In addition, stick around to hear Madeline’s wish for more Star Trek fan clubs and conventions, and Alex’s wish for the other current Star Trek shows to take a page from Picard’s third season and play with more of the franchise’s toys in telling the story they want to tell.
WeeklyTrek is available to subscribe and download each week on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, YouTube, and Spotify— and we’ll be sharing the details of each new episode right here on TrekCore each week if you’re simply just looking to listen in from the web.
Do you have a wish or theory you’d like to share on the show? Tweet to Alex at @WeeklyTrek, or email us with your thoughts about wishes, theories, or anything else about the latest in Star Trek news!
First announced by Eaglemoss in February 2022 — and never released until Master Replicas’ stock sale on April 19 — the Parliament-class USS Vancouver from Star Trek: Lower Decks is about to warp home to one lucky TrekCore reader!
This contest has ended and our winner has been notified.
The USS Vancouver (NCC-70492), was the second new Starfleet starship design introduced by the animated series, first appearing in Season 1’s “Cupid’s Errant Arrow.”
The Official Starships Collection — USS Vancouver (NCC-70492)
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USS VANCOUVER — The design of the Parliament-class starship was essentially dictated by its role in handling assignments that focused on extensive, complex engineering projects.
Advanced in terms of 24th-century design, the U.S.S. Vancouver comprised a large primary saucer section. Its low-slung, aft-ranged warp nacelles were secured by large pylons that formed part of the saucer section’s dorsal superstructure. A discrete secondary hull and deflector array was located below and aft of the saucer section.
Around 2380, the Vancouver was instrumental in successfully completing an operation to demolish one of the moons of Mixtus III. During the mission, the crew was supported by the U.S.S. Cerritos.
The third (and likely final) ship in the Lower Decks Starship Collection measures in just over 8 inches in length and (as of this writing) is sold-out at Master Replicas’ website — and unless there’s another batch of ships found in their Eaglemoss inventory, that’s it for the Parliament-class.
Except for one of you loyal TrekCore readers, who can win one of the rare starship models that our friends at Master Replicas are holding in reserve just for you! To have a shot at landing it for yourself, you can enter to win in one of two ways:
You have until 11:59 PM (Eastern time) on Monday, May 15 to get your entry in — we’ll reach out to the winner through either a Twitter or Facebook direct message after the contest closes to arrange for fulfillment.
Good luck to all!
The comments section of this article will not be considered for contest entries.
This Friday, Master Replicas will release the next wave of Eaglemoss-manufactured stock — including models from the Star TrekOfficial Starships Collection and more — and we’ve got the next breakdown of what collectors will find up for grabs.
Launching on Friday, May 12, TrekCore can today reveal the next set of Eaglemoss releases coming to Master Replicas web shop — and in case you missed it, you can find out about how all of this works in our overview discussion with Master Replicas’ Ben Robinson.
We’ve also got an update from Master Replicas themselves:
This week’s drop features limited-edition and unreleased products, something that we’ll be doing regularly over the next couple of months. This week we have the red and yellow variants of the Tron light cycles. These were only ever produced in a limited edition of 250 and we’ve got them all.
We also have some very rare STAR TREK models including a small quantity of the U.S.S. Nog (which was named for the character played by the last Aron Eisenberg), two very sought after ships from STAR TREK ONLINE, the original version of the Enterprise from ‘The Cage’ and the bonus issues version of the U.S.S. Titan.
We have a couple more STAR TREK books – this time illustrated handbooks for the Ent-D and Deep Space 9. These are beautiful books that are absolutely packed with full-color illustrations and are the most comprehensive guides ever published.
Outside of TREK we have a fantastic ALIEN Xenomorph statue, a ship from The Expanse, Batman-themed Hero Collector Museum pieces, Hot Toys Spider-Man figures, and a dragon from Game of Thrones.
