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Star Wars (soundtrack)

Star Wars (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is the soundtrack album to the 1977 film Star Wars, composed and conducted by John Williams and performed by the London Symphony Orchestra. Williams' score for Star Wars was recorded over eight sessions at Anvil Studios in Denham, England on March 5, 8–12, 15 and 16, 1977. The score was orchestrated by Williams, Herbert W. Spencer, Alexander Courage, Angela Morley, Arthur Morton and Albert Woodbury. Spencer orchestrated the scores for The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi. The score was recorded by engineer Eric Tomlinson and edited by Kenneth Wannberg, and the scoring sessions were produced by Star Wars director George Lucas and supervised by Lionel Newman, head of 20th Century Fox's music department.

This article is about the score for the 1977 film. For the Wilco album, see Star Wars (Wilco album).

Star Wars (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)

June 1977

March 5–16, 1977

Anvil Studios, Denham

74:58

The soundtrack album was released by 20th Century Records as a double-LP record in the United States in June 1977. The album's main title peaked at No. 10 on the Billboard Hot 100, with a disco version of the film's theme by Meco becoming a number one hit single in the United States in October 1977. The soundtrack album itself peaked at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 in September 1977, and became the best-selling symphonic album of all time;[1] it was certified Gold and Platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America, and won numerous accolades including an Academy Award, a Golden Globe Award, a BAFTA Award, and Grammy Awards in the categories of Best Original Score Written for a Motion Picture or a Television Special and Best Instrumental Composition (for the "Main Title"). It was also nominated for the Grammy Award for Album of the Year. In 2004, it was preserved by the Library of Congress into the National Recording Registry, calling it "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant". In 2005, the American Film Institute named the original Star Wars soundtrack as the most memorable score of all time for an American film.[2]


The Star Wars soundtrack saw subsequent reissues since its initial release. In 2016, the album was re-released by Sony Classical Records on vinyl, CD, and digital formats alongside Williams' other Star Wars soundtracks. The vinyl release is pressed on 180g vinyl and features the original 20th Century Records logo. Unlike all of Sony Classical's previous releases, however, the vinyl version is a remastered version of the original 1977 release, not the Special Edition. Walt Disney Records remastered and reissued the soundtrack on vinyl LP on December 1, 2017, and on CD and digital formats on May 4, 2018.[3][4]

Star Wars Trilogy – The Original Soundtrack Anthology: "Star Wars"

1993

Nick Redman

2004

1977

1:45:09

  • John Williams
  • Nick Redman
  • Michael Matessino

1983: The Star Wars Trilogy (Return of the Jedi / The Empire Strikes Back / Star Wars)

[9]

1990/2001: John Williams Conducts The Star Wars Trilogy[11]

[10]

Tracks of the soundtrack appear on various Best of Compilations and rerecordings by John Williams.

(1977)[1]

Academy Award for Best Original Score

(1977)[1]

Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score

(1978)

BAFTA Award for Best Film Music

(1978)

Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media

(1978) – for Main Title

Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Composition

(1978)

Grammy Award for Best Pop Instrumental Performance

(1977) – tied with Close Encounters of the Third Kind

Saturn Award for Best Music

AFI's (2005)[2]

Greatest American movie score of all time

R1P2 Star Wars (March 5, 1977)

R1P3 Imperial Attack Pt. II (The War*) (March 8, 1977)

R1P4-R2P1 Imperial Attack (The Escape Hatch*) (March 12, 1977)

R2P2 The Desert (R1P5-R2P1 Desert Song*) (March 12, 1977)

R2P2 The Little People (Not Recorded)

R2P3N The Little People (March 15, 1977)

R2P3 More Little People (Not Recorded)

R2P5R More Little People (March 15, 1977)

R2P4 R-2 (Not Recorded)

R2P4R R-2 (March 11, 1977)

R3P1 The Princess Appears (Not Recorded)

R3P1R The Princess Appears (March 5, 1977)

R3P2 Lost R2 (Not Recorded)

R3P2R Lost R2 (March 8, 1977)

R3P2N (March 15, 1977)

R3P3 The Sand Speeder (Not Recorded)

R3P3R The Land of the Sand People (March 11, 1977)

R3P4-R4P1 The Sandman Attacks (Not Recorded)

R3P4-R4P1R Land of Sand People Pt. II (March 16, 1977)

R4P2 Obi-Wan Kenobi (March 9, 1977)

R4P2A The Force (March 9, 1977)

R4P3 The Princess Reappears (March 11, 1977)

R4P4 A Home Destroyed (March 11, 1977)

R4P4R The Return Home (March 9, 1977)

R5P1 A Hive of Villainy (Not Recorded)

R5P1R A Hive of Villainy (March 15, 1977)

R5P4-R6P1 Monkey Band (R5P3-3A Jolly Jazzers*) (March 10, 1977)

R5P6 The Inner City (Not Recorded)

R5P6R The Inner City (March 12, 1977)

R6P1 Blasting Away (March 16, 1977)

R6P5N The Destruction of Alderon (March 12, 1977)

R7P1N Is It a Bird? (R6P3*) (March 5, 1977)

R7P1 The Hatch Opens (Not Recorded)

R7P2N The Hatch Opens (March 11, 1977)

R7P2 The Mouse Robot (March 9, 1977)

R8P2N More Rescue (March 12, 1977)

R8P2 The Rescue (Not Recorded)

R8P2R The Rescue (New Intro) (March 8, 1977)

R8P3 The Water Snake (Not Recorded)

R8P3R The Water Snake (March 11, 1977)

R8P4 The Walls Converge (March 11, 1977)

R9P1 Ben Creeps Around (March 8, 1977)

R9P2 The Swashbucklers (March 5, 1977)

R9P3-R10P1 Ben's Death (March 5, 1977)

R10P2 The Fighters Attack (Here They Come*) (March 11, 1977)

R10P3-R11P1 Standing By (Stand By*) (March 12, 1977)

R11P2 Approaching the Target (Not Recorded)

R11P2R The Last Battle Pt. II (March 11, 1977)

R12P1 (March 15, 1977)

R12P2 The Throne Room and End Title (End Titles*) (March 12, 1977)

R12P2X (March 16, 1977)

The Princess Theme (March 8, 1977)

The Story of Star Wars

Music of Star Wars