SecondSpin has the clamshell releases on sale for $24.00 a season
http://www.secondspin.com/s/product...ksEWS2nLcvObcH1TPt89oaAmg-8P8HAQ#.VXzvG0beMTU
I can confirm that the 'plastic era' DVD case versions do indeed contain the pre-"remastered" versions of the episodes, although it must be noted that there are still occasional anomalies where the sound remix doesn't match the originals (as the DVDs were remixed in stereo, whereas the original versions were mono sound). Things like engine hums on space footage and the like aren't 1:1 as broadcast.
AFAIK even the 'original' versions of the episodes still use the remastered soundtrack, which is why we end up with Captain Kirk's 'Space... the final frontier...' monologue being heard on "Where No Man Has Gone Before" regardless of which version you choose on the Blu Ray, when it's a matter of fact that this episode didn't originally have the monologue at all.
The blu ray versions *have* got some... "inconsistencies".
The DVDs will have the opening credit music from the first episodes restored to the "electric violin" themes (but only the opening credits - except WNMHGB, which has the end credits correct). Also "The Man Trap" and "Charlie X" have the ''created by Gene Roddenberry'' credit on the opening titles as first seen in 1966. The DVDs are the only place you can see these on home video. The Blu-Ray's did not keep them. Also, the "electric violin" theme is on too many episodes on the DVDs. It was only in the first 9 broadcast episodes. The DVDs, when originally released in individual 2 episode discs in production order, had them in episodes that aired after the theme was changed to the "Cello version." For example, "The Corbomite Maneuver" should not have the "electric violin" theme.
So, nothing is perfect.
Do you know for sure that the electic violin theme was used on the first nine episodes? When I tried to come up with a definitive answer when I wrote about this (and other music related questions) in 2013, the answer appeared to be that nobody knows:
http://startrekfactcheck.blogspot.com/2013/06/alexander-courages-marvelous-malarkey.html
And in the case of The Fugitive, it was the replacement of the original music with more affordable stock music that was an issue, right?
The changes to Star Trek are both widespread (so you won't see a disc replacement program like Batman) and in many ways more subtle (which is probably why you don't see the outrage caused by blatant music replacement or missing scenes; and probably why CBS hasn't been motivated to reissue the sets)
Thanks! Very thorough and informative.
Only one question, really: you're certain that "The Menagerie" never had the electric violin theme. How do you know?
There has never been a perfect, "night of original broadcast" release of Star Trek. Which bugs me, honestly.
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