And that’s not all — as a special offer, if you buy any STAR TREK item in the month of May, you’ll be able to claim 60% off a MEGO set.
As always, stock is limited but we have very limited stock of the Tron light cycles, the STO ships, the movie version of the Enterprise and the Alien statue.
Check out everything set to arrive for sale this Friday!
Master Replicas - May 12 2023
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Regula One
'The Cage' Enterprise
USS Melbourne
Keldon Class
Timeship Aeon
NX-Alpha
Klingon Transport
From the Star Trek Universe:
USS Enterprise NCC-1701 (From “The Cage”)
Station: Regula One (The Wrath of Khan)
Nebula-class Prototype USS Melbourne (Deep Space Nine)
Cardassian Keldon Class (Deep Space Nine)
Federation Timeship Aeon (Voyager)
Klingon Transport (Enterprise)
NX-Alpha (Enterprise)
Master Replicas - May 12 2023
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USS Titan
Kelvin Timeline Enterprise
USS Buran ('Discovery')
Section 31 Deimos Class
Pathfinder Class
USS Buran ('Star Trek Online')
USS Titan (Star Trek: Titan Novels)
Special: USS Enterprise NCC-1701 (Star Trek 2009)
Section 31 Deimos Class (Discovery)
USS Buran (Discovery)
USS Nog (Discovery)
From Star Trek Online:
USS Buran
USS Pathfinder
Special Trek Items and More:
Book: USS Enterprise NCC-1701-D Illustrated Handbook
Book: Deep Space 9 and USS Defiant Illustrated Handbook
Statue: Commander Riker ‘Facepalm’ paperweight
Master Replicas - May 12 2023
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Aliens Xenomorph Head
Alien3 Runner
Batman Batarang
Batman Cowl
Drogon Statue
UN One ('The Expanse')
Red TRON Light Cycle
Yellow TRON Light Cycle
From Outside the Star Trek Universe:
Alien: Hero Collector Museum Xenomorph Head
Alien 3: XL Runner Xenomorph
Batman: Hero Collector Museum Batarang
Batman: Hero Collector Museum The Dark Knight Returns Cowl
Game of Thrones: Drogon dragon statue
Spider-Man: Hot Toys Mini Scarlet Suit
Spider-Man: Hot Toys Mini Iron Spider Suit
The Expanse: UN One
TRON: Yellow and Red Light Cycles
The company has also hinted at several upcoming releases on social media, including the Caretaker Array from Voyager and more.
Yes last week of May
— Master Replicas Official (@MasterReplicas_) May 8, 2023
— Master Replicas Official (@MasterReplicas_) May 8, 2023
If you want one of the ships or products included in this next wave of sales, you’ll need to move quickly… because once they sell out or leave the Master Replicas site, they may never be available for direct sale again. This round of product is expected to be available starting on May 12 at Friday at 9pm in the UK and 4pm ET.
For more, head over to the Master Replicas website to sign up for their mailing list, and to bring home any of the next wave of surplus Official Starships models when they go on sale May 12.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!
Rebuilt and rescanned from the original film sources, Star Trek: Generations, Star Trek: First Contact, Star Trek: Insurrection, and Star Trek: Nemesis made their way to 4K Blu-ray and 4K-sourced standard Blu-ray disc last month, the first new editions of the Picard-crew movies since their original high-definition release back in 2009.
Like the first-edition Original Series film Blu-rays, the 2009 editions of the four Star Trek: The Next Generation films were plagued with a heavy-handed use of digital noise reduction (DNR) treatments, artificial sharpening efforts (to restore detail erased by the DNR process), and odd color timing that — in some instances — drastically changed the look of the movies when compared to previous VHS, LaserDisc, and DVD home media releases.
Those new Blu-ray discs are remastered as well, using the new 4K scans as source material for the updated releases — but there’s no new extra features; all the commentary tracks and movie-specific bonus material is carried from the 2009 Blu-rays.
