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Preview of Creating the Filmation Generation

Fans of the often forgotten Animated Series of Star Trek which aired between 1973 and 1974 will be pleased to hear that a book dedicated to the production company behind TAS has recently been published by TwoMorrows Publishing. The Animated Series is considered by many to be a curiosity in Star Trek‘s long history. Despite many fans shunning the show as not part of the Star Trek ‘canon’, TAS was actually penned by a variety of Star Trek writers who worked on the Original Series and features the vocal talents of the entire original cast, save Walter Koenig (although Walter wrote one of the episodes).

Founder of Filmation, Lou Scheimer, penned the book with popular Trek writer Andy Mangels (known to many for his work on the Pocket Books line of Star Trek fiction titles). As well as offering a rare insight into the creative process behind Star Trek‘s Animated Series, the book spans the full history of Filmation and the large collection of animated shows that the studio produced which are so beloved among fans of multiple genres. Here are the official details of the book from TwoMorrows Publishing:

Hailed as one of the fathers of Saturday morning television, Lou Scheimer was the co-founder of Filmation Studios, which for over 25 years provided animated excitement for TV and film. Always at the forefront, Scheimer’s company created the first DC cartoons with Superman, Batman, and Aquaman, ruled the song charts with The Archies, kept Trekkie hope alive with the Emmy-winning Star Trek: The Animated Series, taught morals with Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids, and swung into high adventure with Tarzan, The Lone Ranger, and Zorro. Forays into live-action included Shazam! and The Secrets of Isis, plus groundbreaking special effects work on Jason of Star Command and others. And in the 1980s, Filmation single-handedly caused the syndication explosion with He-Man and the Masters of the Universe and its successors. Now, Lou Scheimer tells the entire story to best-selling author Andy Mangels, including how his father decked Adolf Hitler, memories of the comics of the Golden Age, schooling with Andy Warhol, and what it meant to lead the last all-American animation company through nearly thirty years of innovation and fun! Profusely illustrated with photos, model sheets, storyboards, presentation art, looks at rare and unproduced series, and more — plus stories from top animation insiders about Scheimer and Filmation’s past, and rare Filmation art by Bruce Timm, Adam Hughes, Alex Ross, Phil Jimenez, Frank Cho, Gene Ha, and Mike McKone — this book will show the Filmation Generation the story behind the stories!

Stay tuned to TrekCore as we’ll be bringing you a full review of the book alongside a special interview with author Andy Mangels where he talks in detail about TAS. In the meantime, be sure to order Creating the Filmation Generation today… if you’ve been waiting for the definitive “Making Of” book for The Animated Series, then this is it! Recommended!

Buy Creating the Filmation Generation



Season 3 Blus: Our Top 10 “Can’t Wait!” Moments

2012 has been a wonderful year for fans of Star Trek: The Next Generation. After years of debate, anticipation and rumors, the remastering of the show into high definition kicked off thanks to a huge restoration project by CBS. The first two seasons of the show have already enjoyed this meticulous remastering are now available on Blu-Ray. For a lot of fans, the show’s third season is when things really start to get interesting. With this fan-favorite season next-in-line to enjoy a Blu-Ray release thanks to CBS-Digital, we’re taking a look at some of the most anticipated scenes from Season 3 that we can’t wait to see in high definition. Here’s our Top 10:

John Doe’s evolved state in “Transfigurations“. This effect was largely created in-camera using a special filter and a special costume that glowed with a special film stock, and it will be interesting to see how much of a digital touch-up will be needed for the remastered episode. [Update: we’ve received clarification that this effect was NOT created in-camera. In both the original and the remastered, it used an actor in a body stocking, which was used as a matte for the glowing effect.]
Roga Danar’s imaginative escape sequences in “The Hunted“. This episode is full of wonderful shots, we can’t wait to see Danar’s Kamikaze run against the Enterprise in the opening act and his unique escape from the transporter beam later in the episode!
The Enterprise orbiting the red giant star in “Evolution“. This has always been one of our favorirtes, but the brief glimpse of the recreated scene in the Season 3 trailer has mouths watering for more of this amazing effects shot!
The Valley of Chula holodeck simulation from “The Defector” – this was our first ever look at Romulus. The obscured detail of the village in the misty valley should be beautiful when remastered in high-definition.
The Enterprise hiding in the Paulson Nebula from “The Best of Both Worlds, Part I” – the smokey model shot already looks amazing in standard definition, and the quick shot seen in the Season 3 trailer is just breathtaking.
The Barzan Wormhole from “The Price” – the first, but hopefully not the last wormhole we’ll get from the 24th century on Blu-ray!
The Enterprise’s harrowing escape from the asteroid field in “Booby Trap” – another sequence seen quickly in the Season 3 trailer; this is some pretty amazing model work which should look just wonderful in high definition.
Gomtuu’s energy defense from “Tin Man” – this is one of the most unusual effects in the whole seven seasons of the show, and we just can’t wait to see it recreated with modern CG techniques.
A very close contender for the top spot, the Enterprise‘s atmospheric entry sequence from “Deja Q” is a magnificent scene. Even in SD, this scene impresses on so many different levels, but glimpsing a short preview of it in the Season 3 trailer was jaw-droppingly incredible. The full shot is going to look simply beautiful.
The Enterprise-C and famous Klingon battle sequences from “Yesterday’s Enterprise“. The episode is arguably one of the best in the season, and seeing the whole Klingon engagement in HD is going to be epic. One of our sources has described seeing the Enterprise-C in HD as “starship porn”… we totally agree. “Let’s make sure that history never forgets… the name… Enterprise.”

Let us know which moments you’re most looking forward to in the remastered Season 3 Blu-Rays… leave your comments below! Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 3 on Blu-Ray is due for release in April 2013 (subject to change). Order Seasons 1 and 2 on Blu-Ray using the links below!

Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1 Blu-Ray today!



Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2 Blu-Ray today!




First Details of Enterprise S1 Blu-Ray Bonus Features

CBS is well underway prepping the high-definition launch of Star Trek: Enterprise on Blu-Ray. As we previously reported, Enterprise was the only Star Trek series to be filmed natively at high-definition 1080p resolution (although FX shots were rendered at 720p), so CBS has a far easier job putting the show out on Blu-Ray in comparison to the monumental remastering of Star Trek: The Next Generation.

A number of sources have informed TrekCore that Season 1 of Enterprise should be released in mid-late March 2013. Whilst the show was by no means as popular as The Next Generation, CBS have decided to commission another slew of brand-new bonus features to accompany the episodes on the Blu-Ray release. VAM [Value Added Material] Maestros Roger Lay Jr. and Robert Meyer Burnett – responsible for the great work on the TNG Blu-Ray special features – have been brought on board to give fans a candid, honest look at the show’s troubled inception. Here’s what we know so far about the Season 1 bonus features:

  • The Season 1 set will boast a brand new 3-part documentary (similar to TNG Season 1’s “Stardate Revisited”) which we’ve been told is both epiccompelling and incredibly candid.
  • The Season 1 set will include a number of new audio commentaries (expect around 4 episodes to feature commentaries). Furthermore, the show’s Executive Producer Brannon Braga has revealed that Season 1’s fan-favorite episode “Shuttlepod One” will feature a commentary with BrannonConnor Trinneer (Trip Tucker) and Dominic Keating (Malcolm Reed). This is very exciting news, hearing of a commentary featuring the two stars of that particular episode along with the episode’s writer and producer.
    [UPDATE: We’ve confirmed there are in fact five new audio commentaries included with Season 1]
  • The Season 1 release is also set to include an unprecedented special discussion piece between executive producers Rick Berman and Brannon Braga. The lengthy piece, entitled “In Conversation” is described as refreshingly candid and “will be watched by the fanbase for years to come” according to Robert Meyer Burnett.

Lay and Burnett have heavily engaged Enterprise‘s Executive Producer Brannon Braga with these features, and Brannon himself is actively asking the fanbase for suggestions to guide his input into the bonus features. If you have a particular request, an episode you want to hear audio commentary for or any burning questions you have about the show – post them below and we’ll make sure they get passed on!

We’ll be featuring a special interview with VAM producer Robert Meyer Burnett soon, where he further discusses working on Star Trek Blu-Ray bonus features. We’ll also be bringing you a very special video interview we recorded with Brannon Braga back in October at the huge Destination London convention where Brannon spoke to us candidly at length about his time working inside the Star Trek franchise.

Be sure to keep checking back at TrekCore for the latest news and developments relating to Enterprise‘s launch on Blu-Ray!

Order Star Trek: Enterprise Season 1 Blu-Ray today!



Order Star Trek: Enterprise Season 2 Blu-Ray today!



Star Trek (OS) Complete Soundtrack – Track Listing & More Samples

December 4th saw the hotly anticipated release of La-La Land Records’ Complete Star Trek: The Original Series Soundtrack Collection. The set is now available to purchase from the company’s website lalalandrecords.com.

In our recent coverage and interviews we featured a number of exclusive sample tracks from the set. La-La Land have now released a full track listing with a further collection of sample tracks. You can listen to the tracks below. As soon as our set arrives, we’ll be issuing a full review of the collection. In the meantime, be sure to secure your order as the set is limited in number to 6,000 copies.

SEASON 1, DISC 1
The Cage
Music Composed and Conducted by Alexander Courage
Episode #1, Recorded 1/21/65

  1. Main Title* M10 1:00
  2. Dr. Bartender M11 1:23
  3. Survivors M21 1:45
  4. Prime Specimen/Bottled M22–30/M31 5:08
  5. Probing/Monster Illusion/Monster Fight/The Kibitzers M41/M42/M43/M44 5:40
  6. Long Look/Vina’s Punishment M45/M51 2:02
  7. Pike’s Punishment M52 0:36
  8. The Picnic M53 2:17
  9. True Love M61 1:24
  10. Vina’s Dance M62 1:56
  11. Torchy Girl/Under the Spell/Primitive Thoughts M63/M71/M72 1:10
  12. Wrong Think M73 0:43
  13. To Catch a T. M74 1:24
  14. Going Up M75 1:10
  15. Max’s Factor M81 2:12
  16. Who Was Eve & End Credits* M82 1:32
    Total Time: 32:01*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    Where No Man Has Gone Before
    Music Composed and Conducted by Alexander Courage
    Episode #2, Recorded 11/29/65
    Aired #3, 9/22/66

  17. Beyond the Pale (No Man Before)/Main Title M11/M12 1:06
  18. Act 1 Card M13 0:37
  19. Episode Titles M14 1:23
  20. Force Field/Silver Orbs (Zooms Past) M15–20/M21 4:06
  21. Crippled Ship M22 0:56
  22. The Patient/Speedy Reader M23/M24 1:49
  23. Some Corpse M31 2:21
  24. Decision/Playtime/Megalomania/Stronger and Stronger/Hit the Button M32/M41/M42/M43/M44 3:03
  25. On Delta Vega/Strangle by Wire M51/M52 1:14
  26. When Your Eyes Have Turned to Silver M53 1:01
  27. Instant Paradise M54 2:56
  28. Power Mad/Situation Grave/Epilogue M61/M62/M63 6:09
  29. End Title M64 0:23
  30. End Credits M65 0:21
    Total Time: 27:58
    Total Disc Time: 60:06

SEASON 1, DISC 2
The Man Trap
Music Composed and Conducted by Alexander Courage
Episode #6, Recorded 8/19/66
Aired #1, 9/8/66

  1. Main Title* (electric violin version) 0:50
  2. Small Planet Visit/The Changeling M10/M11 3:26
  3. Episode Titles/Genuine Affection M12/M13 0:59
  4. First Goner/Salty Cat/Dressing Down M14–21/M22/M23 1:52
  5. Circle One/Monitor Gizzard/Down Again/Grey to Greene M24/M25/M26/M31 3:16
  6. Salt Chaser M32 1:34
  7. Noisy Plant M33 1:05
  8. At First Sight/Pill Tosser M34/M35–41 2:52
  9. Nancy Schmancy M42 1:54
  10. The Unreal McCoy M43 2:02
  11. Top Security/Lazer Dazer/Dodo Girl M44/M45–51/M52 4:02
  12. Conference M53 4:47
  13. Dead Crater/Last of the Last M54/M61 4:13
  14. Warp One* M62 0:43
  15. Trailer (“The Man Trap”) 1:02
    Total Time: 35:15*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    The Naked Time
    Music Composed and Conducted by Alexander Courage
    Episode #7, Recorded 8/31/66
    Aired #4, 9/29/66

