I found that this episode was a lot easier to take in the remastered version; somehow, everything is a little drier and toned down, less "wacky", because the re recorded music is less intense.
Which music are you referring to?
I found that this episode was a lot easier to take in the remastered version; somehow, everything is a little drier and toned down, less "wacky", because the re recorded music is less intense.
It's an episode obviously rooted in its time, but one that I am also oddly entertained by
Maybe it's just those catchy tunes...
Isn't that Mudd's ship, the remastered?
All of it.Which music are you referring to?
All of it.
But only the main title was re-recorded for the re-mastered version. The rock and roll jams should be the same.![]()
Nope.I mean the episode's background music. The music for all remastered episodes was re-recorded.
I mean the episode's background music. The music for all remastered episodes was re-recorded.
True enough. It does have that Haight Asbury feel…
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but the remastered version was just a redressed Class J cargo ship from “Mudd’s Women”
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*It’s there, trust me. CBS had a thing about hiding its lights—such as they were—under one bushel after another.
IIRC, Buck Rogers actually disco-danced in one ep!
Hippies were the thing to mock in the late 60s. Establishment types (over-thirties) just didn't understand these damn lazy kids. Get a haircut, you look like a girl! So every series had en episode making fun of them, or making them the bad guys. I was about 12 at the time and wanted to BE one (mainly for the free love aspect). Really, all the average hippie wanted to do was listen to rock, do hallucinogenics, protest the war, and ball.
Wait, Buck discoed in a few episodes.
"Free love" sounds nice until the kids start popping out and/or cooties start tunneling in, but at least they were more treatable back then, there's another revolution just waiting to happen... Were the hippies clueless or did they think social construct was set up as some sort of conspiracy theory thing as opposed to reality?
I don't know what that means, but of course, I mean the background music re-performed by an orchestra, and re-recorded for the episode.When we say re-recorded, we mean performed by a new orchestra in 2006.
You must mean "they took a new pass at the studio elements to create the digital master." Which I'm sure they did, but that's a whole different thing.
I don't know what that means, but of course, I mean the background music re-performed by an orchestra, and re-recorded for the episode.
IDK - I thought the "Hippie" movement of the mid to lat 1960ies was in a way the evolution of the Beatnik subculture of the 1950ies:As I understand it, they were reacting to the relative conformity and puritanism of the 1950s, which had arguably swung too far the other way.
Ah. That, they did not do.
.
I remember their announcing at the time that they were re-recording the old arrangements with a new orchestra. I can't remember if there were other things I heard in all the years since that reinforced this, maybe not, and maybe they ended up not doing that.
What I'm referring to may be something about the remastered versions that gives the music slightly less "punch", puts it slightly more into the background compared to the unremastered.
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