Star Trek: Generations (1994) gets perhaps the largest amount of color restoration in its new presentation, as a noticeable yellow-green tint (which permeated the 2009 edition) is scraped away in the 4K edition.
Most noticeable in the scenes shot on location — Worf’s promotion aboard the holographic sailing ship and at Soran’s launch platform filmed in Nevada’s Valley of Fire — are drastically changed from the previous edition, bringing back the sunny blue skies and warm desert tones of the original presentation.
Likewise, greys and silvers aboard the Enterprise-D sets return to their expected color, as do the mustard-color operations uniforms worn by Data, Worf and La Forge. Fine facial details are also no longer so exaggerated, thanks to this edition’s lack of that heavy-handed DNR and artificial sharpening effects.
Curiously, a number of shots are slightly repositioned compared to the previous editions of the film, such as the crew’s arrival to the bridge while wearing their holodeck sailing-ship costumes; this occurs sporadically throughout the film without much obvious rhyme or reason.
It’s not a huge issue, as one probably won’t even notice most of the time — but some shots certainly feel “off-center” now because of these framing adjustments.
* * *
Star Trek: First Contact (1996) takes the crew aboard the first Enterprise-E adventure, filmed on sets that are naturally darker than the Galaxy-class setting of the previous film.
This remastered edition features some nice lighting, contrast, and detail enhancements thanks to the new scan from original film elements.
Like Generations, the 2009 edition of First Contact also had a similar green look that has fortunately been eliminated — the steel and bronze set elements aboard both the Enterprise and in the Phoenix launch facility now shine with proper metallic coloring, and costume elements like Riker’s leather jacket regain their proper tones.
Some color correction appears to veer slightly too far into the blue tone in a few darker sections the new release, however it’s not obvious in the majority of shots and seems to be a limited issue.
* * *
Star Trek: Insurrection (1998) truly benefits from the lack of DNR and artificial sharpening found on its 2009 edition, as the heavy filtering impacted the cast’s facial features dramatically in that old presentation.
The new scan now offers a much more natural look both the actors and the Ba’ku planet, really showcasing just how bad the original Insurrection disc looked.
L-R: 2009 vs 2023 editionL-R: 2009 vs 2023 editionL-R: 2009 vs 2023 edition
The natural features of the Ba’ku planet have slighly tone-down coloring — reducing its somewhat oversaturated appearance in the 2009 release.
Fine details like the piles of straw in which Data and Artim play are no longer a messy blur, Geordi’s sunrise now actually looks like the sun is warming up the Ba’ku valley, and visual effects shots that once had an odd orange-red vibe are shifted more properly to a golden color tone.
* * *
The remastered edition of Star Trek: Nemesis (2002) has less detail improvement than the other TNG films, but better color and lighting fixes — gone is yellow-green tone that permeated the film’s previous release.
While that overall greenish tone has been cleaned up, elements which SHOULD be green — grass, nebula, Thalaron radiation, cymbals — retain their proper coloring.
The ‘mountains’ of Alaska are no longer so pink and purple, and there are several other nice color adjustments (like Guinan’s outfit now properly and and brown, rather than green), and the stained glass aboard Shinzon’s vessel now appears teal and blue rather than green and purple.
The desert landscape of Kolarus III is no longer overexposed to the point of highlight blow-out, and dark scenes have a more balanced lighting and shadow, with some moments having a bit of a colder (but more consistent) look.
* * *
Overall, this is the best that these four films have ever looked on home media — and while we’re always going to prefer the physical releases for best-quality presentation, with any luck, they’ll supplant the 2009 editions across all streaming services sooner rather than later.
We can’t recommend these new 4K presentations enough, even with some of the minor quibbles mentioned above — while it took much longer than it should have to give these films the remastering treatment, the wait has been worth it with these new 4K discs.
Have you upgraded your Next Generation film library to these new remastered releases? Still trying to decide if you want to get the new discs? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below!