  16. Brass Monkeys*/Out of Glove M10/M11 2:58
  17. Breaking Planet*/Sweaty Palm/Itchy Hand M12/M13/M14 1:20
  18. Joe Berserk M21 3:01
  19. Pulled Down*/It Spreads M22/M23 1:12
  20. Joe Goes/Sulu Finks Out M24/M31 1:00
  21. Up the Rebels/D’Artagnan-san M32/M33 3:09
  22. Banana Farm M34 2:11
  23. Out of Control/Lurch Time/Punchy Kid M41/M42/M43 1:48
  24. Party Time M44 1:34
  25. Medicine Girl/Hot Skin M45–51/M52 4:29
  26. Off the Cloud M53 1:06
  27. Captain’s Wig M54–61 4:01
  28. The Big Go M62 2:42
  29. Time Reverse*/Future Risk and End Title* M63/M64 1:45
  30. Trailer (“Mudd’s Women”) 1:02
  31. End Title* (electric violin version) 0:46
    Total Time: 34:44
    Total Disc Time: 70:07*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

SEASON 1, DISC 3
Charlie X
Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
Episode #8, Recorded 8/29/66
Aired #2, 8/15/66

  1. Main Title* (cello version, arr./cond. Steiner) 0:51
  2. Space Orbit+/Charlie X/That’s a Girl M10/M11+M11S/M12+M12 chimes 1:20
  3. Kirk’s Command/Charlie’s Mystery/Charlie’s Gift M13/M14+M14S/M15–20 3:03
  4. Card Tricks M22 1:40
  5. Zap the Antares/Kirk Is Worried M23+M23S/M24 0:46
  6. Kirk’s Command #2/Chess Game M31/M32+M32S 1:33
  7. Charlie’s Yen M33 1:04
  8. Kirk Puzzled M34 0:51
  9. Zap Sam/Zap the Pistol M41/M42 1:37
  10. Standoff M43 1:12
  11. Kirk Waits/Charlie in Control M44/M45 1:08
  12. Charlie’s Mad M51 1:10
  13. Zap Janice M52 0:56
  14. Zap the Cap M53 1:32
  15. Zap the Spaceship M54 1:26
  16. Zap the Broad/Charlie’s Friend M55/M61 2:02
  17. Goodbye Charlie/Finale+ M62/M63 1:50
    Total Time: 24:40*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry
    +Based on a Theme by Alexander Courage

    Mudd’s Women
    Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    Episode #4, Recorded 9/7/66
    Aired #6, 10/13/66

  18. Distant Spaceship/Hint of Danger M11/M12 0:55
  19. Still in Danger/Meet Mr. Mudd/Three Venuses M13/M14/M15 1:58
  20. Venus Walks/Hello Girls M16/M21 1:29
  21. Venus Aboard/Exit Mr. Mudd/Venus Aboard #2/Strange Glances/The Last Crystal/Mudd Laffs M22/M23/M24/M24A/M31/M32 2:50
  22. Hello Ruth M33 1:03
  23. Eve to Magda/Mudd Plan/Mudd’s Perfidy M34–41/M42/M43 1:07
  24. The Venus Drug/Dwindling Power M44/M45 3:02
  25. Planet Rigel M51 0:43
  26. Space Radio M52 2:45
  27. Planet Rigel #2/Eve Is Out M53/M54 1:19
  28. Eve Cooks/Eve Is Tired/Pretty Eve M55/M56–61/M62 3:06
  29. Mudd’s Farewell/Back in Orbit+ M63/M64 1:20
    Total Time: 22:01
    +Based on a Theme by Alexander Courage

    The Corbomite Maneuver
    Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    Episode #3, Recorded 9/20/66
    Aired #10, 11/10/66

  30. Space Cube/Condition Alert M12/M13 1:22
  31. Quiet Cube/Radiation M12A/M23A 1:10
  32. Cube Radiation M23 1:20
  33. Fesarius/Fesarius Approaches M31/M31A 2:06
  34. Hideous Balok M33 0:27
  35. Baby Balok M61A 0:35
    Total Time: 7:11Balance of Terror
    Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    Episode #9, Recorded 9/20/66
    Aired #14, 12/15/66
  36. The Enterprise/In the Chapel+ M11/M11A 1:23
  37. Romulan Agitato 9MB 0:58
  38. Romulan B.G. 9MC 0:41
  39. Romulan Theme M22 0:56
  40. Theme From Star Trek*/Romulan Warship/Romulan Theme 9MA pt 4/M31/M22A tk 3 0:56
  41. Romulan Centurion M43 0:32
    Total Time: 5:35What Are Little Girls Made Of
    Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    Episode #10, Recorded 9/20/66
    Aired #7, 10/20/66
  42. Big Ruk M17A/M17/M17B 0:56
  43. Meet Andrea/Android Kirk M22/M22A/M42 1:10
  44. Ruk Protect/Ruk Attacks M43/M43A 3:18
  45. Ruk Attacks/Enter Andrea M43AB/M54 1:47
  46. End Title* (cello version, arr./cond. Steiner) 0:45
  47. Desilu I.D. (Wilbur Hatch) 0:04
    Total Time: 8:11
    Total Disc Time: 68:04*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry
    +Contains “Long, Long Ago” by Thomas Haynes Baly and “Bridal Chorus” by Richard Wagner

SEASON 1, DISC 4
The Enemy Within
Music Composed and Conducted by Sol Kaplan
Episode #5, Recorded 9/14/66
Aired #5, 10/6/66

  1. The Rock Slide*/Beam Up*/The Evil Kirk M11/M12/M13 1:11 
  2. Alter Ego* M14 1:00
  3. The Tired Captain* M15 0:42
  4. Brandy M16 0:48
  5. The Lascivious Captain M17–21 2:37
  6. Bruised Knuckles/An Impostor M22/M23 1:34
  7. Kirk’s Log*/Indecisive/Evil Fury M24/M31/M32 2:47
  8. Confrontation M33 2:17
  9. The Prone Body*/Shivering Sulu*/No Repair M34–41/M42/M43 0:37
  10. What to Do * M44 0:42
  11. Another Brandy/The Evil Grin/Double Dog Death* M45/M46/M51 1:24
  12. Spock Takes Over*/Help Me* M52/M53 2:03
  13. Evil Triumphs M54–61 1:05
  14. Two Into One* M62 2:18
  15. One Captain Kirk*/Thank You, Yeoman* M63/M64 1:19
    Total Time: 22:58*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    The Conscience of the King
    Music Composed and Conducted by Joseph Mullendore
    Episode #13, Recorded 11/2/66
    Aired #13, 12/8/66

  16. Dagger Sweet’ner/Go for Baroque/Play-Off #1 M11A/M11/M12 1:26
  17. Spaceship Titles*/Dr. Leighton’s Face/Bridge #1* M13/M14/M15 1:11
  18. Quasi-Sex* (Theme From Star Trek, jazz version; Courage/Roddenberry, arr. Mullendore) LM5 1:37
  19. Lenore M16–21 1:45
  20. Kirk and Lenore*/He’s Dead M22/M23 1:42
  21. Spaceship*/5 Sex and a 1/2 Play-Off #2* M24/M25/M26 1:10
  22. Spaceship Play-On*/Toast and Corridor*/Lenore’s Kiss/Short Bridge M27/M31/M32/M33 2:31
  23. Beyond Antares (Wilbur Hatch; vocal: Nichelle Nichols) MV1R 2:36
  24. Poison M41 0:37
  25. Play-On #2*/Quick Ship*/Phaser Overload M42/M43/M44 1:39
  26. Kodos /Voice Test M45/M46 1:33
  27. Everything Is Later*/Play-Off #3* M51/M52 1:52
  28. Ship Play-On*/Woodwind Fanfare/Reilly Gone M53/M54/M55 1:09
  29. Go for Baroque M11 (M56) 1:25
  30. I Know That Voice/All Ghosts Dead M57/M58–61 3:02
  31. Opheliamania*/Bridge #2*/Last Cue* M62/M63/M64 3:01
    Total Time: 28:51*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    Shore Leave
    Music Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried
    Episode #17, Recorded 12/2/66
    Aired #15, 12/29/66

  32. New Planet/Rabbit Music M10A/10B 2:21
  33. School Chum/Finnegan M23/M23A 1:40
  34. 2nd Ruth (Ruth) M31A 2:38
  35. Old English/Tiger/Costume/Birds/Samurai M33/M33A/M33B/M34/M34A 3:51
  36. Knight/Joust M41/M41A 1:27
  37. Dummy/Like Real M43/M44 0:56
  38. A Clue/Finnegan’s Return/The Leg Trick/Dirt Trick M45–50 Pt. 1/M45–50 Pt. 2/M51/M53 4:34
  39. Tiger Thoughts/Strafing/2nd Samurai/Caretaker/Lazarus M55–60/M55–60A/M55–60B/M61/M62 2:02
  40. 2nd Ruth/Ruth to Commercial (2nd Ruth) M31A/M24B 0:49
    Total Time: 20:34
    Total Disc Time: 72:36

SEASON 1, DISC 5
The City on the Edge of Forever
Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
Interpolating “Goodnight, Sweetheart” by Jimmy Campbell, Reginald Connelly and Ray Noble
Episode #28, Recorded 3/24/67
Aired #28, 4/6/67

  1. Main Title* (cello version; Courage/Roddenberry, arr. Steiner) 0:52
    2006 Recording Conducted and Produced by Gregory Smith
  2. New York 1930 M26–30+M26–30B 1:37
  3. Edith’s Theme M33 1:25
  4. Edith Suspects M43 1:20
  5. Goodnight, Sweetheart (vocal)+ M44 1:28
  6. Edith’s Fate/Edith Must Die M47/M47A 1:16
  7. Edith’s Vision M51 0:45
  8. Edith Falls M61 0:55
  9. Edith’s Death M65 0:37
    Total Time: 10:38*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry
    +Contains “Goodnight, Sweetheart” by Jimmy Campbell, Reginald Connelly and Ray Noble, published by Campbell, Connelly Inc. and EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP).

    First Season Library Music
    Music Composed by Joseph Mullendore

  10. Impension* LM1 1:10
  11. Lonely to Dramatic* LM3 1:27
  12. Romantic Scene* LM6 0:46
  13. Pensive Mood* 13LM2 2:09
  14. Play-Off (with button)* 13LM5 0:15
  15. Play-Off (with sustain)* 13LM5A 0:18Music Composed by Wilbur Hatch
  16. Love Scene* 13LHM3 1:29
  17. Humoresque* 13LHM7 0:43
  18. Humoresque (tag)* 13LHM7A 0:13
    Total Time (10–18): 8:48Tracks 10–12 and disc 4, track 18 recorded with “The Corbomite Maneuver,” “Balance of Terror” and “What Are Little Girls Made Of ”
    Tracks 13–18 recorded with “The Consience of the King”

    Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    From “Charlie X”:

  19. That’s a Girl M12X 0:42
  20. Kirk’s Command M13X 0:57
  21. Charlie’s Mystery M14X 0:45
  22. Kirk Puzzled M34X 0:38
  23. Kirk Puzzled M34Y 0:22
  24. Kirk Puzzled M34Z 0:15
  25. Zap Sam M41X 1:01
  26. Zap the Pistol M42X tk 1 0:42
  27. Zap the Pistol M42X tk 2 0:11
  28. Standoff M43X 0:54
  29. Standoff M43Y 0:17
  30. Standoff M43Z 0:08
  31. Zap Janice M52X 1:00
  32. Zap the Spaceship M54X tk 1 0:08
  33. Zap the Spaceship M54X tk 2 0:04
  34. Charlie’s Friend M61X tk 1 0:40
  35. Charlie’s Friend M61X tk 3 0:10From “Mudd’s Women”:
  36. The Last Crystal M31X 0:14
  37. The Last Crystal M31X tk 3 0:07From “The Corbomite Manuever”:
  38. Condition Alert M13A 0:14
  39. Hideous Balok M33A 0:25
  40. Baby Balok M61 0:31From “Balance of Terror”:
  41. Theme From Star Trek* 9MA pt 1 0:12
  42. Theme From Star Trek* 9MA pt 2 0:14
  43. Theme From Star Trek* 9MA pt 3 0:11
  44. Theme From Star Trek* 9MA pt 4 0:12
  45. Romulan Theme M22/M22A tk 1 0:52From “The City on the Edge of Forever”:
  46. Edith Must Die M47B 0:12Source Music, Sound Effects and Outtakes

    Source Music From “Charlie X”:

