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AllMusic | [1] |
The Day the Earth Stood Still soundtrack (1951) was composed in July, and recorded in August 1951.[2] It was Bernard Herrmann's first soundtrack after he moved from New York to Hollywood. Herrmann chose unusual instrumentation for the film including violin, cello, and bass (all three electric), two theremin electronic instruments (played by Samuel Hoffman and Paul Shure), two Hammond organs, a large studio electric organ, three vibraphones, two glockenspiels, two pianos, two harps, three trumpets, three trombones, four tubas, and extensive percussion including cymbals and tam-tam.[3] Unusual overdubbing and tape-reversal techniques were used, as well. 20th Century Fox later reused the Herrmann title theme in the original pilot episode for Irwin Allen's 1965 TV series Lost in Space. Danny Elfman noted The Day the Earth Stood Still's score inspired his interest in film composing, and made him a fan of Herrmann.[4]
Track listingTitle |
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1. | "Twentieth Century Fox Fanfare" | 0:12 |
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2. | "Prelude / Outer Space/Radar" | 3:45 |
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3. | "Danger" | 0:24 |
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4. | "Klaatu" | 2:15 |
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5. | "Gort / The Visor / The Telescope" | 2:23 |
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6. | "Escape" | 0:55 |
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7. | "Solar Diamonds" (not used in film) | 1:04 |
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8. | "Arlington" | 1:08 |
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9. | "Lincoln Memorial" | 1:27 |
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10. | "Nocturne / The Flashlight / The Robot / Space Control" | 5:58 |
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11. | "The Elevator / Magnetic Pull / The Study / The Conference / The Jewelry Store" | 4:32 |
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12. | "Panic" | 0:42 |
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13. | "The Glowing / Alone / Gort's Rage / Nikto / The Captive / Terror" | 5:11 |
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14. | "The Prison" | 1:42 |
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15. | "Rebirth" | 1:38 |
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16. | "Departure" | 0:52 |
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17. | "Farewell" | 0:32 |
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18. | "Finale" | 0:30 |
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