This Friday, Master Replicas will release the next wave of Eaglemoss-manufactured stock — including models from the Star TrekOfficial Starships Collection and more — and we’ve got the next breakdown of what collectors will find up for grabs.
Launching on Friday, May 5, TrekCore can today reveal the next set of Eaglemoss releases coming to Master Replicas web shop — and in case you missed it, you can find out about how all of this works in our overview discussion with Master Replicas’ Ben Robinson.
Here’s everything set to arrive for sale this Friday!
Master Replicas - May 5 2023
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Planet Killer
V'Ger
Vulcan Long-Range Shuttle
Enterprise Ringship
USS Excelsior
USS Rhode Island
Enterprise NX-01 Refit
Klingon D7 (Discovery)
USS Europa
USS Nog
From the Star Trek Universe:
Planet Killer (The Original Series)
V’Ger (The Motion Picture)
Vulcan Long-Range Shuttle (The Motion Picture)
Enterprise CVN-330 (The Motion Picture)
USS Excelsior NCC-2000 (The Undiscovered Country)
USS Rhode Island NCC-72701 (Voyager)
Enterprise NX-01 Refit (Enterprise)
Klingon D7 Battlecruiser (Discovery)
USS Europa NCC-1648 (Discovery)
USS Nog NCC-325070 (Discovery)
Master Replicas - May 5 2023
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Deep Space Station K-7
Jupiter Station
Enterprise Plaque
Enterprise-D Plaque
Light Speed Plaque
Spock (Ethan Peck) Statue
Star Trek Space Stations:
Jupiter Station (Voyager)
Deep Space Station K-7 (Original Series)
Special Items and More:
Dedication Plaque: USS Enterprise (Original Series)
Dedication Plaque: USS Enterprise-D (The Next Generation)
Metal Plaque: Speed of Light Certificate (Picard)
Statue: Spock (Ethan Peck, Discovery)
Master Replicas - May 5 2023
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Alien Covenant Lifter
Alien Resurrection 'Betty'
Battlestar Galactica Viper
Osiris (BSG)
Fallout Vertibird
Fallout Vertibird
Fallout Prydwen
Fallout Prydwen
Harry Potter Statue
Space 1999 Eagle
Space 1999 Eagle Laboratory
Orville Shuttle
From Outside the Star Trek Universe:
Alien Covenant: Cargo Lifter
Alien Resurrection: The Betty
Battlestar Galactica: Viper Mark VII
Battlestar Galactica: The Osiris (Blood and Chrome)
Battlestar Galactica Shipyards (Book)
Fallout:Prydwen
Fallout: XVB02 Vertibird
Harry Potter: Harry at the Battle of Hogwarts (Statue)
Space 1999:Eagle Transporter
Space 1999:Eagle Transporter Laboratory Module
The Orville: Union Shuttle ECV-197-1
The company also has two special releases from Peaky Blinders, revealed today through their social media channels:
We have two 1/6th Scale Peaky Blinders figures on sale on Friday drop – we have 99 units available. Each figure will have a hand signed plaque
Figure 1 : Tommy Shelby signed by Cillian Murphy
Figure 2 : – Arthur Shelby signed by Paul Anderson
— Master Replicas Official (@MasterReplicas_) May 1, 2023
If you want one of the ships or products included in this next wave of sales, you’ll need to move quickly… because once they sell out or leave the Master Replicas site, they may never be available for direct sale again. This round of product is expected to be available starting on May 5 at Friday at 9pm in the UK and 4pm ET.
For more, head over to the Master Replicas website to sign up for their mailing list, and to bring home any of the next wave of surplus Official Starships models when they go on sale April 5.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for all the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!
A new website from Roddenberry Entertainment and digital graphics company OTOY now allows Star Trek fans to visit the most famous starship bridges from all around the final frontier — virtually, that is — through a new portal called the Roddenberry Archive.