  47. Weird Guitar M21 (Steiner) 0:12
  48. Charlie Is My Darling M21A/M21B (traditional, arr. Steiner; vocal: Nichelle Nichols) 2:17First Season Score Alternates:
  49. Joe Berserk M21 tk 3 (from “The Naked Time,” Courage) 0:14
  50. Leg Trick M51/M51A (from “Shore Leave,” Fried) 1:02
    Total Time (19–50): 17:14The Squire of Gothos
    Source Music Performed by Ivan Ditmars
    Episode #18, Recorded 12/16/66
    Aired #17, 1/12/67
  51. A Major Sonata (Domenico Scarlatti) M21/M21A/M22 1:19
  52. F Minor Sonata (Scarlatti) M31/M32 1:18
  53. Southern Roses (Johann Strauss) M33–40 3:47
    Total Time: 6:29The Cage Pre-Recording
  54. Vina’s Dance (Wilbur Hatch) 2:09Sound Effects
  55. Transporter Effect (“The Cage”) M4 tk 3 0:14
  56. Planet Atmosphere (“The Cage”) [Series Transporter Effect] M16 tk 3 2:02
  57. Pike Window Bump (“The Cage”) M8 tk 1 0:11
  58. Talosian Door Effect (“The Cage”) M14 tk 6 0:08
  59. Disappearance Effect (“The Cage”) MRV tk 1 0:14
  60. Sickbay Scanner, High (“Where No Man Has Gone Before”) MFX3 tk 1 0:33
  61. Sickbay Scanner, Low (“Where No Man Has Gone Before”) MFX2 tk 1 0:47Unused Sound Effects
  62. Computer Processing (“The Cage”) M11 tk 1 0:35
  63. Computer Transmission (“Where No Man Has Gone Before”) MFX1 tk 1 0:23
  64. Planet Atmosphere Alternate #1 (“The Cage”) M1 tk 1 0:34
  65. Planet Atmosphere Alternate #2 (“The Cage”) M2 tk 2 0:34
  66. Planet Atmosphere Alternate #3 (“The Cage”) M3 tk 1 0:36
  67. Planet Atmosphere Alternate #4 (“The Cage”) M16 tk 4 2:01
  68. Pike Window Bump (“The Cage”) M8 tk 2–6 0:14
  69. Bass Twangs (“The Cage”) M10 tk 1, 2 0:46Sound Effects Rehearsals and Outtakes
  70. Planet Atmosphere (“The Cage”) [Series Transporter Effect] M16 tk 2 (Alexander Courage rehearsal) 1:05
  71. Enterprise Fly-By (“The Naked Time”) MX1 tk 1 (Alexander Courage vocal effect) 0:28
  72. Virus Sound (“The Naked Time”) MX4 tk 1, 2 0:41
    Total Time (55–72): 12:56Theme Music Outtakes
  73. Main Title* (electric violin version; arr./cond. Courage) MT tk 1–5, 7 5:03
  74. Main Title* (cello version, arr./cond. Steiner) M10A tk 1–3 3:02
  75. End Title* (electric violin version, arr./cond. Courage) ET tk 1 0:57
  76. End Title* (cello version, arr./cond. Steiner) META tk 1–3, 5–6 5:20
    Total Time: 14:31
    Total Disc Time: 73:21*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

SEASON 2, DISC 1
Catspaw
Music Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried
Episode #30, Recorded 6/21/67
Aired #36, 10/27/67

  1. Main Title* (soprano version, arr./cond. Courage) 1:01
  2. Starship*/Captain Kirk M11/M12+M12X 1:13
  3. Orbiting Ship*/Fog Planet M13/M13A+M13B 1:51
  4. Thicker Fog/Witches M14+M14A/M15 1:47
  5. Fog Storm/Castle/Second Castle M16–20+M16–20A/M21/M22 2:28
  6. Cat Music/Enterprise* M22X/M22A 1:05
  7. Follow That Cat/Brain-Washed M23/M24 2:10
  8. Drugged/Scene Change Sweetener/Korob/Lap Kitten/Cat as Hostess/Free Meal/The Bribe M25/M25A/M26/M31/M32/M33+M33A/M34 3:27
  9. Sylvia/Unguarded Entrances/Sympathetic Magic M35/M36/M37+M37X 2:41
  10. Cooking Lesson/Force Field M41/M42 1:31
  11. Defeated Captain/Music to Dent Force Fields By M43/M44 1:06
  12. Bones, the Zombie M45 0:44
  13. Love, Sort Of M51 3:26
  14. Kirk Caught/Rescue M52/M53 0:52
  15. Racial Memories/Captain Kirk/Mace Fight M54–60/M54–60A/M61 3:32
  16. Giant Cat M62+M25A 1:31
  17. Wand-Breaking/The Prototypes/Five to Beam Up* M63+M25A/M64+64B/M64A 1:32
    Total Time: 32:36*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    Friday’s Child
    Music Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried
    Episode #32, Recorded 7/7/67
    Aired #40, 12/1/67

  18. Ship*/Capella IV M11/M12 1:09
  19. Captain’s Log* M13A/M13 2:06
  20. Klingon Ship/Music for Fruits/The Teer M14/M15/M16-20 1:26
  21. The Challenge/Klingon Blip M21/M21A 1:09
  22. Distress Signal M22 1:42
  23. Arm Barbeque/Slow Turn/Call of Duty M24/M25/M26 0:56
  24. Scott/Bones’Good Idea/Capellan Desert M31/M32/M33A 2:16
  25. Belly Feeler M34 2:13
  26. Sonic Ambush/Bouncing Boulder M35/M36 1:03
  27. Kras on the Rocks/Paternity Case/New Capellan in Town M41/M45/M51 1:42
  28. Negative Report/Old Russian Saying/The Mother Splits M53/M54/M55 1:34
  29. The Baby Sitter/Road Hog M56/M57 0:44
  30. Down the Throat M58 1:13
  31. Arrows M61 1:28
  32. Forfeit M62 1:31
  33. Coochy Coo/Godfathers M63/M64 0:39
  34. End Title* (soprano version, arr./cond. Courage) 0:46
    Total Time: 24:13
    Total Disc Time: 56:56*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

SEASON 2, DISC 2
Amok Time
Music Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried
Episode #34, Recorded 7/19/67
Aired #30, 9/15/67

  1. Main Title* (soprano version, enhanced stereo; arr./cond. Courage) 1:01
  2. Enterprise/Prying M11/M12 0:47
  3. Episode Title*/Mr. Spock/Log* M13/M14/M14A 1:59
  4. Deep Thought*/Contrary Order/Prognosis/The Big Question/Message From T’Pring M15/M16–20/M16–20A/M21/M22/M23 5:01
  5. Vulcan Biology/Pon Farr M24/M24A 3:44
  6. More Soup* M26–30B 1:51
  7. T’Pring M32 0:53
  8. Vulcan M33 1:03
  9. Processional M34–40 1:36
  10. The Challenge M41 3:01
  11. War Sash M42 0:43
  12. Ritual/To the Death M43/M44 1:54
  13. The Ancient Combat/2nd Kroykah M51/M52/M52A 5:09
  14. Remorse/Vulcan Logic/Marriage Counseling M53–60/M53–60A/M53–60B 2:48
  15. Resignation*/Lazarus Returned/Pig’s Eye* M61/M62/M63 0:44
    Total Time: 32:46*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    The Doomsday Machine
    Music Composed and Conducted by Sol Kaplan
    Episode #35, Recorded 8/30/67
    Aired #35, 10/20/67

  16. Approach of the Enterprise*/Distress Signal/The Ship Search*/The Constellation M11/M12/M13/M13A 2:05
  17. The Dead Ship*/Going Aboard M14/M15 2:00
  18. Commodore Matt Decker/The Crew That Was M16–20/M21 1:59
  19. What Is a Doomsday Machine /The Planet Killer* M22/M23 2:02
  20. Gaining Speed*/The Strange Beam* M24/M25–30 0:53
  21. No Casualties*/Decker Takes Over M31/M32 2:41
  22. The New Commander*/The Approaching Killer* M33/M33A 1:38
  23. Light Beams*/Tractor Beam M34–40/M41 3:27
  24. Violent Shakes* M42+M42A 2:45
  25. Spock Takes Command/Decker’s Foil/The Sneaky Commodore* M43/M51/M51A 2:44
  26. Goodbye M. Decker* M52/M52A 3:04
  27. Condolences*/Power Drain* M53/M61 1:11
  28. Kirk Does It Again* M62 3:45
  29. One’s Enough* M63 0:24
  30. End Title* (soprano version, enhanced stereo; arr./cond. Courage) 0:47
    Total Time: 31:51
    Total Disc Time: 64:45*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

SEASON 2, DISC 3
Who Mourns for Adonais
Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
Episode #33, Recorded 7/12/67
Aired #31, 9/22/67

  1. Ship of Stars/Green Hand M11/M12 1:50
  2. Giant Hand M13 1:13
  3. Apollo Motif M14/M14A 1:12
  4. Apollo’s Power/Kirk’s Theme/Apollo’s Temple M21/M22/M23 3:16
  5. Stingers/Giant Apollo M24/M24A/M24B/M24C/M24D/M25 1:02
  6. Spaceship Stuck/Apollo Fades/Kirk to Apollo M26/M27/M28 1:17
  7. Apollo Digs Carolyn/Apollo’s Fist/New Venus M29–30/M31/M32 2:37
  8. Computer Generator M33 0:34
  9. Apollo’s Temple #2 M34 2:58
  10. Apollo Zaps M35–40 1:02
  11. Apollo Weakens/Kirk to Enterprise/Bridge to Apollo M41/M42/M43 1:13
  12. Kirk Worried M44–50 0:40
  13. Apollo in Love M51 0:44
  14. Dreamy Venus/Kirk and Carolyn/Spaceship Stuck Again M52/M53/M54 2:34
  15. Apollo’s Kiss/Apollo’s Storm/Final Battle M55/M56-60/M61 3:35
  16. End of Apollo/Spaceship Orbit+ M62/M63 2:48
    Total Time: 29:07+Based on a Theme by Alexander Courage

    Mirror, Mirror
    Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    Episode #39, Recorded 9/8/67
    Aired #33, 10/6/67

  17. Mirror Mirror/Blackship Theme/The Agonizer M12/M12A/M12B 2:22
  18. Blackship in Space/Blackship Underscore M13/M14 1:20
  19. Thematic Bridge*/Blackship Tension M21/M21A 2:19
  20. Suspicion M23 1:13
  21. . Evil Kirk/Evil Kirk #2 M32/M33 0:38
  22. Meet Marlena/Short Curtain M36/37 2:01
  23. Blackship Theme M12AA 0:46
  24. Pretty Marlena M46 1:21
  25. Goodbye Marlena M47–50 1:41
    Total Time: 13:59By Any Other Name
    Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    Episode #50, Recorded 12/27/67
    Aired #51, 2/23/68
  26. Kelvan Theme/Neutralizer M12/M12A+M12AS 1:31
  27. More Neutralizer M14 0:55
  28. Rojan’s Revenge/Rojan’s Blocks/Broken Block M22/M23/M24 3:03
  29. More Blocks/Rallentando M41/M42 2:05
  30. Pretty Words/Short Playoff M52/M55 1:48
  31. Kelinda’s Question/Rojan Roars/Kelinda’s Kiss M59/M61/M61A 1:40
  32. Finale/Thematic Playoff*+ M64/M64A 1:12
    Total Time: 12:28*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry
    +Based on a Theme by Alexander Courage

    The Omega Glory
    “Star-Spangled Enterprise”
    Incorporating “Theme From Star Trek” and “The Star-Spangled Banner”
    Devised and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    Episode #54, Recorded 12/27/67 (With “By Any Other Name”)
    Aired #52, 3/1/68

  33. Drums 0:20
  34. Star-Spangled Enterprise (act out)* MX-1/MX-6 0:20
  35. Star-Spangled Enterprise (episode medley)* MX-5/MX-4/MX-2 0:38
  36. Star-Spangled Enterprise (outtakes medley)* MX-3/MX-7/MX-6 0:37
    Total Time: 2:01*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    Second Season Library Music
    Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner

    From “Who Mourns for Adonais “:

  37. Kirk to Apollo M28A 0:26From “Mirror, Mirror”:
  38. The Agonizer M12BA 0:25
  39. Blackship in Space M13A 0:38
  40. Blackship in Space M13B 0:22
  41. Blackship Tension M21AA 1:02
  42. Blackship Tension M21A 0:35
  43. Suspicion M23A 0:37
  44. Meet Marlena M36A 0:49From “By Any Other Name”:
  45. Kelvan Theme M12 tk 5 0:40
  46. Neutralizer M12AA 0:59
  47. Rojan’s Blocks M23A tk 3 0:41
  48. Short Playoff M55A 0:15From “Charlie X”:
  49. Chess Game (M32, recorded with “Who Mourns for Adonais “) LM50 1:24
  50. Zap Sam (M41, recorded with “Who Mourns for Adonais “) LM51 1:11
  51. Goodbye Charlie (M62, 2 versions, recorded with “By Any Other Name”) LM53 1:31From “The Corbomite Maneuver”:
  52. Fesarius Approaches (M31A, recorded with “Mirror, Mirror”) LM52 2:15
    Total Time (37–52): 14:24
    Total Disc Time: 72:26

SEASON 2, DISC 4
Metamorphosis
Music Composed and Conducted by George Duning
Episode #31, Recorded 6/28/67
Aired #38, 11/10/67

