Product Details
Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Star Trek: The Motion Picture
Various Artists

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Ilia's Theme
  2. Main Title
  3. Klingon Battle
  4. Total Logic [#]
  5. Floating Office [#]
  6. Enterprise
  7. Leaving Drydock
  8. Spock's Arrival [#]
  9. Cloud
  10. Vejur Flyover - Gene Rodenberry
  11. Force Field [#] - Gene Rodenberry
  12. Games [#] - Gene Rodenberry
  13. Spock Walk - Gene Rodenberry
  14. Inner Workings [#] - Gene Rodenberry
  15. Vejur Speaks [#] - Gene Rodenberry
  16. Meld - Gene Rodenberry
  17. Good Start [#] - Gene Rodenberry
  18. End Title - Gene Rodenberry

Disc 2:

  1. Start Trek Theme [*] - Gene Rodenberry
  2. Introduction: Nichelle Nichols [#][*] - Gene Rodenberry
  3. Inside Star Trek [*] - Gene Rodenberry
  4. William Shatner Meets Captain Kirk [*] - Gene Rodenberry
  5. Introduction to Live Show [*] - Gene Rodenberry
  6. About Science Fiction [#][*] - Gene Rodenberry
  7. Origin of Spock [*] - Gene Rodenberry
  8. Sarek's Son Spock [*] - Gene Rodenberry
  9. Questor Affair [*]
  10. Genesis II Pilot [#][*]
  11. Cyborg Tools and E.T. Life Forms [#][*]
  12. McCoy's Rx for Life [*]
  13. Star Trek Philosopy [*]
  14. Asimov's World of Science Fiction [*]
  15. Enterprise Runs Around [*]
  16. Letter from a Network Censor [*]
  17. Star Trek Dream (Ballad 1/Ballad 2) [*]
  18. Sign off: Nichelle Nichols [#][*]

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #35066 in Music
  • Brand: Sony
  • Released on: 1999-01-26
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Formats: Enhanced, Soundtrack, Box set
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: .29 pounds

Customer Reviews

The best of the Star Trek scores...5
Jerry Goldsmith is one of the most well-known and accomplished musicians in the field of modern classical film scores. Always pushing the envelope, blending styles and instruments, with this, his score to the 1979 film "Star Trek: The Motion Picture," he creates one of the most memorable themes in sci-fi film history, and some of the most eerie music ques ever heard. In several interviews, Goldsmith states his difficulty with making film scores because of his initial lack of a theme...but when he finally comes upon a theme, it's something to behold. The fanfare theme is as recognizable as the original Alexander Courage theme for the TV show...so much so, it was even used on "Star Trek V: The Final Frontier," and even "Star Trek: The Next Generation." The theme for the planet Vulcan in "Total Logic" recalls the atmosphere created by the original TV series, as well as gives a sense of a culture that has as much in common with ancient Oriental mysticism as it does with scientific logic. The true gems are the V'Ger themes, first showcased in the "Klingon Battle," and further explored with "The Cloud," "V'Ger Flyover," and "Force Field." The use of the blaster beam is very powerful and very alien (I don't think it's ever been used on another film score, at least not to the degree to which it was used here). That sounds instantly grabs the listener's ears and induces everything from dread and fear to curiosity and awe. It's a beautifully menacing sound. Despite the fact that several cues are still missing from this CD, it is still a must-have for soundtrack enthusiasts, Trekkers and Trekkies alike, and fans of neo-classical music. It is without a doubt a triumph for Jerry Goldsmith, and is certainly an underappreciated gem of a soundtrack.

Possibly the Best Film Score Ever!5
Ranking up there with Bernard Herrmann's score for "Vertigo" and John Williams's original "Star Wars" as the best of all music for film is Jerry Goldsmith's soundtrack for "Star Trek: The Motion Picture." The film which launched the movie series was mediocre, at best, but the superlative music made the movie better than it actually was. The hauntingly melodic "Illya's Theme" is one of the most beautiful compositions ever done for film, equal to "Laura" and "As Time Goes By," earlier classics from Hollywood's "Golden Age." The dynamic theme, later adapted for the Next Generation television series, is here in all its thunderous glory. This disc features cues omitted from the original release, a welcome addition to an already magnificent score. If there had been justice, the 1980 Academy Award for best score would have gone to this monumental recording. A "gotta-have" for Goldsmith fans and others who appreciate the fine art of film scoring.

Three Words: I love it.5
A movie's soundtrack can have a big impact on how good a movie is. Not only does the music itself have to be good, it also has to fit the movie. It wouldn't make much sense to have Fur Elise playing over a fight scene, or to play Wagner's Flight of the Valkyries at a Vulcan wedding.

Goldsmith's music captures the sense of adventure and awe perfectly. I've listened to this album over and over again, and I'm still not tired of it. Despite it's age it's still as good as (if not better than) most of the scores composed today. Many of today's movies have soundtracks that are dull and uninspired.

So far I've only addressed the first disc (the soundtrack itself) in this two disc set. The second is the expanded version of an album released in 1976 of interviews with the cast, crew and others. While to me the first disc is worth the price alone, the second disc is a very nice bonus. Its a nostalgic trip down memory lane (even though I wasn't alive in 1976).

Whether you are a Jerry Goldsmith fan, a Star Trek fan, or just a general fan of good movie soundtracks, I would reccomend the purchase of this set.