The Empire Strikes Back (soundtrack) explained

Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Type:soundtrack
Artist:John Williams
Cover:The Empire Strikes Back.jpg
Caption:Cover of the original vinyl edition
Released:May 16, 1980
Recorded:December 1979–January 1980
Studio:Anvil Studios, Denham
Genre:Classical
Length:74:34
Label:RSO
Producer:John Williams, Nick Redman (2004)
Prev Title:1941
Prev Year:1979
Next Title:Raiders of the Lost Ark
Next Year:1981

The score from The Empire Strikes Back composed by John Williams. Between Star Wars and The Empire Strikes Back, Williams had also worked with the London Symphony Orchestra for the scores to the films The Fury, Superman and Dracula. The score earned another Academy Award nomination for Williams. Again, the score was orchestrated by Herbert W. Spencer and Angela Morley, recorded by engineer Eric Tomlinson and edited by Kenneth Wannberg with supervision by Lionel Newman. John Williams himself took over duties as record producer from Star Wars creator George Lucas.

The soundtrack was first released in the United States as a 75-minute double LP five days before the film's premiere but the first Compact Disc release ran only half the length of the 2-LP set. Re-recordings of the score even included music that was not on the original CD soundtrack. A remastered version of the soundtrack was released by Walt Disney Records on May 4, 2018.

Background

The musical score of The Empire Strikes Back was composed and conducted by John Williams, and performed by the London Symphony Orchestra at a cost of about $250,000. Williams began planning in November 1979, estimating Empire required 107 minutes of score. For two weeks across 18 three-hour sessions just after Christmas, Williams recorded the score at Anvil Studios and EMI Studios, London. Up to 104 players were involved at any one time, performing with instruments including oboes, piccolos, pianos, and harps.

History

In 1980, the disco label RSO Records released the film's original soundtrack in a double-album, with two long-playing (LP) records. Combined, the two records featured seventy-five minutes of film music. This double LP package also included a booklet presentation with pictures of the main characters and action sequences from the film. Featured at the booklet's end was an interview with John Williams about the music and the new themes, such as "The Imperial March (Darth Vader's Theme)" and "Yoda's Theme". It also included a brief explanation of each track. The front cover artwork featured Darth Vader's mask against the backdrop of outer space; and the back cover featured the famous Gone with the Wind version of the poster art. As a side note, this package marked the final time a double LP soundtrack set was ever issued (Episode VI, the final film to have an LP soundtrack released, had only a single disc, also released by RSO Records). A double-cassette edition was also released.

In the U.K., a single vinyl album and cassette were released in 1980 by RSO Records. This comprised only ten tracks, which were also re-arranged differently. For instance, the first track on the U.K. release is "The Imperial March" instead of the "Star Wars Main Theme". This track listing would be used for the album's first international CD release in 1985. Also unlike the U.S. version, this release did not have a booklet but the information (and some photographs) were replicated on the inner sleeve.

In 1985, the first Compact Disc (CD) release of the soundtrack was issued by Polydor Records, which had by that time absorbed RSO Records and its entire music catalog. As with the album's original U.K. vinyl and cassette release, this CD release reduced the music content from the seventy-five minutes featured in the 1980 U.S. double-album down to forty-two minutes.

In 1993, 20th Century Fox Film Scores released a special four-CD box set: Star Wars Trilogy: The Original Soundtrack Anthology. This anthology included the soundtracks to all three of the original Star Wars films in separate discs. The disc dedicated to The Empire Strikes Back restored almost all of the original seventy-five minutes from the 1980 LP version and included new music cues never released before for a total of nineteen tracks. On the fourth bonus disc, five additional tracks from Empire were included in a compilation of additional cues from the other two films. This CD release also marked the first time that the famous "20th Century Fox Fanfare" composed by Alfred Newman in 1954 was added to the track listing, preceding the "Star Wars Main Theme".

In 1997, RCA Victor released a definitive two-disc set coinciding with the Special Edition releases of the original trilogy's films. This original limited-edition set featured a thirty-two page black booklet that was encased inside a protective outer slipcase. The covers of the booklet and the slipcase had the Star Wars Trilogy Special Edition poster art. This booklet was very detailed, providing extensive notes on each music cue and pictures of the main characters and action sequences from the film. The two discs were placed in sleeves that were on the booklet's inside front and inside back covers. Each disc had a glittery laser-etched holographic logo of the Empire. The musical content featured the complete film score for the first time. It had all of the previously released tracks (restoring the Mynock Cave music which was left off the 1993 release), included extended versions of five of those tracks with previously unreleased material, and six brand new tracks of never before released music for a total of one hundred twenty-four minutes. All the tracks were digitally remastered for superior clarity of sound. They were also re-arranged and re-titled from the previous releases to follow the film's story in chronological order. RCA Victor re-packaged the Special Edition set later in 1997, offering it in slimline jewel case packaging as an unlimited edition, but without the original "black booklet" version's stunning presentation and packaging.

