The front cover of the Star Wars double LP |
One
of the greatest favours Steven Spielberg ever did for his friend George Lucas
was to introduce him to the man who had written the music for Spielberg's first
two films – John Williams. The young George Lucas knew little about music,
apart from the kind of rock and roll 45s that had been so adeptly woven into
the soundtrack of American Graffiti. But he wisely put his trust in a fine composer.
Williams already had about two impressive careers behind him even before he worked for Spielberg at the age of 42.
John Williams conducting Star Wars in 1977 |
Williams
had won an Oscar as arranger and conductor for Fiddler on the Roof (1971) and scored some of the biggest
commercial hits of the 1970s – including The
Poseidon Adventure (1971), The
Towering Inferno (1974) Earthquake
(1974) – before notching up his first Oscar as composer for Jaws.
The back cover of the Star Wars album |
With
Star Wars, Williams was to outdo
himself, creating his second Oscar-winning score and one of the greatest music
soundtracks ever to grace a movie – a big, romantic score in the tradition of
Max Steiner and Eric Wolfgang Korngold, delivering a higher count of memorable
themes than any director would have a right to expect.
"I think this film is
wildly romantic and fanciful," Williams said in the sleeve notes to the Star Wars album. "George and I felt that the music should
be full of high adventure and the soaring spirits of the characters in the
film."
According to Williams, Lucas
had voiced the idea of integrating classical music into the score. "2001
and several other films have utilised this technique very well," said the
composer. "But what I think this
technique doesn't do is it doesn't take a piece of melodic material, develop it
and relate it to a character all the way through the film."
Williams
exploited the Wagnerian tradition of leitmotif, with characters, situations and
ideas all getting their own themes. Aside from a march to represent Luke's
heroism, the gorgeous Princess Leia's
Theme and a lush melody for Obi-Wan and the Force, there is a fanfare for
the Rebels, a brash fragment of music for Darth Vader and the Imperials, not to
mention distinctive music for the Jawas and the Tusken Raiders, an Elgar-style
interlude for the Throne Room scene, and memorably strange pieces for Mos
Eisley's Cantina Band.
I once interviewed Richard
Studt, one of the London Symphony Orchestra’s four concert masters during those
sessions, and he recalled that the orchestra had been unsure whether the music
would work. “We thought it was far too
swashbuckling. The style of it was harking back to
Korngold’s film scores of the 30s and 40s – very well orchestrated, very busy,
bellicose, glorious and overblown music, with a great big love theme in
Princess Leia’s Theme,” he said.
(I just came across an interesting interview from 2011 on the website Popdose with
Mike Matessino who worked on the 1997 reissue
of the Star Wars soundtracks and
wrote the extensive sleeve notes. He clearly thinks the score was intended more
jovially than people realise, remarking that: " ... with Star Wars Williams
absolutely intended – with tongue more in cheek than most people perceive – to
recapture the Golden Age approach of Max Steiner and Erich Korngold. I don’t
think that when he wrote it he thought that audiences would embrace the work
seriously, since you had to go back probably to Ben-Hur to find a score like Star Wars, meaning that it was all orchestral, featured a
lot of themes, and was heard throughout most of the film. Star Wars was
originally intended – by George Lucas as well – as an homage to a movie genre
from the past, but it ended up becoming its own new thing.")
The pictures from the Star Wars album's gatefold sleeve. I spent quite a while gazing at these in shop window displays. |
20th
Century Records took the unusual step of putting out a double LP of the Star
Wars soundtrack. The album, with George Lucas credited as producer, reached
number two in the US
charts in 1977 and contained a generous 74 of the 88 minutes of music recorded
for the film. As with many of Williams'
subsequent albums, the tracks were sequenced the way the composer thought would
make for the most entertaining album, rather than always following the progress
of the film. (The track Inner City, for example, encompasses the
Millennium Falcon’s approach to the
Death Star, Obi-Wan Kenobi’s meeting with Artoo-Detoo and finally Luke and
Ben’s progress towards Docking Bay 94 on Mos Eisley.)
Geoff Love does Star Wars: One of several alternative Star Wars albums |
There
was one odd difference between the US
and UK
versions of John Williams' album: The US
release was one of those double-albums where sides one and four were on the
first record, and sides two and three on the other. (That arrangement perplexed me for years,
until I discovered that the idea was that you could stack both records on a
turntable that had an autochanger, thereby playing sides one and two in
succession before flipping both LPs over and playing sides three and
four.)
The 20th Century/Pye and RSO releases – identical bar the labels and the disappearing liner inserts |
The
album eventually sold four million copies – setting a record for an
orchestral soundtrack. It was re-released on the RSO label in 1982 (identical
to the 1977 version but without the poster and liner notes) and was issued on
CD by Polydor in 1986.
The intervening years have brought extended
releases, including just about every note from those March 1977 recording
sessions, and I'll review them in due course.
But it’s still worth returning to the original album and admiring the
way Williams sequenced his music over four of the greatest sides of
movie-related vinyl ever produced.
6 comments:
Enjoyed this immensely as always Darren!
Like you, I gazed lovingly and starry-eyed at the inner gatefold sleeve as a kid. I even drew scenes onto the paper sleeves! I really should put those on SWa9 one of these days! I recall one day poring over them thinking: "When I have a son, he'll be just as excited about Star Wars as I am." [it came true]
My version, I think just had the black and white Vader-in-Stars poster, not the wonderful John Berkey Last Battle scene that they got in the US. Nor the liner notes you mentioned.
So George took credit as 'producer' on this too. Shameless. Why am I not surprised..?
This was certainly my introduction to orchestral music at only 9 years old and it was very beneficial to my future musical interests. I see that my own PYE/Irish Pressing reads for track 2:
'Mouse Robot and Blasting Off.'
Keep up the great work. And I'll keep promoting it :)
John
How much is a 3 dics soundtrack
Another wonderful article, this site is a gem! As is the album!
Another wonderful article, this site is a gem! As is the album!
johnnyivan - The original 1977 release in London had the Berkley poster - not the Darth Vader one. The Berkley poster seemed pretty common in second hand copies in the 80s and I think I even picked one up from a batch of posters only at a comic mart or movie fair.
Post a Comment