Familarity with something can influence or opinions, what if TNG had used a different theme and hundreds of episodes and decades later because we are familiar with it how would we recat to hearing an alternative.
with the clicking(whatever made that sound)
I keep thinking of superheroes... and considering that Patrick Stewart went on to play King Richard in "Robin Hood: Men in Tights," that makes it funnier to me.McCarthy's theme sounds like swashbuckling music to me. I keep expecting a couple of guys to whip out their swords.I say we call it the TMP theme as that's where it originated. Of course the TNG had an alternative theme by Dennis McCarthy before they decided to use the TMP theme
I'm glad they went with the Goldsmith theme. The alternate sounds really Galaxy Quest, but since this was before GQ, it's really really corny.![]()
I'm probably thinking of the anklung. It was used to make the rhythmic, triple-click sound intermittently, though not as sporadic and non-sequential as the horn interjections.with the clicking(whatever made that sound)
According to the CD liner notes, the percussion included an Indonesian instrument called the anklung, plus "knuckles striking the bottom of a piano."
I was happy to hear the TMP theme being put to good use on TNG. Had makers of subsequent Trek movies not been trying so hard to distance themselves from TMP, it might have been used as the recurring movie-era Trek theme.
Again, I think that's just because Shatner, and after him Frakes and Baird, wanted to hire Jerry Goldsmith. The theme came with the composer -- nothing more complicated than that. TNG and the later movies all used Goldsmith's theme because Goldsmith was a legend and everyone in the business would've gladly hired him if they could. The fact that that theme music was associated with Jerry Goldsmith probably carried far more weight than the fact that it was associated with TMP or TNG.I also found it odd and conspicuous that they chose to bring it back in the first movie following TNG's appropriation of the theme. (Bringing it back in later TNG films, OTOH, seemed natural enough.)
The only Star Trek movie on which Joel Goldsmith contributed to the musical score was First Contact (though he did work on the sound effects in TMP).It also doesn't help that, by then, Goldsmith was splitting the scoring duties with his son, Joel, IIRC, which kinda makes it less special in my eyes.
I thought I saw Joel working with his dad in the extras for Nemesis.
You know, I still find it odd and hard to believe that Jerry Goldsmith is gone - and that it's been so long.
I remember a few ago on another message board some poster complain on how all of his music sounds the same. I like to point out you can easily recognize his stuff from movies if you never seen the movie before.
I thought I saw Joel working with his dad in the extras for Nemesis.
He's not credited for it.
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