In 2004, Sony Classical acquired the rights to the classic trilogy scores since it already had the rights to release the second trilogy soundtracks (The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones). In 2004, Sony Classical re-pressed the 1997 RCA Victor release of the Special Edition Star Wars trilogy, including The Empire Strikes Back. The set was released in a less-than-spectacular package with the new art work mirroring the film's first DVD release. Despite the Sony digital remastering, which minimally improved the sound heard only on high-end stereos, this 2004 release is essentially the 1997 RCA Victor release.

In 2016, Sony Classical released a remastered version of the original 1980 release as a two-disc LP, copying all aspects of the original RSO release, down to the labeling.

On May 4, 2018, Walt Disney Records released a newly-remastered edition of the original 1980 album program on CD, digital download, and streaming services. This remaster was newly assembled from the highest-quality tapes available, rather than sourced from the existing 1980 album masters. This release marks the first release on CD of the complete 1980 soundtrack album.

Release history

!Title!U.S. release date!Label!Format
The Empire Strikes Back–Original Soundtrack May 16, 1980RSODouble-LP
1986PolydorCD
Star Wars Trilogy: The Original Soundtrack Anthology1993Arista
Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)1997RCA VictorDouble CD
2004Sony Classical
The Music of Star Wars: 30th Anniversary Collector's Edition[1] November 6, 2007CD
Star Wars: The Ultimate Soundtrack Collection[2] January 8, 2016CD, LP, digital
Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)[3] May 4, 2018Walt DisneyRemastered CD, digital

Track listing

First U.S. release on LP

Total Time: 74:34

Charts

Chart (1980)Position
US Billboard 200[4] 4
Australia (Kent Music Report)[5] 58

Original U.K. release and first international release on CD

  1. "The Imperial March (Darth Vader's Theme)" – 3:00
  2. "Yoda's Theme" – 3:27
  3. "The Asteroid Field" – 4:10
  4. "Han Solo and the Princess" – 3:26
  5. "Finale" – 6:25
  6. "Star Wars (Main Theme)" – 5:48
  7. "The Training of a Jedi Knight" – 3:05
  8. "Yoda and the Force" – 4:02
  9. "The Duel" – 4:03
  10. "The Battle in the Snow" – 3:48

Total Time: 41:23

Star Wars Trilogy: The Original Soundtrack Anthology

Star Wars Trilogy – The Original Soundtrack Anthology: "The Empire Strikes Back"
Type:Film
Artist:John Williams and the London Symphony Orchestra
Released:1993
Recorded:1980
Genre:Classical
Label:Arista Records on behalf of Twentieth Century Fox Film Scores, a Bertelsmann Music Group Company
Producer:Nick Redman

In 1993, 20th Century Fox Film Scores released a four-CD box set containing music from the original Star Wars trilogy. Disc two in the set was devoted to The Empire Strikes Back, with further tracks on disc four.

Note: Parts of tracks six and seventeen on this particular set have their left & right channels reversed).

The first part of track twenty-one, "Ewok Celebration (Film Version)", is from Return of the Jedi.

Special edition re-issue

In preparation for the 20th anniversary Special Edition releases of the original trilogy's films, 20th Century Fox spent four months, from April to July 1996, transferring, cleaning and preparing the original soundtracks for special two-disc releases. The original release, by RCA Victor in 1997, consisted of limited-edition books with laser etched CDs inside the front and back covers with each book. In the case of The Empire Strikes Back, the discs are etched with the logo for the Empire. The discs were given an unlimited release in a two-disc jewel case, also by RCA Victor later that year. They were again re-released in 2004 by Sony Music, with new artwork paralleling the original trilogy's first DVD release.

Recording information

Cue List

See also

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. News: Sony Classical Celebrates the 30th Anniversary of Star Wars with an 8-CD Collectors Edition Featuring Three of Composer/Conductor John Williams' Original Soundtrack Recordings. November 7, 2007. March 21, 2018. Sony Music Masterworks. PR Newswire. 11 July 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180711055836/https://www.sony.com/en_us/SCA/company-news/press-releases/sony-music-masterworks/2007/sony-classical-celebrates-the-30th-anniversary-of-.html. dead.
  2. News: Sony Classical Reissues Star Wars Episodes I-VI In Newly Restored Audio Collections. January 8, 2016. March 21, 2018. Sony Classical. PR Newswire.
  3. News: Disney Music Group Set To Release First 6 Remastered Star Wars Original Motion Picture Soundtracks On May 4. March 21, 2018. March 21, 2018. Walt Disney Records. PR Newswire. Burbank, California.
  4. Web site: Billboard 200 July 12, 1980. Google. 12 July 1980. 31 October 2021.
  5. Book: Kent, David. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. illustrated. Australian Chart Book. St Ives, N.S.W.. 1993. 0-646-11917-6. 283.