Through this new web portal, visitors can explore highly-detailed, three-dimensional replicas of the bridge of all starships called Enterprise — along with the USS Voyager — from every iteration and time period of the Star Trek franchise.
This includes the Enterprise-B from Star Trek: Generations, the Enterprise-C from “Yesterday’s Enterprise,” the Enterprise-F and Enterprise-G from Star Trek: Picard, and the Kelvin Timeline Enterprise.
The partnership also includes a number of video features exploring the powerful use of digital graphics in recreating key time periods from Star Trek’s past, like this fascinating (pardon the pun) exploration of a hypothetical moment where Ambassador Spock visits Captain Kirk’s grave on Veridian III as the Enterprise-D saucer is extracted from the planet’s surface.
This lengthy video explores the return of the Next Generation crew — and the Enterprise-D — in Star Trek: Picard, utilizing the virtual OTOY sets to depict the starship’s interior over many time periods.
From Deadline’s coverage of the new partnership:
The web portal will allow fans to virtually explore the many dozens of evolutionary iterations of the famous Starship Enterprise bridge, across every epoch of Star Trek‘s history, with each bridge made accessible in the timeline as a 1:1 scale, “in-universe,” 360 recreation. De Lancie, who has portrayed extra-dimensional being Q since 1987’s Star Trek: The Next Generation, narrates a supplementary documentary, offering a deep dive into the evolution and legacy of the bridge — from its inception in Pato Guzman’s 1964 sketches, through its portrayal across decades of films and TV series, to its latest incarnation on the Enterprise-G, as revealed in the final episode of Star Trek: Picard.
This combined documentary and exploratory online experience brings the legacy and history of the starship Enterprise to life through meticulous recreations of the filming sets used for production as well as the aforementioned “in-universe” life size, functional immersive virtual interiors. The recreations were produced for the Gene Roddenberry Estate, and overseen by veteran Star Trek artists including Denise and Michael Okuda, who authored The Star Trek Encyclopedia, as well as Daren Dochterman, Doug Drexler and Dave Blass.
The Archive will also, for a limited time, allow fans to try an experimental technology preview through the web portal, enabling them to walk onto the bridges of the Enterprise (boasting working turbolifts and consoles) and explore them in every detail, all from an instantaneous livestream.
Making It So: A Memoir will arrive this Autumn from Gallery Books, as both 432-page hardcover tome and an audiobook read by Patrick Stewart himself.
From his acclaimed stage triumphs to his legendary onscreen work in the Star Trek and X-Men franchises, Sir Patrick Stewart has captivated audiences around the world and across multiple generations with his indelible command of stage and screen.
Now, he presents his long-awaited memoir, Making It So, a revealing portrait of an artist whose astonishing life—from his humble beginnings in Yorkshire, England, to the heights of Hollywood and worldwide acclaim—proves a story as exuberant, definitive, and enduring as the author himself.
“Every moment of working on it has been thrilling for me because it was a brand-new experience,” Stewart says. “It took me a while to realize how immersed I was. This will sound rather pretentious, but it would take some time for me to shift my head from my childhood, my teenage years, my first experiences as an actor, back to today and now and, what did I really want for supper?”
He also revealed that a book tour is in early development, where he expects to travel around promoting Making It So; more details are expected to become available closer to the book’s October release date.
Arriving next month, the “interactive narrative game” will be available to play on PlayStation 5, PlayStation 4, Xbox Series X/S, and Xbox One gaming consoles, and through the Epic Games Store for PCs.
(Dramatic Labs)
As the Dramatic Labs puts it:
Star Trek: Resurgence is a bold interactive narrative game set shortly after Star Trek: The Next Generation’s timeline. A worker uprising threatens the tenuous peace between two alien civilizations, and Starfleet is forced to intervene.
