We talk a lot about Trek music composers on here, and rightly so: they consistently did an outstanding job. (Even "Spock's Brain" has a top-notch Fred Steiner score ...)
But what about the music editors? The hard-working guys who had to take existing music and weave it into other episodes. Looks like there were just three such guys on the original series (Robert H. Raff, Jim Henrikson, Richard Lapham). In my opinion, they worked wonders.
Just finished watching "Balance of Terror" for the zillionth time. Now we all know how great Steiner's "Romulan theme" is, and it absolutely enhances what's already a superb episode. But there are many scenes that use music from other episodes. That lovely Enterprise fly-by music we hear as the episode title appears on the screen? It's from "The Conscience of the King." That dramatic music at the end of Act II when Kirk and McCoy exit the briefing room? It's Joe-Tormolen-Goes-Berserk music from "The Naked Time." The beautiful cue at the end of the episode when Kirk exits the chapel? From "Where No Man Has Gone Before."
I wonder if the music editors had free rein to use whatever cues they deemed appropriate. Or if the composers stayed involved to "track" their original music into various other episodes.
But what about the music editors? The hard-working guys who had to take existing music and weave it into other episodes. Looks like there were just three such guys on the original series (Robert H. Raff, Jim Henrikson, Richard Lapham). In my opinion, they worked wonders.
Just finished watching "Balance of Terror" for the zillionth time. Now we all know how great Steiner's "Romulan theme" is, and it absolutely enhances what's already a superb episode. But there are many scenes that use music from other episodes. That lovely Enterprise fly-by music we hear as the episode title appears on the screen? It's from "The Conscience of the King." That dramatic music at the end of Act II when Kirk and McCoy exit the briefing room? It's Joe-Tormolen-Goes-Berserk music from "The Naked Time." The beautiful cue at the end of the episode when Kirk exits the chapel? From "Where No Man Has Gone Before."
I wonder if the music editors had free rein to use whatever cues they deemed appropriate. Or if the composers stayed involved to "track" their original music into various other episodes.