Hello, All! For those that have been following along, I've been listing to the Star Trek TOS scores on the 47th anniversary of the recording. (The weird date is just because I had the idea in 2013 and didn't want to wait two years. I'll probably do it again this year for the 50th - starting with Where No Man Has Gone Before - for a rounder number!)
Here's the second season thread: http://www.trekbbs.com/showthread.php?t=247261
My life has been a little topsy turvy the last month or so. So I missed the recording date for the third season library music (6/25/68) and Jerry Fielding's Spectre of the Gun (7/5/68).
My actual liner notes are in a box in storage at the moment. So please feel free to call out when I make a mistake. I'm going off the track listing on LLL's website. For example I have no idea when they recorded the third season titles or why there is a stereo version.
Here we go!
The third season scores are my least listened to. I keep telling myself that I just don't enjoy the sound. I think it's a dryer sound. It sounds smaller. It sounds closer. To my mind it sounds cheaper. I know there are people who find Courage, Steiner, and Fried's work in the the third season to be their favorite. (Oh, and don't you wish people would stop saying Courage left after season one?)
I did go through a period where I only listened to season three and tried to warm up to it. That helped. Maybe this will as well.
Today I'll wander down memory lane for season three's re-recordings of music from the pilots and seasons one and two.
Wilbur Hatch conducting had a different sound from Courage. (Just as Steiner did.) He sounds a little more like "classic 50's television" to me. (I love his first season library cues.) Vina's Dance here sounds like something from a Crosby and Hope Road picture. I like how he conducted Fried's combative pieces as well.
Courage's early scores are the most interesting re-recorded library cues to me because they were recorded without Jack Cookerly's "magic box". They sound very different from the originals. The Talosian motifs might sound a little less other-worldly. But in some cases they sound more solid and grounded. Monster Illusion sounds really cool with its new instrumentation. I actually like Man Trap much better without its synthesizers.
I'm not as intimately familiar with season three so I'm not always sure where these cues showed up in their "new life". It's interesting to note how much music from the pilots was brought back three years later. Courage really did define that Star Trek sound from the beginning.
Man Trap is much more digestible in this abbreviated form.
It's interesting what was re-recorded and what was not. Look at how much Man Trap was included. But no Charlie X. No Kaplan. Fried would re-record more cues from his own Shore Leave and Amok time later on. A very different set from season two. Also no original library cues were composed like in the first two seasons.
The final season of Star Trek scores is under way. I'll be back later this week to go through the first actual score of the season, Spectre of the Gun. Please post your own comments in the meantime. We don't have much TOS music left!
Here's the second season thread: http://www.trekbbs.com/showthread.php?t=247261
My life has been a little topsy turvy the last month or so. So I missed the recording date for the third season library music (6/25/68) and Jerry Fielding's Spectre of the Gun (7/5/68).
My actual liner notes are in a box in storage at the moment. So please feel free to call out when I make a mistake. I'm going off the track listing on LLL's website. For example I have no idea when they recorded the third season titles or why there is a stereo version.
Here we go!
The third season scores are my least listened to. I keep telling myself that I just don't enjoy the sound. I think it's a dryer sound. It sounds smaller. It sounds closer. To my mind it sounds cheaper. I know there are people who find Courage, Steiner, and Fried's work in the the third season to be their favorite. (Oh, and don't you wish people would stop saying Courage left after season one?)
I did go through a period where I only listened to season three and tried to warm up to it. That helped. Maybe this will as well.
Today I'll wander down memory lane for season three's re-recordings of music from the pilots and seasons one and two.
Wilbur Hatch conducting had a different sound from Courage. (Just as Steiner did.) He sounds a little more like "classic 50's television" to me. (I love his first season library cues.) Vina's Dance here sounds like something from a Crosby and Hope Road picture. I like how he conducted Fried's combative pieces as well.
Courage's early scores are the most interesting re-recorded library cues to me because they were recorded without Jack Cookerly's "magic box". They sound very different from the originals. The Talosian motifs might sound a little less other-worldly. But in some cases they sound more solid and grounded. Monster Illusion sounds really cool with its new instrumentation. I actually like Man Trap much better without its synthesizers.
I'm not as intimately familiar with season three so I'm not always sure where these cues showed up in their "new life". It's interesting to note how much music from the pilots was brought back three years later. Courage really did define that Star Trek sound from the beginning.
Man Trap is much more digestible in this abbreviated form.
It's interesting what was re-recorded and what was not. Look at how much Man Trap was included. But no Charlie X. No Kaplan. Fried would re-record more cues from his own Shore Leave and Amok time later on. A very different set from season two. Also no original library cues were composed like in the first two seasons.
The final season of Star Trek scores is under way. I'll be back later this week to go through the first actual score of the season, Spectre of the Gun. Please post your own comments in the meantime. We don't have much TOS music left!