Players experience the conflict and larger mystery from two key perspectives. The U.S.S. RESOLUTE’s First Officer Jara Rydek is part of the diplomatic envoy led by Ambassador Spock that’s tasked with finding a resolution – and uncovering the ultimate source of this tense situation. Engineering Crewperson Carter Diaz highlights how the mission plays out from the lower decks, caught up in the events in his own unique way.
Throughout the gripping story, players can interact with the Star Trek universe like never before, with moments of authentic action and critical decisions that shape the broader narrative in subtle and unexpected ways.
Here’s a big collection of screenshots from the upcoming game, released this week:
The short answer is because we are a relatively small development team, making a pretty big game, and that has been keeping us very busy!
As you might know, we had initially hoped to have the game out in “Spring 2022,” but it is now “Spring 2023.” What happened? Honestly, our initial target was just too aggressive. We were very excited to get Star Trek: Resurgence to everyone as fast as we could, but this is our first game as Dramatic Labs, and our first game built with the Unreal Engine. And along the way it became clear the game wouldn’t be what we wanted if we kept that release window.
We considered trying to hit the holiday season for 2022, but we decided that, if we were going to change the date, we should do it to make the best game we could. Not to meet some arbitrary marketing timeline. That’s why we reset for a Spring 2023 release and now we’re excited to finally announce a date: May 23, 2023!
Lastly, you might want to know why we’ve been so quiet along the way. We’ve primarily been putting our efforts into getting across the finish line. Trailers, dev diaries, and social media take time away from actually working on the game. We also didn’t want to announce a new release date without having a good idea of when we would deliver the game to you. We did preview the game for press at various points along the way and got some great media coverage and we had a blast playing through a scene with the audience at our Comic Con panel in San Diego.
That said, we realize we could have done a better job of keeping you all in the loop. But now that Star Trek: Resurgence is this close to being in your hands, you’ll be hearing much more from us. We can’t wait for you to join the crew of the U.S.S. Resolute and play the game!
And if you missed it last year, here is some gameplay footage from the game, which by May will be finished for all gamers to play.
Keep checking back for more news about Star Trek: Resurgence as its May 23 release date approaches — and let us know in the comments below if you plan to play this new Star Trek game yourself!
Hallmark’s annual trip to the final frontier doesn’t disappoint this year, as the company returns to themed Star Trek releases after spending three years in the Mirror Universe.
Starting with Star Trek: The Next Generation, Hallmark is revisiting the landmark crossover episode which brought Montgomery Scott (James Doohan) through time to visit the Enterprise-D. Taken from his shared time in the ship’s holodeck , this “Relics” ornament has Scotty offering Picard a glass of green Aldebaran Whiskey.
The “Relics” ornament — which also features audio from this scene in the Next Generation episode — will be available in October 2023 for $34.99.
Data and his pet cat Spot take the second Next Gen ornament spot this year; this TNG release will also include integrated audio: press a button and hear the android’s “Ode to Spot” poem, as recited aboard the Enterprise-D in “Schisms.”
The Data and Spot ornament will be available in July 2023 for $22.99.
A two-pack of Badgey ornaments from Star Trek: Lower Decks represents the animated series this fall, as these representations of the hologram’s good and evil personalities join the Hallmark Star Trek lineup.
The Badgey two-pack will be available this October at a price of $19.99.
The “giant green space hand” (as it was called in Star Trek Beyond) of the Greek god Apollo — which captured the Enterprisein the beginning of that 1967 episode — comes to life this year with an ornament that allows holiday collectors to insert a standard Christmas tree light into its ‘wrist.’
Available in July, the “Who Mourns for Adonais?” ornament will cost $29.99.
Hallmark is also releasing two miniature-sized ornaments this year — a small USS Enterprise and a tiny Captain Kirk — which will fit perfectly on the branches of one of those small table-top Christmas trees.
In addition to the light show, the display also includes audio clips from five Original Series episodes (including “Balance of Terror”), plus the series theme song — you can also play ambient Enterprise bridge sound effects from the display base.