  1. Shuttlecraft/Shuttle Helpless M11/M12 2:09
  2. The Planetoid/Most Unusual M13/M14 1:15
  3. Cochrane* M15 1:35
  4. Looks Familiar M21 0:50
  5. Companion*/Still Alive M22+M22X/M23 0:42
  6. Zefram/Nancy Flips* M24/M25 1:14
  7. You’ve Got It/Angry Companion* M26/M27–30+M27–30X 1:12
  8. Cochrane Calls M31+M31X 2:14
  9. Spock OK/Judas Goat M32/M33/M33A 2:06
  10. Mad Companion* M34+M34X 1:36
  11. Starship*/Scott Anxious M41 tk 3/M42 0:37
  12. Transition*/Companion Talks/Kirk Frustrated M43/M44/M44A 4:22
  13. Cochrane Angry/Spock Puzzled/Nancy Sobs* M45/M46–50/M51 1:11
  14. Kirk Pleads/New Nancy M52+M52X/M53 3:06
  15. It’s Her/Loveliness M54/M55–60 2:57
  16. You Loved Me M61 1:45
  17. Cochrane’s Decision* M62 1:11
    Total Time: 30:36*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    Return to Tomorrow
    Music Composed and Conducted by George Duning
    Episode #51, Recorded 12/29/67
    Aired #49, 2/9/68

  18. The Voice* M12 1:07
  19. Who Are You/The Globes* M15/M21 1:20
  20. Sargon Transfers/Sargon Requests M22/M23 2:23
  21. Thalassa/Kirk Returns M24/M31 1:14
  22. Kirk’s Philosophy* M32 0:57
  23. Ready Sargon M33 0:52
  24. Thalassa Recalls M34–40 1:53
  25. Henoch+/I Remember M41/M44 1:13
  26. Thalassa Worried+/Nurse Puzzled+/Thalassa Concerned/Thalassa Pleads M45/M45A/M46/M51 2:33
  27. Sargon Inert+ M52 0:56
  28. Nurse Chapel*/Spock Alive M55–60/M63 1:34
  29. Last Moments* M64 1:41
    Total Time: 18:09*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry
    +Contains “Blackship Theme” Composed by Fred Steiner

    Patterns of Force
    Music Composed and Conducted by George Duning
    Episode #52, Recorded 12/29/67 (With “Return to Tomorrow”)
    Aired #50, 2/16/68

  30. Military Mite (Nazi March) M10 tk 1 1:41
  31. Military Mite (Nazi March) (soft version) M10 tk 2 1:17
  32. Military Mite (Nazi March) (10 bars, soft opening) M10 tk 3 0:24
  33. Military Mite (Nazi March) (10 bars, hard opening) M10 tk 4 0:26
  34. Military Mite (Nazi March) (6 bars, long ending) M10 tk 5 0:14
  35. Military Mite (Nazi March) (6 bars, short ending) M10 tk 6 0:14
  36. Military Mite (Nazi March) (horn motive) M10 tk 7 0:08
  37. Military Mite (Nazi March) (horn theme) M10 tk 9 0:14
  38. Military Mite (Nazi March) (percussion only) M10 tk 10 1:42
    Total Time: 6:35The Apple
    Unused Percussion Tracks
    Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried
    Episode #38, Recorded 7/10/67 (With “Friday’s Child”)
    Aired #34, 10/13/67
  39. . M1 tk 1 1:35
  40. M2 tk 1 0:59
  41. M3 tk 2 0:20
  42. M4 tk 1 1:33
  43. M5 tk 1 1:02
  44. M6 tk 1 0:20
    Total Time: 5:59Wolf in the Fold
    Unused Belly Dancer Music
    Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried
    Episode #36, Recorded 7/19/67 (With “Amok Time”)
    Aired #43, 12/22/67

    45. Navel Maneuvers M1/M1A 3:05
    Total Disc Time: 64:51

SEASON 2, DISC 5

I, Mudd
Music Composed and Conducted by Samuel Matlovsky
Episode #41, Recorded 9/22/67
Aired #37, 11/3/67

  1. Main Title* (soprano version, second season mix; arr. Courage) 1:03
    2006 Recording Conducted and Produced by Gregory Smith
  2. Please*/You Listen M21/M23 1:25
  3. Harry Mudd/Mudd’s Series M24/M25 1:00
  4. Stella M31 0:44
  5. Control Room M32 0:55
  6. Eternal Beauty/Crew Gone M33/M36 0:42
  7. We Are Real M40 1:12
  8. A Gilded Cage/Not Programmed M41/M42 1:09
  9. Mudd’s Farewell/Stella’s Reprise M43/M44 0:59
  10. Alice in Wonderland M55 2:08
  11. Love’s Hate M56 0:50
  12. Tired of Happiness M62 1:26
  13. The Last Straw M63 2:12
  14. Mudd’s Detention/Stella 500 M65/M66 1:38
    Total Time: 17:50*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    The Trouble With Tribbles
    Music Composed and Conducted by Jerry Fielding
    Episode #42, Recorded 10/5/67
    Aired #44, 12/29/67

  15. The Muzak Maker M16 0:55
  16. They Quibble Over Tribble/Kirk Out M21+M21S/M31 0:58
  17. The Scherzo Maker M34 0:44
  18. Bartender Bit M35 0:28
  19. Big Fite M36/M36A/M36B 2:15
  20. A Matter of Pride/Barrel of Tribbles/Tribble Hooks Kirk/My Chicken Sandwich/Come on Spock!/Raining Tribbles M42/M43+M43S/M44/M44A+M44AS/M44B/M51/M51A+M51AS /M52/M54+M54S 4:03
  21. Dead Heap!/Close That Door/Hissing Tribbles/Poor Jonesy/No Tribble at All M55/M56/M57/M63+M63S/M65 2:30
    Total Time: 12:05Second Season Library Music
    Conducted by Alexander Courage
    Recorded 6/16/67
    Composed by Alexander Courage:
  22. Ship in Orbit* (Big) LM6 0:39
  23. Sad and Thoughtful on Captain’s Theme LM8 2:29
  24. Captain Playoff No. 1 (Heavy) LM2 0:07
  25. Smooth Neutral Ship Theme* LM7 0:39
  26. Playoff on M.T. Theme LM1 0:21
  27. Fight on Captain’s Theme LM5/LM5A 1:44
  28. Captain Playoff No. 2 (Neutral—Slightly Ominous) LM3 0:07
  29. Stingers LM17A/LM17B/LM17C/LM17D 0:50
  30. New Sexy Exotic LM9 2:16
  31. Captain Playoff No. 3 (Sad and Alone) LM4 0:19
  32. Prime Specimen (“The Cage” M21–30) LM19 3:14
  33. Monster Illusion (“The Cage” M42) LM18 2:33
  34. Mr. Spock (“Captain’s Wig” From “The Naked Time” M54–61) LM16 3:26
  35. The Big Go (“The Naked Time” M62) LM15 2:29Composed by Fred Steiner:
  36. Mudd’s Perfidy (“Mudd’s Women” M43) LM10A/LM10 0:33
  37. Zap the Cap (“Charlie X” M53) LM11 1:33
  38. Zap the Cap (“Charlie X” M53) LM11A tk 1 0:08
  39. Zap the Cap (“Charlie X” M53) LM11A tk 2 0:05
  40. Zap the Spaceship (“Charlie X” M54) LM12 1:28
  41. Zap the Spaceship (“Charlie X” M54) LM12A 0:33
  42. Zap the Spaceship (“Charlie X” M54) LM12B 0:07
  43. Ruk Attacks (“What Are Little Girls Made Of ” M43A) LM13 1:40Composed by Gerald Fried:
  44. 2nd Ruth (“Shore Leave” M31A, orch. Gus Levene) LM14 2:35
    Total Time (22–44): 30:43Second Season Alternates and Outtakes
  45. Neck Pinch Sweetener (“Catspaw” M61A) (Fried) 0:04
  46. More Soup* (“Amok Time” M26–30/M26–30A) (Fried) 1:52
  47. Resignation* (“Amok Time” M61A) (Fried) 0:08
  48. Approach of the Enterprise* (“The Doomsday Machine” M11A) (Kaplan) 0:23
  49. Approach of the Enterprise* (“The Doomsday Machine” M11A/M11S) (Kaplan, with Fred Steiner brass sweetener) 0:24
  50. One’s Enough* (“The Doomsday Machine” M63A/M63) (Kaplan) 0:24
  51. Shuttle Helpless (“Metamorphosis” M12A) (Duning) 0:38
  52. Starship* (“Metamorphosis” M41 tk 2) (Duning) 0:14
  53. Nancy Sobs* (“Metamorphosis” M51A) (Duning) 0:19
  54. Nancy Sobs* (“Metamorphosis” M51B) (Duning) 0:10
  55. You Loved Me (“Metamorphosis” M61A) (Duning) 0:20
  56. Cochrane’s Decision* (“Metamorphosis” M62B) (Duning) 0:13
  57. We Are Real (“I, Mudd” M40A) (Matlovsky) 1:11
  58. No Tribble at All (“The Trouble With Tribbles” M65A) (Fielding) 0:13
  59. Poor Jonesy (“The Trouble With Tribbles” M63, orchestra only) (Fielding) 0:29
  60. Poor Jonesy (“The Trouble With Tribbles” M63S, trombone sweetener at recorded speed) (Fielding) 0:53
  61. Tribbles FX (unused) (Matlovsky) 0:52
    Total Time: 9:23Amok Time
    Source Music and Outtake
    Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried
  62. Vulcan Lyre M25 0:06
  63. Gong FX 0:12
  64. Bells 0:22
  65. Wind Chimes 0:36
  66. Contrary Order (Gerald Fried rehearsal) M16–20 1:37
    Total Time: 3:03
    Total Disc Time: 73:26

SEASON 3, DISC 1
Spectre of the Gun
Music Composed and Conducted by Jerry Fielding
Episode #56, Recorded 7/5/68
Aired #61, 10/25/68

  1. Main Title* (soprano version, stereo; arr. Courage, cond. Hatch) 1:01
  2. Melkots’Warning*/Hailing Frequencies* M11/M12 5:04
  3. It Is Done! M14 1:04
  4. Tombstone M15–20 1:19
  5. The Clantons Lost/Death Is Real!/Tack Piano (Weird) M21/M22/M23 1:30
  6. Good Morning Gents/Draw Clanton M31/M32 1:03
  7. Taos Lightning/Teeth Pulling M33/M34 1:22
  8. My Name—Doc Holliday/Love Scene in Old West/Chekov Gets Killed M35–40/M41/M42 4:50
  9. Not Yet Our Time M44 0:46
  10. One Other Place/Any Way You Can/Ten Minutes M51/M52/M53 1:15
  11. We’re Trapped/Shoot Out, Part 1 M54/M55–60 3:15
  12. Shoot Out, Part 2/Kirk Wins! M55–60/M61/M61A 1:11
  13. It’s Gone Sir M62 0:44
  14. No Title/Final Curtain* M63+M63B/M63A 1:18
    Total Time: 26:10*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    The Paradise Syndrome
    Music Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried
    Episode #58, Recorded 7/19/68
    Aired #58, 10/4/68

  15. Pine Trees/The Amerikinds/Tahiti Syndrome/The Brain Wash M11/M12/M13/M14 3:38
  16. Episode Title/Puzzled Kirk/Miramanee/Maximum Warp/Engine Strain M21/M22/M23/M24/M25 3:34
  17. Bad Memory*/Breath of Life*/The New God/Deflection M26/M27/M27A/M28–30 3:34
  18. Asteroid/Dilithium M31/M31A 1:54
  19. Washday/Salish Fluffed/Potter Kirk/Naming the God/Target M32/M33/M34/M35/M36 4:19
  20. Lazy Lazer/Joining Day M37/M38–40 1:57
  21. Meditating Spock/Wedding Dress/Challenge M41/M42/M42A 1:46
  22. The Fight/The Ceremony/Listless Spock/Spock Cheats Doctor/Forest Montage/Troubling Dreams/Mud Map M43/M43A/M45/M46/M47–50/M47–50A/M47–50B/M50A 5:11
  23. Forever Cooking/Wind/False God M51/M52/M53 2:50
  24. Check-Up/Death to a False God/Mind Fusion M54/M55/M61 2:29
  25. Back to Reality/The Right Words/Wounded Girl M62/M62A/M62B 2:15
  26. The Right Button/Death of Miramanee/End M63/M64+M64A/M65 3:08
  27. End Title* (soprano version, stereo; arr. Courage, cond. Hatch) 0:43
    Total Time: 37:58
    Total Disc Time: 64:15*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

SEASON 3, DISC 2
Elaan of Troyius
Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
Episode #57, Recorded 7/12/68
Aired #68, 12/6/68

