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The score for Star Trek: The Motion Picture was written by Jerry Goldsmith, who would later compose the scores Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, Star Trek: First Contact, Star Trek: Insurrection, and Star Trek: Nemesis, as well as the themes to the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation and Star Trek: Voyager.
The First Contact soundtrack was released by the independent label GNP Crescendo Records—which distributed all of the Star Trek film and television soundtracks—on December 2, 1996, [7] [8] The album contained 51 minutes of music, with 35 minutes of Jerry Goldsmith's score, 10 minutes of additional music by Joel Goldsmith, and two licensed songs—Roy Orbison's "Ooby Dooby" and Steppenwolf ...
Star Trek: Music from the Motion Picture is a soundtrack album for the 2009 film Star Trek, composed by Michael Giacchino.The score was recorded in October 2008 since the film was originally scheduled to be released the following December.
Uhura's Song is a Star Trek: The Original Series novel written by Janet Kagan published in 1985. Kagan was asked to produce an outline by editor David G. Hartwell, after he read the manuscript of her novel Hellspark. She was unfamiliar with Star Trek and needed to research the series whilst writing Uhura's Song.
Some of the instrumental pieces, used to record the score, includes the ADS (Advanced Digital Synthesizer) 11, manufactured from Con Brio, Inc., [5] Blaster Beam, an electronic instrument 12 to 15 feet (3.7 to 4.6 m) long, [6] [7] created by musician Craig Huxley, [1]: 89 and several state-of-the-art synthesisers used as musical instruments, notably the Yamaha CS-80, ARP 2600, Oberheim OB-X ...
The Search for Spock's original score was released in LPs and cassettes through Capitol Records in the United States and EMI Records in the United Kingdom. [6] In early-1990s, the independent label GNP Crescendo Records acquired the licensing and distribution deal with Paramount to distribute Star Trek soundtracks in CDs which included The Search of Spock's soundtrack which released on January ...
The punk music during the bus scene was written by Kirk Thatcher who worked with the film's sound designer Mark Mangini and two other sound editors from punk bands to create their own music. [3] They would be credited as the fictional punk band "Edge of Etiquette" and wrote a song named "I Hate You" which contained few explicit lyrics.
The musical score for the 1994 science fiction film Star Trek Generations is composed by Dennis McCarthy. Generations, the seventh Star Trek film overall, is directed by David Carson and based on the television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, which was also scored by McCarthy. He had to balance the score from the series and film score ...