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Triumph of the Spirit (Cliff Eidelman) (1989)
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Average: 3.37 Stars
***** 82 5 Stars
**** 91 4 Stars
*** 70 3 Stars
** 41 2 Stars
* 45 1 Stars
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Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:

Orchestrated by:
Mark McKenzie
Audio Samples   ▼
Total Time: 53:27
• 1. Main Title (2:25)
• 2. Love in Wedlock (0:49)
• 3. Dark Tunnel to Auschwitz (1:53)
• 4. There Was a Time (1:45)
• 5. Answer Us (3:53)
• 6. Mi Dyo Mi (0:49)
• 7. Avram Refuses to Work (2:22)
• 8. Longing for Home (1:48)
• 9. A Hard Felt Rest (1:28)
• 10. Hell Realization (0:32)
• 11. Elena's False Dreams (2:00)
• 12. There Was a Memory (4:26)
• 13. Begging For Bread (1:04)
• 14. The Mourning (2:13)
• 15. The Slaughter (2:15)
• 16. It Was a Month Before We Left (1:29)
• 17. Hunger (1:20)
• 18. Mercy on to Us (1:27)
• 19. Salamo Desperately Finds Allegra (3:27)
• 20. Allegra's Punishment (1:36)
• 21. A New Assignment (1:44)
• 22. Death March (5:37)
• 23. Epilogue/End Credits (6:54)

Album Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(December 10th, 1989)
Regular U.S. release.
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,353
Written 6/19/01, Revised 5/6/07
Buy it... if you respect the melodramatic awe that a truly well researched and rendered Holocaust score can provide.

Avoid it... if poor depth of sound in recording quality tends to distract you during heavily layered orchestral scores.

Eidelman
Eidelman
Triumph of the Spirit: (Cliff Eidelman) Among the lesser known dramas about the Holocaust, Triumph of the Spirit featured the story of a prisoner (Willem Dafoe) who survives the death camps by becoming a boxing champion over other prisoners at Auschwitz. Understandably gloomy in the trials of the main character, the film was ultimately an arthouse affair with a predictably bittersweet ending. After scoring a string of even more obscure releases, the newly arrived musician Cliff Eidelman was recommended for a composing position in the production of Triumph of the Spirit at a very young age, only a few years out of his music studies. Not many people are familiar with the scores of Cliff Eidelman from his pre-Star Trek days, but there is no doubt that Triumph of the Spirit is the strongest of the young composer's early works. When presented with the prospect of working on the true WWII/Auschwitz story, Eidelman jumped at the opportunity, noting that the film had lengthy sequences without dialogue, allowing the score to flourish in emotion for extended cues. As part of the process of creating a few demonstration pieces for the producers of the film, Eidelman manually researched the instrumentation and language of the Greek Jew culture that was depicted in the story, and this attention to ethnic detail won Eidelman the job. Because of those lengthy sequences without dialogue, Eidelman would utilize a large performing group and chorus to represent the emotional intangibles of the tale, traveling to Rome to record this score with the large group of performers and singers of the Unione Musicisti Di Roma. A common question regarding the choral renditions involves the unconventional use of language in the spoken chants; the language in which the chorus performs is actually a native Ladino, a cross between Hebrew and Spanish that Greek Jews in Spain and Eastern Europe spoke at the time. Eidelman also took note of the instrumentation from the same pre-WWII time and regions of Europe. Along with a primary role for strings (which carry much of the emotional weight of the score), a mixture of Eastern and Western instruments was used, including guitars, tamboras, mandolins, and mandolas. Accenting the stark visuals for the film, this precise choice of instrumentation provides one of the more authentic holocaust sounds in film score history.

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