  1. Mission to Elas/Meet Kryton/Meet Elaan M11/M12/M13 2:24
  2. Elaan of Elas/Impulse Drive/Elaan Is Annoyed/Peevish Elaan/Thematic Bridge*/Elaan’s Interest M15/M16/M17/M21/M22/M23 2:40
  3. Mysterious Things/Klingon Warship/Elaan in Trouble M24/M25/M26 2:01
  4. Medical Man/Elaan Motif/Elaan Eats M27/M28/M29–30 1:00
  5. Elaan Angry/Enemy Warship/Bad Kryton M31/M32/M33 2:57
  6. More Trouble/Elaan’s Temper M34/M35 1:23
  7. Magic Tears/The Intruder/Kryton Vanishes M36–40/M41/M42 3:40
  8. Afterwards M43 1:26
  9. Realization/Battle Stations M44/M45 1:54
  10. Close Call M46 1:12
  11. Elaan Pleads M51 1:34
  12. Klingon Command M52 1:55
  13. Elaan’s Jewels/Confrontation M53/M54 1:54
  14. Battle Music M55–60 2:06
  15. Thematic Bridge*/Goodbye Elaan/Kirk in Command M61/M62/M63 2:28
    Total Time: 31:05Spock’s Brain
    Music Composed and Conducted by Fred Steiner
    Episode #61, Recorded 8/26/68
    Aired #56, 9/20/68
  16. Alien Ship/Meet Kara M11/M12 3:08
  17. Awakening/Poor Spock M13/M14 1:26
  18. No Mind/Tense Moment/Tracking the Alien/The Question M15/M16/M21/M22A/M22 1:10
  19. Icy Planet/Caveman/Caveman Fight M23/M24/25 2:56
  20. Caveman Run/Cave Music/Corpus Spock/Hello Luma/Kara Zaps Kirk M31/M32/M33/M34/M36 4:06
  21. Chicken Delight/Kirk Caught/The Answer/The Agonizer/Sulu’s Log M41/M42/M43/M44/M45 2:57
  22. Communicators/Scientific Fight M46/M47A 1:54
  23. Spock Walks/Agonizer #2/Spooky Spock M49–50+M50A/M51/M52 tk 3 3:54
  24. Magic Helmet/Kara’s Kaper M53/M54 1:50
  25. Kara Commands M55 0:51
  26. Kirk’s Dilemma/Magic Helmet #2/Operation Spock/Operation Montage/Spock Is O.K./Spock’s Fugue M56/M57–60/M61/M62/M63/M64 7:05
    Total Time: 31:45Fred Steiner Library Cues
    From “Elaan of Troyius”:
  27. Meet Elaan M13A 0:33
  28. Elaan in Trouble M26A 0:14
  29. Bad Kryton M33A/M33B 1:23
  30. Battle Stations M45A 1:01
  31. Goodbye Elaan M62A 0:15From “Spock’s Brain”:
  32. Meet Kara M12A 0:28
  33. Poor Spock M14A/M14B 0:21
  34. The Question M22A 0:38
  35. Kara Motif M26 0:09
  36. Corpus Spock M33A 0:33
  37. Hello Luma M34A/M34B 1:28
  38. Scientific Fight M47 0:32
  39. Overstings M48A 0:30
  40. Spooky Spock With Overstings M52 tk 3+M48A 1:13
  41. Brain Box M50A 0:09
  42. Spooky Spock M52 tk 4 1:11
  43. Kara’s Kaper M54A 0:28
  44. Kara Motif (Fred Steiner rehearsal and master) M26 0:56
    Total Time (27–44): 12:51
    Total Disc Time: 75:50

Season 3, Disc 3
The Enterprise Incident
Music Composed and Conducted by Alexander Courage
Episode #59, Recorded 8/5/68
Aired #57, 9/27/68

  1. Main Title* (soprano version, monaural; arr. Courage, cond. Hatch) 1:01
  2. Aberrated Captain* M11 3:04
  3. Surrounded/Temper, Temper M12/M13 1:14
  4. Unfair Exchange M14–20+M14–20B 1:04
  5. Vulcanian Cahoots M21 3:34
  6. Hemmed In*/Vulcanization M22/M31 0:48
  7. Konked Kirk M32 3:42
  8. Vulcanized M33 1:13
  9. Kirk Rekirked M41 1:21
  10. Back From Dead/Commandeered M42/M43–50 6:31
  11. Back to Business M51 2:13
  12. Stolen Device M52 2:51
  13. Reworked*/Deposition/Sweaty Scotty M53/M54/M55–60 1:50
  14. Free Enterprise* M61 6:19
  15. Ear Bob* M62 0:36
    Total Time: 37:56*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    Plato’s Stepchildren
    Music Composed and Conducted by Alexander Courage
    Episode #67, Recorded 10/25/68
    Aired #65, 11/22/68

  16. Giant Dwarf* M11 0:45
  17. Meet the Folks/Soaring Syringe M12/M13 1:09
  18. Episode Titles M14 0:45
  19. Delirium Parmen’s* M15–20 2:34
  20. Reluctant Guests/Psychokinetic Effect M21/M21A 0:30
  21. The Frog (Alexander’s Song) (vocal: Michael Dunn) M22A 0:27
  22. Slap Unhappy M23 0:41
  23. Cut Off/I Hear You Calling M24/M25+M25A 0:45
  24. Psychokinetic Shenanigans/Stopped Cold M26/M31 1:17
  25. Groveling Kirk M32+M32A 2:46
  26. Dancing Spock M33 3:49
  27. Spock Brought/New Talent M41/M51 0:54
  28. The Aristocrats/Flung About M52/M53 1:24
  29. Maiden-Wine+ (vocal: Leonard Nimoy) M54A 1:18
  30. Orgy Porgy M55–60 5:58
  31. Brain Bout M61 1:51
  32. The Little Visitor M62 0:38
    Total Time: 28:06*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry
    +Composed by Leonard Nimoy, Published by Adajul Music (BMI)

    Whom Gods Destroy
    Music Composed and Conducted by Alexander Courage
    Episode #71, Recorded 10/25/68 (With “Plato’s Stepchildren”)
    Aired #69, 1/3/69

  33. Arab Hootch Dance (Hootchie Kootchie) LM133 1:44The Way to Eden

    Songs by Arthur Heinemann, Charles Napier and Craig Robertson
    Music Director: Wilbur Hatch
    Episode #75, Recorded 11/20/68
    Aired #75, 2/21/69

  34. Beam-In Sweetener M6 0:04
  35. Looking for a New Land (vocal: Charles Napier) MV1 1:31
  36. Like Hail (vocal: Napier) MV3 0:13
  37. Hey, Out There! (vocals: Charles Napier and Deborah Downey) MV2 2:48
  38. Far Out Jam (William Pitman) M8/MV5A 1:14
  39. Headin’ Out to Eden (vocal: Napier) MV4 1:04
  40. Headin’ Out to Eden (instrumental tags) M7A tk 2, 1 0:24
  41. End Title* (soprano version, monaural; arr. Courage, cond. Hatch) 0:43
    Total Time: 8:15
    Total Disc Time: 76:21

SEASON 3, DISC 4
Is There in Truth No Beauty?
Music Composed and Conducted by George Duning
Episode #62, Recorded 9/6/68
Aired #60, 10/18/68

  1. Enter Marvick*/Enter Miranda+ M11/M12 1:37
  2. Ambassador Arrival*/My Life Is Here+/I Must Know/Starship Party* M13/M14/M15/M21 3:35
  3. McCoy’s Toast/Quite a Woman/Marvick Pleads M22/M23/M24/M24A 5:26
  4. Marvick Mad/Marvick Berserk/Marvick Dies M31/M32/M32A/M33 5:56
  5. Unknown Void/Sentimental Jim/What Is Ugly?+/Why? M34/M41/M42/M43 3:56
  6. Blind Miranda/Mind Link+/Spock—Kollos M44/M51/M52 4:54
  7. Hero Spock*+ M53/M53A/M53B 3:38
  8. Don’t Move/Spock Out/No Change/Miranda Mad+/Miranda’s Farewell*+ M61/M62/M63/M64/M64B/M64A/M64C/M65 7:19
    Total Time: 36:39*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry
    +Contains “Mr. Spock” Composed by Gerald Fried

    The Empath
    Music Composed and Conducted by George Duning
    Episode #63, Recorded 9/6/68
    Aired #67, 12/6/68

  9. Starship Again*/Nova Phase/What Happened? M11/M12/M13 2:01
  10. Lost Trio/Enter Gem/The Vians/Kirk Stunned/Force Field/Kirk Healed M14/M15+M15A/M16/M21/M22/M23 4:26
  11. Vian Lab/The Subjects M24/M25 1:55
  12. Cave Exit+/Star Trek Chase/Slow Motion Kirk M26/M27/M28–30/M28–30A/M28–30B 3:17
  13. One Specimen/Kirk Tortured/Kirk’s Agony/Help Him/Vians’ Threat M31/M32/M33/M34/M35 4:54
  14. How’s It Going*/Spock’s Hypo/Spock Stuck+/McCoy Tortured/Gem Wistful M41/M42/M43/M44/M45 3:52
  15. Poor McCoy/Bedside Manner/No Interference/Time Grows Short M51/M52/M53/M54–60/M54–60A 6:33
  16. Don’t Touch Me M61 2:07
  17. Vians’ Farewell/Off Again* M62/M62A/M63 1:51
    18. Empath Finale*+ M64 1:05
    Total Time: 32:24*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry
    +Contains “Mr. Spock” Composed by Gerald Fried

    Requiem for Methuselah
    Brahms Paraphrase by Ivan Ditmars
    Episode #76, Recorded 1/15/69
    Aired #74, 2/14/69

  18. Pseudo Brahms Esq. M26/M26A 2:22
  19. Pseudo Brahms Esq. (alternate ending) M26 2:13
    Total Time: 4:37
    Total Disc Time: 73:53

SEASON 3, DISC 5
And the Children Shall Lead
Music Composed and Conducted by George Duning
Episode #60, Recorded 8/9/68
Aired #59, 10/11/68

  1. Main Title* (soprano version, third season mix; arr. Courage) 1:02
    2006 Recording Conducted and Produced by Gregory Smith
  2. Triacus*/What Goes Kids? M11/M12 2:41
  3. Triacus Burial/Kooky Kids/Reluctant Kids M13/M14/M15 1:49
  4. Strange Feelings M16–20 1:30
  5. Starship Again*/Instant Ice Cream M21/M22 1:04
  6. Busy-Busy/Tommy Tired/Here Comes the Gorgon/Kids’ Whammy #1 M23/M24/M25/M26 3:59
  7. Standard Orbit #1*/Starnes’ Tape/Kids’ Whammy #2/Tommy’s Whammy/Standard Orbit #2*/Whammed Crew*/Starnes’ Story M31/M32/M33/M34/M35/M36/M36A/M37 5:36
  8. Mislead Innocent/McCoy Mad*/Out of Orbit*/Call the Angel M38/M41/M42/M43/M43A 2:56
  9. Kids in Control M44–50/M44–50A/M44–50B/M44–50C/M44–50D/M44–50E 7:14
  10. Scotty Whammied/By Whose Orders M51/M52 2:01
  11. Last Whammy M53/M53A 1:30
  12. Gorgon Summoned/Gorgon Zapped* M54–60/M61 5:07
    Total Time: 36:56*Contains “Theme From Star Trek (TV Series)” by Alexander Courage and Gene Roddenberry

    Third Season Library Music
    Conducted by Wilbur Hatch
    Recorded 6/25/68

    From “The Cage” (Alexander Courage):

