Fumio Hayasaka had a celebrated association with the pre-eminent Japanese director
Akira Kurosawa which was short-lived due to Hayasaka's early death. The 1948 film
Drunken Angel (Yoidore tenshi) was the first film directed by Akira Kurosawa that Hayasaka composed music for. The director and composer collaborated to test "oppositional handling of music and performance". In his autobiography, Kurosawa would say that working with Hayasaka changed his views on how film music should be used; from then on, he viewed music as "counterpoint" to the image and not just an "accompaniment". This is also the first film that Kurosawa used
Toshiro Mifune as an actor. In the Japanese film culture, directors normally wanted music that sounded like well-known Western works; Kurosawa specifically had asked Hayasaka to compose music that sounded like
Maurice Ravel's Boléro.
Masaru Satō, then a young composer, was so impressed with the music that he decided to study with Hayasaka. This film was also related to the atomic scar of the Japanese culture; although the American occupation forces forbade the Japanese media from "criticizing America's role in the tragedy" of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
Rashomon depicts a historical era of Japan where her cities are in ruin and social chaos abounds. Hayasaka was continually productive in the years leading up to his death. In 1950, he founded the Association of Film Music. The 1953 film
Ugetsu, directed by Kenji Mizoguchi, featured a score by Hayasaka; the film won the silver prize at the 1953
Venice Film Festival. The year after, 1954, Hayasaka did another Mizoguchi film, the
jidai-geki Sansho the Bailiff (Sansho dayu). This film shared the 1954 Silver Lion prize from the Venice Film Festival with
Kazan's On the Waterfront,
Fellini's La Strada, and
Kurosawa's Seven Samurai.
Seven Samurai, a Kurosawa jidai-geki film, also features music by Hayasaka. At the time, it was the largest Japanese film production ever. This film featured strong directorial music choices that are closely related to Western symphonic concert music. Masaru Sato assisted with the orchestration of Hayasaka's score. During his time in Tokyo, Hayasaka also wrote several notable concert works including
Ancient Dances of the Left and on the Right (1941), a
Piano Concerto (1948) and the orchestral suite
Yukara (1955). Hayasaka served as a musical mentor to both Masaru Satō and
Tōru Takemitsu. == Death ==