Warping in this October, the Enterprise tabletop display will retail at $129.99.
Keep checking back to TrekCore for the latest in Star Trek merchandise news!
At long, long last, the celebrated episodic score to Star Trek: Strange New Worlds is on its way!
It’s been nine months since the Strange New Worlds Season 1 finale,and fans have been clamoring for composer Nami Melumad’s score ever since — and as part the lead-up to the show’s return in June, Lakeshore Records is releasing the complete Season 1 episodic score (and Jeff Russo’s main title theme) on Friday, April 28.
The full announcement from Lakeshore Records, which includes commentary from primary series composer Nami Melumad as well as main title theme composer Jeff Russo.
Lakeshore Records is set to release Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 1—Original Series Soundtrack digitally on April 28 with original music by award-winning composer Nami Melumad –she recently won the David Raskin Award for Emerging Talent at this year’s SCL Awards for this score. Emmy Award-winning and Grammy-nominated composer Jeff Russo, known for his definitive scores to several Star Trek series in including Star Trek: Picard and Star Trek: Discovery, created the main title and end credits themes.
Notes Melumad: “Creating the ‘Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ score has been one of the biggest honors of my life. A captain is nothing without her crew and I’d like to thank the artists, musicians, and friends that made this Season 1 score album possible: Matt Decker, Jeff Kryka, Tracie Turnbull, Natalia Goldstein, Dennis Sands, Brian Vibberts, Vincent Cirlli, Jamie Olivera, Tom Hardisty, Rich Wheeler, Whitney Martin, Gina Zimmeti, Nick Cazares, Lisa Janacu, Booker White and our wonderful orchestra musicians. Also, many thanks to Alex Kurtzman and the Secret Hideout, Paramount+ and Lakeshore records! Happy listening!“
Adds Russo: “Being asked to write the theme for the show that was going to directly precede the original series was such an honor. Tying into the sound of the iconic theme while creating something unique for our new adventure was such a fantastic artistic experience.”
We’ve got an exclusive preview of the soundtrack to share with you today, bringing you “Home is Where the Helm Is” from the closing moments of Strange New Worlds’ premiere episode.
Here’s the full track listing for the digital release:
1. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (Main Title Theme) – Jeff Russo (1:51)
2. Everyone Wants a Piece of the Pike (3:50)
3. Put a T’Pring On It (2:56)
4. Eyes on the Enterprise (4:42)
5. Home is Where the Helm Is (4:16)
6. Space Cadet (1:01)
7. Comet Away With Me (2:36)
8. Romancing the Comet (3:23)
9. M’hanit and Greet (7:00)
10. Since I First Saw the Stars (3:54)
11. A Holding Pattern (4:44)
12. Gorn With the Wind (5:29)
13. The Pike Maneuver (2:03)
14. Gorn But Not Forgotten (3:24)
15. Are You a Vulcan or a Vulcan’t? (2:59)
16. Spock Too Soon (2:03)
17. Chris Crossed (3:43)
18. Looking For Ascension in All the Wrong Places (3:04)
19. Ascent-ial Questions (2:01)
20. T’Pring It On (1:42)
21. Pirates in the Sky (2:54)
22. Will You Be My Vulcantine? (2:45)
23. Won’t You Be My Pirate? (3:38)
24. You’re My Mercury Stone (2:04)
25. Don’t Leave in Uhurry (2:54)
26. When the Hemmer Falls (4:09)
27. No One’s Ever Neutral About Spaghetti (2:53)
28. Throw Plasma from the Train (5:28)
29. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (End Credits) – Jeff Russo (0:57)
Lakeshore Records’ Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 1 soundtrack can be purchased for streaming through Apple Music, Spotify, and Deezer through this link.
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds Season 2 is in post-production now and will debut June 15 on Paramount+ on Paramount+ in the U.S, the U.K., Australia, Latin America, Brazil, France, Italy, Germany, Switzerland and Austria.