  13. Survivors (M21) LM100 1:41
  14. Bottled (M31) LM101 1:51
  15. Monster Illusion (M42) LM102 2:46
  16. Monster Illusion (tag) (M42) LM102A 0:09
  17. The Kibitzers (M44) LM103 0:40
  18. Vina’s Punishment (M51) LM104 1:54
  19. Vina’s Dance (M62) LM105 1:52
  20. Wrong Think (M73) LM106 0:42From “Where No Man Has Gone Before” (Alexander Courage):
  21. Act 1 Card (M13) LM107 0:37
  22. Crippled Ship (M22) LM108 0:54
  23. Speedy Reader (M24) LM109 1:05
  24. End Title (M64) LM110 0:23From “The Man Trap” (Alexander Courage):
  25. First Goner (M14–21) LM111 tk 3 0:48
  26. First Goner (M14–21) LM111 tk 4 0:49
  27. Dressing Down (M23) LM114 0:07
  28. Monitor Gizzard (M25) LM113 0:13
  29. Monitor Gizzard (M25) LM113A 0:09
  30. Lazer Dazer (M45–51) LM112 2:43
  31. Dodo Girl (M52) LM115 0:09From “Catspaw” (Gerald Fried):
  32. Drugged (M25) LM116 1:23
  33. Mace Fight (M61) LM117 0:59
  34. Mace Fight (M61) LM117A 0:18From “Friday’s Child” (Gerald Fried):
  35. . Down the Throat (M58) LM118 1:13
  36. Arrows (M61) LM119 1:25
    Total Time (13–36): 25:40Composed and Conducted by Gerald Fried (With “The Paradise Syndrome”)
  37. School Chum (“Shore Leave” M23) LM125 0:32
  38. Mr. Spock (“Amok Time” M14) LM128/LM128A 0:57
  39. Contrary Order (“Amok Time” M16–20A) LM129 2:58
  40. More Soup* (“Amok Time” M26–30B) LM126 2:00
  41. More Soup (“Amok Time” M26–30B) LM126A/LM127 1:05
    Total Time: 7:41Conducted by George Duning (With “Is There in Truth No Beauty?”)
  42. Act Out LM131 tk 1 0:14
  43. Act Out LM131 tk 2 0:13
    Total Time: 0:30Score Alternates
  44. Ambassador Arrival* (“Is There in Truth No Beauty?” by Duning, M13A) 0:15
  45. Out of Orbit* (“And the Children Shall Lead” by Duning, M42A) 0:14
  46. Final Curtain* (“Spectre of the Gun” by Fielding, M63C) 0:13
  47. Unfair Exchange (“The Enterprise Incident” by Courage, M14–20A) 0:15
  48. Tromba Sweetener (“Plato’s Stepchildren” by Courage, M25A) 0:23
  49. The Aristocrats (“Plato’s Stepchildren” by Courage, M52A) 0:16
    Total Time: 1:48The Savage Curtain
    Episode #77, Recorded 1/24/69
    Aired #77, 3/7/69
    Music Composed and Conducted by Wilbur Hatch
  50. Drums/Salute to Our President Fanfare MX/M1/M1A 1:30
  51. Salute to Our President Fanfare (outtakes medley) M2/M3/M4/M5 0:52
  52. End Title* (soprano version, alternate ending; arr. Courage, cond. Hatch) 0:41
  53. Paramount Television I.D. (Wilbur Hatch) 0:05
    Total Time: 3:16
    Total Disc Time: 76:18


The Star Trek: TOS Complete Soundtrack set is broken down into the three separate seasons of Star Trek: The Original Series. Each season gets its own special disc casing.

The 15-CD boxset contains all episode scores as heard in all three original seasons of Star Trek. This special collection has been newly remastered from studio elements and features hours of material previously unreleased in any format. Retail price is set at $224.98.

TNG Remastered Season 3: Blu-Ray Trailer

Yesterday marked the official release of Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2 on Blu-Ray. The set features a dramatic trailer for the third season release with a stunning selection of clips from Season 3 remastered in HD. The trailer also includes a sneak preview into the bonus features on the third season set including the continuation of the wonderful “Stardate Revisited” / “Making it So” documentary. The trailer features clips from fan-favorite season 3 episodes including “Evolution“, “The Survivors“, “Booby Trap“, “The Defector“, “Yesterday’s Enterprise“, “The Offspring“, “The Best of Both Worlds, Part I” and more!

Watch the trailer below in full 1080p high definition!

More compliments are certainly due to the trailer team at CBS. I’ve probably seen this 50 times already and it never gets old! Patrick’s line of “You have RUINED our summer!” is stuck in my head and sure to be representative of more wonderful in interviews due in the third season bonus feature material. Season 3 is listed as “coming soon” by CBS Home Entertainment, although our sources tell us to expect the set in 2013 Q1, most likely April.

We’ve got a selection of HD-screencaps from the trailer available below:

In the meantime – if you haven’t already, be sure to order your copies of Seasons 1 and 2 of Star Trek: The Next Generation remastered on Blu-Ray below!

Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1 Blu-Ray today!



Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2 Blu-Ray today!




Star Trek (OS) Complete Soundtrack – Jeff Bond (Producer) Interview

We’re now less than 24 hours away from the official release of the Soundtrack of the Year! Star Trek: The Original Series: The Complete Soundtrack Collection from La-La Land Records starts shipping tomorrow (December 4th) and excitement at TrekCore HQ is at fever pitch!

We’ve been profiling the talented producers involved with this project in some special exclusive interviews. So far the spotlight has been on Neil Bulk and Lukas Kendall who both shared their insights into this gargantuan project.

Our third and final producer interview is with Star Trek musicologist Jeff Bond. Jeff is another familiar name to Star Trek music fans, having lent his considerable writing talents to numerous collections of liner notes in previous releases as well as his ever-popular book The Music of Star Trek. We caught up with Jeff a few days ago to discuss his work on the set, the huge task of researching the music for Star Trek and what we can expect in the liner notes. We’ve also got FIVE new exclusive sample tracks from the set chosen to accompany the interview. Scroll to the bottom of the interview to listen to them!

Jeff Bond

Jeff Bond: Star Trek TOS Soundtrack Interview

Interviewed by Adam Walker for TrekCore.com

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TrekCore: Great to talk to you, Jeff. Can you start off by telling everyone how you were involved in the Star Trek: The Original Series Soundtrack project and what you were responsible for?

Jeff Bond: Well, I have worked for Lukas Kendall – who produced the set – for many years. He actually brought me out to California and got me started in the weird job of writing liner notes for CDs, and that got me eventually into editing magazines and a lot of other writing jobs. One of the first things that I did when I came out here was write a book about Star Trek music. That book came out in about 1998, but I continued to work for Lukas and in the past few years he began working on releases of several of the Star Trek movie scores which I did the liner notes for.

Doing the Original Series music was always something that everyone I knew involved in this business wanted to do. There were a number of problems with doing it but I remember five or six years ago having a discussion with Michael Gerhard of La-La Land Records and him saying that he was planning on doing the set. I then asked him about every month afterwards for the past five or six years when we were going to do it! It always seemed like the logistics of doing it were almost impossible. Looking back on it, I don’t think I even realized how ambitious the set was going to be because I had always just wanted CDs of the scores that were written. What eventually wound up happening [with this set] is that every note of music of the series was done which I don’t think would have ever been done with a normal series of CD releases. I don’t think all the library music and the songs – the additional ingredients that went into the set – would have ever been put out in a normal release of multiple CDs. I kept working with Lukas over the past decade and when he got involved with helping Mike Gerhard’s label get this project going I was fortunately able to work on the liner notes for it. It’s been a long road!

TrekCore: What do you think it is about the music of the original Star Trek that still puts it in so much demand today?

Jeff Bond: There are a number of things. Part of it is just the importance of the original show. It’s basically the beginning of all Star Trek fandom and it created the entire Star Trek universe and it’s been around for the longest time. For a long time in syndication, it ran every day on television and people like me watched the show over and over again. Subconsciously, watching it so many times you would get the music memorized. I actually made tapes of the show by holding a cassette-recorder microphone up to my television set because I wanted to hear the music cues. The show was done at a time when music in television was incredibly expressive and played a huge role in the story – it was very melodic with recognizable themes. Because a lot of the show’s music was repeated, re-arranged and re-cut, you would hear that music over and over again and it was constantly being reinforced and memorized. Anyone who hears most of the music on these CDs is going to recognize most of it.

TrekCore: And that’s incredible given that we’re now 46 years after the show aired…

Jeff Bond: Yes! And I have to say it’s been promulgated in other venues. I talked to Gerald Fried about this, he wrote music for about five episodes of the show. Some of his music is so distinctive that it’s been used in other television series and movies.

TrekCore: Right! The “Amok Time” theme is iconic…

Jeff Bond: Exactly. And it’s used in a humorous way sometimes because that fight music became like musical code for all the crazy stuntman fights that you had on Star Trek. Those are also a part of television production in the 60’s and 70’s. You would always have these elaborately choreographed fight scenes, and they all looked similar… that fight music became the code word for stuntmen fights. I remember watching Mystery Science Theater, a show where they ran old movies and a guy and two robots would sit and shout comments at the screen, and I think there’s more than one episode where a bunch of characters get into a fight and they just use stuntmen, they all start humming that music as a joke. So it’s sort of an in-joke, and so many people are familiar with that music. It works as a piece of pop-culture reference.


Jeff Bond describes how certain Star Trek music such as the fight theme from “Amok Time” remains iconic 46 years later and has appeared in countless TV shows and movies.

TrekCore: I understand that with this set there’s a huge 100-page booklet full of your liner notes to accompany it. How did you go about researching that given that we’ve sadly only got one of the composers from the Original Series left with us?

Jeff Bond: Well we were very fortunate in a number of ways. First of all, I had been able to talk to Alexander Courage, Fred Steiner and Gerald Fried for the original book that I did and obviously I had access to those quotes. There have been a number of other interviews with those people and some of the other composers done in a few soundtrack magazines over the years. We were particularly fortunate in the fact that Fred Steiner had done a huge article on scoring the series for the Library of Congress, and he wrote it around 1982. He did interviews with all the composers that were living at that time, which was really everyone except for Jerry Fielding who had died by that time and Samuel Matlovsky who wrote the episode “I, Mudd” and I don’t think that he was around or available to be interviewed by Fred.

Fred wrote this very lengthy article and used quotes from his interviews with all the composers. In his personal archive, he actually had all the original transcripts – the full length interviews that he had done that had a lot more comments than those we saw in the final article. We were really desperate to get that material – we knew that it existed and we thought it would be very important to have for the liner notes, and we had some contacts at – I think it was Brigham Young University. We had a contact there who we were trying to get to find the material, but the guy was unable to locate what we were looking for.

One of the amazing things that happened is that literally within a week of us figuring out that we weren’t going to be able to get this material from the guy at the university, I was contacted by a woman named Jessica Getman who was a scholar at Ann Arbor University who was going to write her thesis on the original Star Trek music. She had contacted me because I’d done a couple of pieces for another website and I’d written a couple of articles about music. She had seen that and got in contact with me, and she’d just gone to Brigham Young University for her research and she had transcribed all of that material for herself. She was willing to forward me all of her research material in exchange for us giving her access to some of the material that we had. I was right at the point where I was going to start writing the notes, and I was going to do it based on the materials that I had, and this woman came along at exactly the right time with a mother lode of quote material, and it really forms the spine of the notes. [Jeff also wishes to acknowledge the help of Alan Andres in providing a lot of interview research for the notes]

We broke the booklet up into four booklets – an introduction to the whole set and then one book for each season. We’ve talked a lot about “100 pages”, but I don’t want people to get the impression that it’s 100 pages of verbiage from me – there’s a lot of artwork and lists of all the musicians. It’s a lengthy set of notes and we managed to have quotes from most of the composers that are specific to a lot of the episodes. When Fred Steiner talked to these people, it was only about a decade after Star Trek went off the air, whereas when I talked to Fred and Alexander Courage and Gerald Fried for my book that was in 1998, 30 years after the series went off the air. Their memories were not always as good.

Alexander Courage often said in interviews that he didn’t remember a thing about individual episodes, although he did remember the story of working out the theme for the show and the pilot. We made a really interesting discovery going through the original interview materials from 1980 – Alexander Courage always stated that he did no work on the Original Star Trek during the second season. There are pieces of music in the second season where it’s unclear who would have done those if Alexander Courage didn’t do them. There’s a point in the interview with Fred Steiner where [Courage is] again recounting how he didn’t work on the show during the second season and Fred prompts him about something and Courage all of a sudden looks through his notes and says “Oh wait, I forgot about that!” He recorded thirty minutes of library cues, some of the best music from the second season in addition to the main and end titles. These interviews were invaluable because it uncovered a lot of information we didn’t know about.


When talking about the music of Star Trek which remains to be released in soundtrack form, Jeff Bond laments that Ray Ellis’ unique Star Trek: The Animated Series score is currently “lost”, although he remains positive about Voyager and Enterprise releases for the future.

TrekCore: We’ve had a number of high-profile Star Trek music releases in recent years. As a Star Trek musicologist, what do you think is the next step in Star Trek soundtrack releases?

Jeff Bond: Well we’re putting out another 4 CDs of music from Deep Space Nine. There’s some great music there. There’s also a lot of music in the later series – Voyager and Enterprise have some good scores, but the style of music in the spin-off shows from Next Generation forward is very different. They’re far more subdued – you don’t want to really diminish their value as music, but the goal of the producers on those shows – and the composers to an extent – was to create a very unified sound. Dennis McCarthy said something about seeing it more as a saga, so the music begins with the first episode of the show and ends with the last. There isn’t a lot of huge highs and lows, you see more of an overall approach to the music. You can put that together – you can put it on 4 CDs and have a great listening experience. It’s probably a little more challenging to say we’re going to release all seven years of music from, say, Star Trek: Voyager. I don’t think that is ever going to happen, although never say never. I’ve got a feeling that we will see collections of music – maybe from Voyager and Enterprise down the line.

