• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Roddenberry's lyrics

unfortunately no: when an instrumental version of a song with lyrics is used the lyricist always still gets royalties.
That's how director Robert Altman's son Michael ended up earning more on the movie M*A*S*H than his father ever did. Michael Altman wrote the lyrics used in the theme song "Suicide is Painless" and earned more than $1 million in royalties on the TV series because it used the theme, even though his lyrics were never heard. Not bad for something a 14-year-old dashed off in five minutes.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_Is_Painless
 
That's how director Robert Altman's son Michael ended up earning more on the movie M*A*S*H than his father ever did. Michael Altman wrote the lyrics used in the theme song "Suicide is Painless" and earned more than $1 million in royalties on the TV series because it used the theme, even though his lyrics were never heard. Not bad for something a 14-year-old dashed off in five minutes.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_Is_Painless
At least those lyrics actually had their moment on screen though (in the movie version of MASH)
 
That's how director Robert Altman's son Michael ended up earning more on the movie M*A*S*H than his father ever did. Michael Altman wrote the lyrics used in the theme song "Suicide is Painless" and earned more than $1 million in royalties on the TV series because it used the theme, even though his lyrics were never heard. Not bad for something a 14-year-old dashed off in five minutes.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_Is_Painless

Thanks for sharing this. It's posts like this that keep me coming back to the Trek BBS
 
That's how director Robert Altman's son Michael ended up earning more on the movie M*A*S*H than his father ever did. Michael Altman wrote the lyrics used in the theme song "Suicide is Painless" and earned more than $1 million in royalties on the TV series because it used the theme, even though his lyrics were never heard. Not bad for something a 14-year-old dashed off in five minutes.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_Is_Painless

It's a depraved song, probably did a lot of harm to some families.
 
That's how director Robert Altman's son Michael ended up earning more on the movie M*A*S*H than his father ever did. Michael Altman wrote the lyrics used in the theme song "Suicide is Painless" and earned more than $1 million in royalties on the TV series because it used the theme, even though his lyrics were never heard. Not bad for something a 14-year-old dashed off in five minutes.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_Is_Painless
Still weirded me out to learn the title of the opening theme of my favorite TV show of all time.
 
. . . Michael Altman wrote the lyrics used in the theme song "Suicide is Painless" and earned more than $1 million in royalties on the TV series because it used the theme, even though his lyrics were never heard. Not bad for something a 14-year-old dashed off in five minutes.
Still weirded me out to learn the title of the opening theme of my favorite TV show of all time.
You must be a relative youngster. I knew the M*A*S*H TV show theme was an instrumental version of "Suicide is Painless" because I saw the movie first!
 
You must be a relative youngster. I knew the M*A*S*H TV show theme was an instrumental version of "Suicide is Painless" because I saw the movie first!
I mean, maybe. Depends on who you ask. One client guessed I was 50 last week.

But, I never got in to the MASH film, found it rather unpleasant. The TV show was much more my speed.
 
You must be a relative youngster. I knew the M*A*S*H TV show theme was an instrumental version of "Suicide is Painless" because I saw the movie first!
I recall my parents saw the film. My dad, a Korean War veteran, had a mixed reaction.
 
There should be a mash up of Gene's lyrics and Bobby Darin's "Beyond the Sea'.
It does seem the words were trying (unsuccessfully) for the same vibe as “Beyond the sea” --even more so in Gene Coon’s lyrics to “Beyond Antares” which Uhura sang a couple times.

I've read that there were at least 3 space tv shows before Trek - Space Patrol, Buck Rogers, and Lost in Space. None of them had melodic theme music, mostly eerie electronic sounds strung together. So Trek was the first to have a memorable instrumental - which also became a radio hit. The theme has several chromatic shifts but ends in major chords, suggesting a more upbeat, optimistic tone than the earlier shows.
 
Last edited:
There’s horrifically awesome Trek rap in the middle of that!

I never would have heard that part if you hadn't mentioned it. I was even afraid you were kidding, to trick people into sitting through the whole thing, But you weren't kidding. :crazy:
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top