakthrough movie. The
composer caught the weariness, dust, dirt and blood of a vanishing West
in a rich underscore that interspersed sprightly action cues with
wistful Mexican folk melodies and nostalgic, bittersweet dirges.
However, as always, the nostalgia was tempered with Fielding's
characteristically steely irony. It earned him his first Oscar
nomination. A second came with Peckinpah's
Straw Dogs (1971) in 1971. This
controversial though somewhat garbled tale of the violence lurking
within a meek man saw Fielding's music take a new direction. Inspired
by
Igor Stravinsky's "Histoire Du
Soldat", and with a large orchestra supplying dense, yearning sound
clusters, this remarkable work gives voice to both the characters'
inner turmoil and the desolate Cornish landscapes of the film's
setting.
Fielding provided another sensitive, beautifully forlorn score for
Peckinpah's proxy self-portrait,
Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia (1974).
However, some Peckinpah collaborations were not so happy. Fielding's
music for
The Getaway (1972) was
rejected in favor of a score by
Quincy Jones. Then in 1973 Fielding
backed out of working with
Bob Dylan on the
score for
Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid (1973).
Fielding's association with Michael Winner began in 1970 with
Lawman (1971), for which the composer
supplied an epic score tinged with jazz--something of a first for a
western! Then followed the searing, impressionistic music for
Chato's Land (1972),
The Mechanic (1972) and
Scorpio (1973). A standout score was for
Winner's gothic melodrama,
The Nightcomers (1971). This gave
Fielding a chance to indulge his love of 19th-century baroque music.
The composer considered it among his finest works. His final score for
Winner was for
The Big Sleep (1978). It was an
admirable consummation of the composer's various techniques.
Clint Eastwood was well served by Fielding's scores to
The Enforcer (1976) and
The Gauntlet (1977). The composer
responded to their hard-edged urban milieu with full-on jazz
compositions that featured some of the best jazz players in the
business. In 1976 Fielding received his third and final Oscar
nomination for Eastwood's
The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976).
Jerry Fielding was a man who fought hard to get his brand of music into
films. He was not a glad-hander. He was an uncompromising artist who
perhaps sacrificed many choice assignments by spurning easy,
producer-friendly routes. These stances may have taken their toll on
him. From the mid-'70s onwards, the composer endured a series of heart
attacks. In 1980 he suffered a fatal heart seizure while in Canada
scoring Funeral Home. He
was 57 years old. Jerry Fielding had an innately humane approach to
film scoring. He eschewed traditional "mickey-mousing" techniques
(i.e., slavishly following every on-screen action). Rather, his music
sought to mirror and illuminate the motivations and deepest inner lives
of the characters. This it did with great compassion, beauty and
sensitivity. Producer
Gordon T. Dawson
touchingly described Fielding's music as being " . . . like a man in a
green suit walking in a forest."
And so it is.