The other thing that people would probably like to see – and I don’t know if it’s possible or practical – is music from The Animated Series. That was done only a few years after the Original Series by a great composer named Ray Ellis who did almost all of the Filmation cartoon music. He actually did the arrangement of the Spiderman song from the original 60s series and if you listen to that song, you can get a very strong idea of what his style was. He did these terrific big-band brassy arrangements – he did a lot of music for that Spiderman show that people remember and he did music for Star Trek that was in a similar style, but not as pop-oriented. The Animated Series music was very memorable, although they didn’t do a lot of music for the show. My guess is there’s probably thirty or forty minutes of music at the very most because they basically created more of a library for that show and tracked it through the episodes. The problem is that Filmation went through a number of ownerships and I’m not sure if CBS have access to the original music elements. According to Ray all of that stuff was destroyed long ago. There can always be dubs and copies floating around, but as far as I know there’s nothing in great quality that you could put together for another release. That’s something that people might like to see, but it’s not certain if it could be done.

TrekCore: Jeff, can you sum up the Original Series set for us – how do you hope it will be viewed by fans when they get it through their mailbox for the first time?

Jeff Bond: Well it evokes the most powerful memories of the series. It’s the only television music I can think of where if you hear a little cue you’re reminded of specific lines of dialogue. This music had such a huge impact on the show, it wasn’t just for fight scenes or special effects scenes. It scored scenes of conversation and drama and those were done on just as big a level as the space action and the fight scenes. One of the biggest musical moments in the show is in the episode “The Doomsday Machine” and it’s just written for William Windom standing up and getting out of the captain’s chair and Mr. Spock sitting down. This one little simple moment of drama where this obsessed character is forced to give up command on a technicality has music screaming the character’s frustration and anger at being forced out of command. It’s an incredible piece of music and all of that type of drama was done on that level, but it could never have been done on television like that now. When you listen, you’re almost getting the full impact of the episode just in the music. That’s what is amazing when people listen to this set – they’re getting all of the emotional impact of all of those stories and the characters, but in the form of this really superb orchestral music.


The Star Trek: TOS Complete Soundtrack set is broken down into the three separate seasons of Star Trek: The Original Series. Each season gets its own special disc casing.

The 15-CD boxset will contain all episode scores as heard in all three original seasons of Star Trek. This special collection has been newly remastered from studio elements and features hours of material previously unreleased in any format. The set is limited to 6,000 units and will be available exclusively from www.lalalandrecords.com at 1pm (PST). The retail price will be $224.98.

To complement our interview with Jeff Bond, TrekCore is able to bring you some more exclusive sample tracks from the release for your listening pleasure! You can stream the tracks directly or save them to your computer by right clicking on the links.

Monster Illusion (from “The Cage“, Alexander Courage)
Space Cube / Condition Alert (from “The Corbomite Maneuver“, Fred Steiner)
Apollo’s Storm (from “Who Mourns for Adonais?“, Fred Steiner)
Lonely to Dramatic (library cue, Joseph Mullendore)
The Right Button / Death of Miramanee / End (from “The Paradise Syndrome“, Gerald Fried)

We look forward to being able to bring you a full review of this iconic set soon, so be sure to watch out for that! In the mean time, guarantee your order by ordering from www.lalalandrecords.com at 1pm (PST) on December 4th 2012.

Star Trek (OS) Complete Soundtrack – Lukas Kendall (Producer) Interview

With just a few days to go until the official release of the unprecedented Star Trek: The Original Series Complete Soundtrack Collection from La-La Land Records, we’re continuing our look at the boutique set’s production and content.

Last time we chatted with Producer Neil Bulk who gave us a great insight into how the set was first conceived and the arduous process of sourcing every single note of classic Trek music.

Our second interview is with Producer Lukas Kendall. Lukas is a familiar name to Star Trek fans through his soundtrack label and magazine Film Score Monthly. We caught up with Lukas last week to discuss his role on the set, what the set means to him and Star Trek soundtracks as a whole. We’ve also got FIVE new exclusive sample tracks from the set chosen to accompany the interview. Scroll to the bottom of the interview to listen to them!

Lukas Kendall

Lukas Kendall: Star Trek TOS Soundtrack Interview

Interviewed by Adam Walker for TrekCore.com

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TrekCore: Hi Lukas! Tell us a bit about how you’re involved with this huge Star Trek: The Original Series soundtrack project and what you were responsible for.

Lukas Kendall: [pause] Do you remember in Pulp Fiction where the guy comes over to clean the bodies—the Wolf, Harvey Keitel? Not quite like that! [Laughter] I’ve been doing this for 15 years, I’ve put out hundreds of soundtrack albums mostly through my company, Film Score Monthly, which I’ve decided to close down to make a career change. This has been something I’ve always wanted to do the most, and finally the relationships were in place between CBS, La-La Land and GNP/Crescendo so we could produce this box set. With Star Trek [The Original Series soundtrack], there were so many parties involved and everyone was extra passionate, involved and interested. I was the person hired by La-La Land Records to do the production, so in that sense I had a lot of responsibility but I don’t want to make it sound like it was all my doing because it was a collaborative effort and it’s really La-La Land who have financed this and decided what they wanted.

Music licensing is a lot more complicated than a lot of other licensing that Star Trek licensees deal with. When you’re releasing music, not only do you have to license from CBS, you have to pay royalties to the composers who wrote the music, the musicians who performed the music, the vocalists who sang the music, and for Star Trek, there are existing exclusive rights in place with other labels, specifically GNP/Crescendo. All of these details had to be sorted out in a way that was fair to everyone by someone who knew the subtleties of dealing with licensing. When I joked that I was the Wolf in Pulp Fiction, I happened to be the person who had these relationships, who knew the systems that the different entities liked to use, and could come up with fair amounts while being trusted as a liaison to make sure that their interests were represented.

TrekCore: You did the fantastic Ron Jones box set through Film Score Monthly and I recall you were limited to using just five minutes of cues from “The Best of Both Worlds.” What changed between that circumstance with GNP/Crescendo and this time around with Star Trek: The Original Series?

Lukas Kendall: This is a little bit of a delicate topic. What changed was I approached GNP/Crescendo wearing a different hat. I approached them in a very informal activity that I’ve had helping Paramount Pictures with some of their soundtrack albums and asking if GNP/Crescendo would like to do the collectors’ editions that we’ve subsequently released of First Contact and Generations. It was through doing that that I got to work with Neil Norman and his wife Melanie Clarkson Norman, and I like them very much and I hope I did a good job for them. I was in a better position to then ask for certain rights that they’d been understandably reluctant to negotiate away. It was just a matter of furthering the relationships and treating everyone fairly and coming up with a way to make the deals work.


The Star Trek Original Series Soundtrack project involved a lot of behind-the-scenes delicate licensing negotiations which Lukas was able to lend his expertise in the industry to.

TrekCore: When we look at the Original Series set, it’s clear that the pressure you must have been under to get every single piece of music right and not to use a wrong take must have been immense given how particular Star Trek fans are. How did you cope with it?

Lukas Kendall: I appreciate that question. My answer may be a little counterintuitive: I’m always that way! Having done hundreds of these albums, it doesn’t make a difference to me whether it’s James Bond or Superman or Star Trek. I always approach these projects with a very obsessive personality and the thing that made Star Trek more difficult was not the pressure to get things correct—because I always feel that pressure—it was the cacophony of having so many interested people who were also paying attention during the production process and wanted to know what was going on in order to put in their two cents. I don’t want to be dismissive towards my colleagues, but it just became a more complicated working environment compared to a soundtrack album of a film that no one has ever heard of where I could indulge in my obsessive behavior in anonymity.

I think can be a little more cavalier with that answer than I should be because the person who really did what you asked, as far as ensuring the correct takes were used, was Neil Bulk, whom you’ve already interviewed. There are three people listed as the producers of the box set and that’s me, Neil and Jeff Bond, who wrote the liner notes. I am very proud to be listed alongside them because all three of us are lifelong Star Trek fans who never in our wildest dreams would have imagined this opportunity. It would have been physically impossible to produce this box set in the time-frame and with the quality that we did without the three of us collaborating. I am indebted to Neil and Jeff and our other colleagues for their skills and talents which are much more developed than mine in their respective fields.

TrekCore: A lot of the music that was used early in Star Trek was later re-used with subtle differences in later seasons. Where did you draw the line in terms of putting everything on the collection? Were there occasions where tracks weren’t different enough to warrant a second inclusion?

Lukas Kendall: No, we included everything. We included every original recording that we had that was considered a master take. When they’re recording any piece of music they’ll do Take #1, Take #2, Take #3 and so on until they get it right. In rare cases they may use an earlier take because they could not improve on that performance. We made a point to include every recorded master take, or “intercut” combination thereof, that was considered by the production to be the definitive recording of that composition. There were instances at the beginning of Seasons 2 and 3 where they had a recording session where they did new performances of earlier compositions which were then expressly used for library purposes. We made a point to include all of those re-recordings of the earlier music, but it was very easily identifiable what was original or not.

TrekCore: Imagine you’re a fan who’s listening to this set for the first time. What would stand out to you as the biggest surprises in the collection?

Lukas Kendall: I would be most relieved to hear how good it all sounds! The quality is terrific. We even have soundtracks in stereo which is very rare for television music of that period. I think the excitement of hearing the box set for the first time is the same excitement that we had when we began the project. We were anxious about finding every recording, and I’m happy to report that everything is there and it all sounds great. If people have any apprehension that maybe we’ve overlooked something, I’m quite sure that’s unfounded.

TrekCore: We touched on licensing a little earlier. Was it difficult to get the copyrights sorted for publishing material such as “The Star Spangled Banner” in “The Omega Glory” and some of the music from “The City on the Edge of Forever”?

Lukas Kendall: No, and that has to do with some of the subtleties of music licensing. “The Star Spangled Banner” is public domain as the National Anthem in the United States, it was written so long ago that you no longer need a license to use it. The song “Goodnight Sweetheart” in “The City on the Edge of Forever” is under copyright, but whereas you would need a synchronization license if you were going to use that song in a new television show, if you are just putting it on a record album it’s called a “mechanical license” and a “compulsory license.” To make a long story short, you need to pay for it, but you don’t necessarily need permission, although we are getting permission and we’re doing everything on the up-and-up.


Lukas Kendall explains the different types of licenses required for including music such as “Goodnight Sweetheart” from the iconic Star Trek episode “The City on the Edge of Forever

TrekCore: You started Film Score Monthly which pretty much kicked off these expanded editions of Star Trek soundtracks that have been so successful. Did you ever expect when you first started work on The Wrath of Khan [Expanded Edition Soundtrack] that you would be reaching a day when you worked on the complete archive music of The Original Series?

Lukas Kendall: The answer is yes. It was always my plan to build and develop relationships so that I could do most—if not all—of the Star Trek music that I’m personally interested in. Going back 15 years, I’ll happily take credit for the work I’ve done, but I did it simultaneously with at least half a dozen other producers. I get a lot of notice I think because I’ve been visible with the website I have and the message board because I’ve always communicated very directly to our customers, but I would be mortified if it sounded like I was trying to take credit for an entire industry. I was probably one of 12 or more people who very passionately worked on this since the 1990s.

TrekCore: What are the chances of Varèse Sarabande relasing an expanded edition of Star Trek Nemesis?

Lukas Kendall: I don’t know, honestly. I know the producer there—Bob Townson—is devoted to Jerry Goldsmith’s music. I know he’s also an excellent producer, he’s certainly someone who’s done far more work in the field than I have and whose career in the field predates mine by several years. I would be very optimistic that he’s aware of the interest in the title. Whether he does it or not is not for me to say.

TrekCore: What about GNP/Crescendo finishing their last Star Trek title, Insurrection?

Lukas Kendall: Well, I have to be a little cheeky and neither confirm nor deny any such plans, because I have to be aware of GNP/Crescendo’s prerogative to either announce or not announce what they wish to.

TrekCore: Last time with Neil Bulk, we chatted briefly about La-La Land’s upcoming Deep Space Nine set. Did you have any involvement with that?

Lukas Kendall: Yes. I’m very happy with these releases, I consulted on them. The producer who has been most involved with that (and La-La Land’s Next Generation set) is Ford Thaxton. He knows the scores by Dennis McCarthy and Jay Chattaway much better than I do and I trust his judgment when it comes to selecting the episodes and cues to put on the album. With modern day Star Trek series, there’s a much larger quantity of music that was recorded because they did an original score for each and every episode. I tried with the Ron Jones box set to present every single note, but it became a very large set that was probably not cost effective, it was just something I personally wanted to do because I was passionate about Ron’s music. In the case of the newer Star Trek series and the composers who did many more episodes than Ron did, by necessity we have to excerpt their work. I trust Ford to make the best selections for the collections.


One of Lukas’ previous flagship collections was the “Ron Jones Project” put out on his label Film Score Monthly. He explains that such projects for other modern-day Trek composers such as Jay Chattaway or Dennis McCarthy would be unfeasible due to the volume of work.

TrekCore: If you could sum up what fans are going to get in the Original Series box set, how would you describe it?

Lukas Kendall: Well, I don’t presume that every Star Trek fan is also a Star Trek music fan. Something we wrote in the liner notes is that it’s very hard to discuss music. We can’t take a picture of it—we can take a picture of the written notes on the page or the composers, but the music itself exists in air and sound and time. You know, the famous line of “Writing about music is like dancing about architecture” is true. Music is, by definition, something of an abstract art form. I think the way in which people react to it can be a little abstract as well, it can be a little more emotional. I always hope that when I finally get the reviews of a set that I’ve helped create… I hope people will be very happy. I think it will be a lovely collectible, and I think that there will be a certain ‘binge’ attitude which I experienced personally as far as wanting to listen and devour all of the music. To finally—after so many decades after hearing the tracks behind sound effects and dialogue—to hear it un-obscured and listen to all the lovely details in the music, to have this experience for the first time will be a special moment.

It’s an interesting journey that you go through as a collector and a fan, to have this material at your fingertips and to re-experience your affections for Star Trek and the emotions that you had from enjoying it for so many years. For example, I have the CD-ROM collection of the Star Trek comic books which came out in 2008. It’s a very interesting experience opening up PDFs of those comic books that I purchased in a drugstore in 1985. The only thing that I wish the PDFs had is the smell of the newsprint. Star Trek is sci-fi but it’s also sui generis, that’s Latin for unique unto itself. It really is a one-of-a-kind thing that we’ve grown up with, and when you listen to the music it’s a very evocative experience, a very emotional experience. You hear little phrases and sounds and it really brings you back—not only to the stories of the Star Trek episodes—but to the experience that you had watching them either as a child, or a teenager or in every corner of your life. It’s something to think about, and I hope that people can appreciate the recordings on the box set in that context, as much as I am eager for them to experience it simply as a very cool collectible that I hope they acquire.


The Star Trek: TOS Complete Soundtrack set is broken down into the three separate seasons of Star Trek: The Original Series. Each season gets its own special disc casing.

The 15-CD boxset will contain all episode scores as heard in all three original seasons of Star Trek. This special collection has been newly remastered from studio elements and features hours of material previously unreleased in any format. The set is limited to 6,000 units and will be available exclusively from www.lalalandrecords.com at 1pm (PST). The retail price will be $224.98.

To complement our interview with Lukas Kendall, TrekCore is able to bring you some more exclusive sample tracks from the release for your listening pleasure! You can stream the tracks directly or save them to your computer by right clicking on the links.

Zap the Spaceship (from “Charlie X“, Fred Steiner)
I Know That Voice (from “The Conscience of the King“, Joseph Mullendore)
Kirk’s Philosophy (“Return to Tomorrow“, George Duning)
Chekov Gets Killed (from “Spectre of the Gun“, Jerry Fielding)
Slap Unhappy (from “Plato’s Stepchildren“, Alexander Courage)

Stay tuned to TrekCore for more exciting news and coverage on the Star Trek: The Original Series Complete Soundtrack Collection. Be sure to guarantee your order by ordering from www.lalalandrecords.com at 1pm (PST) on December 4th 2012.

TNG Remastered: Season 3 Cover Art

We’ve been deluged with requests for a higher-resolution copy of the cover art from the 3rd Season of Star Trek: The Next Generation on Blu-Ray after we trailed it in a recent article on CBS-Digital. The cover art is showcased in the trailer for the Season 3 Blu-Rays which you can see on Disc 1 of the Season 2 set, released this coming week.

The set sports images of Captain Picard, Lt. La Forge and Doctor Crusher surrounded by the familiar design of the Next Generation-era commbadge in bright green colored packaging. Please note, as is usually the case, the cover art is subject to change. TrekCore will keep you updated if the artwork does change and all the latest developments with TNG Remastered.

Tell us what you think about the cover art… are you a fan of the color? Let us know in the comments below!

Order TNG - "The Best of Both Worlds" Feature Blu-Ray today!


Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 3 Blu-Ray today!



Analysis: TNGS2 Blu-Ray ‘Up the Long Ladder’ Deleted Scene

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Last week we analyzed one of the special deleted scenes included on the Season 2 release of Star Trek: The Next Generation on Blu-Ray from the episode ‘The Icarus Factor‘. The second episode to contain standalone deleted scenes is ‘Up the Long Ladder‘, often ridiculed by fans as being one of the worst in the season. Nevertheless, in their mission for completeness, CBS has included a total of 8 minutes of deleted scenes from the episode. Today we take a deeper look at the scenes, breaking them down for you and giving our analysis.

TNG Episode 144 ‘Up the Long Ladder

Act 3, Scene A24c (0:29)
This scene takes place on the bridge, right after Riker’s romantic encounter with Brenna in his quarters, and just before the cargo bay sequence where Worf demonstrates the food replicator’s alcohol selections to the Bringloidi. Riker’s question to Worf about his health refers to his fainting spell which occurred in the beginning of the episode.

Worf is heading for the forward turbolift as Riker emerges from the forward lift. The first officer looks very content.

RIKER
Feeling better, Worf?

WORF
Yes. And you, Commander?

RIKER
Couldn’t be better.

Worf enters the turbolift. Data stands and yields the command chair to Riker.

RIKER
(continuing)
Status, Mister Data?

DATA
Warp factor five, continuing on course for NB2323. ETA, eighteen hours.

RIKER
Excellent.

Our take: This scene’s removal was probably for the best. It serves little purpose other than to confirm what was already shown in the previous scene in Riker’s quarters, and bringing the episode to a halt just to have Riker smirk to the viewer seems unnecessary. It makes much more sense to jump right to the next scene in the cargo bay.

***

Act 4, Scene 33 (3:52)
This scene, where Granger describes the cloning history of the Mariposan people, takes place in the Enterprise observation lounge. The rough cut presented here, however includes a few lines missing from the final version of the scene, and a number of alternate takes of the familiar segments of the conversation – but is overall largely similar to the final cut of the episode.

A portion of the scene’s script, with restored lines in blue:

PULASKI
How did you suppress the natural sexual drive? Drugs? Punitive laws?

GRANGER
In the beginning, a little of each. Now three hundred years later the entire concept of sexual reproduction is a little repugnant to us.

PICARD
A culture without children.

GRANGER
To accelerate clone growth. Some basic learning can be chemically imprinted on the developing clone, the rest we do after emergence.

PULASKI
How did you overcome the problem of replicative fading?

GRANGER
We haven’t.

PULASKI
You have got a problem.

RIKER
Wait. I don’t understand. Replicative fading?

PULASKI
Each time you clone you’re making a copy of a copy. Subtle errors creep into the chromosomes, and eventually you end up with a non-viable clone.

GRANGER
Yes. We’ve noticed a sort of mental hardening of the
arteries. An inability to respond to new situations.

PICARD
How can we help you?

GRANGER
We need an infusion of fresh DNA. I was hoping that you would be willing to share tissue samples from your crew.

RIKER
You want to clone us?

GRANGER
Yes.

RIKER
No way. Not me.

Our take: The three lines that were cut do nothing but add unnecessary technobabble to a relatively straightforward scene, and the conversation certainly flows better with out them. Even with the alternate angles presented in this rough cut, the scene is so similar to the final version that we’re wondering why it was included in this compilation.

***

Act 4, Scene 39B (1:10)
Set in the Enterprise cargo bay, this scene features Worf and Picard watch Danilo, the Bringloidi leader, as tells the children of the settlement a story about the founding of the colony:

DANILO
And after a long and gentle sleep we awoke and there was Bringloid, our dream world. Our companions in the butterfly ship left us off, and said they would leave a guard in heaven to watch out for us. They flew on in the darkness — their search was not yet over — but we had found the sun, a world, a home.

BRENNA
And now we have lost it.

DANILO
Then we’ll find another.

BRENNA
When? How long must we wait and journey?

Picard’s expression has been shifting as various emotions and realizations strike him. He crosses swiftly to Worf, leans in.

PICARD
Now I finally understand. The distress satellite was left by the Mariposans as a way to protect the Bringloidi. Both colonies were on that ship.

Our take: The scene is a nice bit of contrast to the somewhat poor presentation of the Bringloidi’s overly-stereotypical Irish culture featured elsewhere in the episode. Unfortunately, by this point in the episode, we’ve already figured out that the two colonies left Earth together (the S.S. Mariposa listed computer equipment and spinning wheels in it’s cargo manifest). Despite the bit of oral history, it’s not a particularly relevant scene and it’s removal was probably the right decision.

***

Act 5, Scene 48 (2:25)
While the final version of the episode ends with Picard and Brenna discussing the benefits of the Bringloidi/Mariposan union, the original cut of continues on with a last scene on the bridge, where Data expresses his disappointment that theEnterprise would be unable to study the future of the combined colony. We get not only a typical “Data doesn’t understand humans” discussion, but also a new insight into Klingon desires:

Riker and Pulaski ENTER from the aft turbolift.

PICARD
All squared away?

RIKER
The Bringloidi have reached their new home.

PICARD
Set a course for Starbase 114, warp factor three.

DATA
It is unfortunate that we cannot remain and observe the integration of the two colonies.

PULASKI
They’re going to do just fine.
They’re survivors, both of them.

PICARD
They’ll do more than just survive. I believe that they will flourish.

RIKER
We’ve got the cats in the sack; let’s just hope we haven’t shaken the bag too much.

DATA
What is occurring on Mariposa is a demonstration of sociobiology, and the concept of the selfish gene.
The males and females are each pursuing their respective reproductive strategies in an effort to maximize their contribution to the gene pool of the next generation.

PULASKI
Data, I liked the commander’s analogy better.

DATA
Why, Doctor?

PULASKI
It was more romantic.

DATA
How are cats in a sack romantic? They would fight and scratch…

WORF
Mmmm. Very romantic. I hunt in the darkness. The stars my guide. The memory of you sings in my blood. I seize the gift. Carry it to your bower. And lay at your feet the hearts of my enemies.

The silence is deafening; stunned reaction shots of Troi and Data. Picard turns slowly back to
face the main viewscreen. Points at CONN.

PICARD
Engage.

WORF
Perhaps it does not translate well.

Our take: The scene drags on a little bit too long – the “Data doesn’t understand metaphors” thing is getting pretty stale, even after two seasons – but after learning about Klingon poetry earlier this season (in ‘The Dauphin‘), it’s kind of a shame that this look into Worf’s romantic side had to be cut from the final episode – it’s certainly a better attempt at poetry than his half-hearted attempt in DS9‘s ‘One Little Ship‘ a few years later. The wide-eyed stares coming from the crew after Worf’s soliloquy are well worth the watch.

In addition to these deleted scenes, Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2 on Blu-Ray includes a brand new hour-long roundtable discussion with the principal cast, the continuation of Robert Meyer Burnett and Roger Lay Jr.’s epic documentary chronicling the history of TNG with Making It So: Continuing The Next Generation. Also included are the much-talked about extended edition of “The Measure of a Man”, a brand new gag-reel and other extras including LeVar Burton’s original TNG-based “Reading Rainbow” episode!

With just a few days to go until release… be sure to pre-order Season 2 below so you get it on release date in your country. All Amazon stores have significantly discounted the title – at the time of writing it’s under $65 in the U.S.£47.00 in the U.K. and under 57,00EUR in Germany!

Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1 Blu-Ray today!



Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2 Blu-Ray today!




TNG Remastered: Season 3 and Beyond

As Star Trek: The Next Generation prepares to boldly go into its second season on Blu-Ray, behind-the-scenes CBS Digital is busy working away on finalizing work for the third season. FX Guide magazine – one of the biggest VFX-centered sites – recently spoke to Craig Weiss, Director at CBS Digital about the company’s history and their current efforts to remaster Star Trek: The Next Generation in high definition. You can watch their piece over at FX Guide. The interview gives a very nice insight into the technical elements of the remastering and the kit at CBS Digital’s disposal, including their whopping 600 Terabytes of SAN-storage used to store and share elements the team are working on.

TNG Blu-Ray Season 1 TNG Blu-Ray Season 1 TNG Blu-Ray Season 1

Eagled-eyed viewers will spot a few shots (stills above) where CBS-Digital appear to be working on the fourth season (episodes “Reunion” and “In Theory“). It’s important to clarify that while CBS-Digital are indeed working on the conform for Season 4, the visual effects portion is being done by another house (however we can confirm that Season 2 post-house HTV are not involved). Season 3 – as we’ve mentioned previously – is being handled fully in-house at CBS-Digital.

Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 1 Blu-Ray today!



Order Star Trek: The Next Generation Season 2 Blu-Ray today!