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Stargate SG-1 (Various) (1997)
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Average: 3.13 Stars
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Stargate SG-1 Music
Sheridan - April 20, 2006, at 10:14 a.m.
1 comment  (4190 views)
Looking for the actual music score to SG-1
Steve Mathews - June 17, 2004, at 11:27 p.m.
1 comment  (3596 views)
Stargate SG-1 music
Megs - October 8, 2003, at 5:39 a.m.
1 comment  (4443 views)
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Episodics Composed and Co-Produced by:
Joel Goldsmith
Kevin Kiner
Richard Band
Dennis McCarthy

Original Themes by:
David Arnold

Co-Produced by:
Rick Chadock
Audio Samples   ▼
1997 Milan Album Tracks   ▼
2001 GNP Crescendo Album Tracks   ▼
2017 Intrada Album Tracks   ▼
2018 Dragon's Domain Album Tracks   ▼
1997 Milan Album Cover Art
2001 GNP Crescendo Album 2 Cover Art
2017 Intrada Album 3 Cover Art
2018 Dragon's Domain Album 4 Cover Art
Milan Entertainment
(November 25th, 1997)

GNP Crescendo Records
(August 28th, 2001)

Intrada Records
(June 26th, 2017)

Dragon's Domain Records
(March 26th, 2018)
The 1997 and 2001 albums are regular U.S. releases but have gone out of print and fetched collectors' prices. The 2017 Intrada album was limited to an unknown number of copies and retailed at soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $22. It went out of print in September of 2020. The 2018 Dragon's Domain album is limited to 1,000 copies but remained available at some of those same outlets for years at its original $18 price.
The insert of the 1997 album includes no extra information about the score or show. By contrast, the 2001, 2017, and 2018 albums contain details about each suite or score and the episodes for which they were written.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #267
Written 12/26/97, Revised 8/23/22
Buy it... on the 2001 GNP Crescendo and 2018 Dragon's Domain albums if you desire a satisfyingly comprehensive selection of original music from the first season of the show.

Avoid it... on either the 1997 Milan or 2017 Intrada albums, the former a repetitive rearrangement of material from David Arnold's original film score and the latter a sparsely rendered shell of what this concept's music once was.

McCarthy
McCarthy
Stargate SG-1: (Joel Goldsmith/Richard Band/Various) While visually entertaining, the 1994 science fiction film Stargate by Roland Emmerich and Dean Devlin had its fair share of negative attributes. The fact that several successful television spin-offs have resulted from that source material is, frankly, somewhat curious. The concept's core, an ancient Egyptian-inspired stargate that can be used as a portal to visit far away worlds, allowed for a wealth of scripting ease for the ten years of "Stargate SG-1" and the made-for-television movies and other series that spun off from it. One of the 1994 film's most redeeming elements, though, was its romantically epic score by newcomer David Arnold, who seized upon the opportunity to develop a mainstream career. It's easy to be skeptical whenever a television series follows a popular film, and especially when that film has a score that has risen to the status of "cult classic" in the years since its composer has become famous. Typical television scores, due to budgetary restrictions, usually offer a much poorer quality of performance when compared to the original, especially in the age prior to foolproof instrumental sampling. Such scores also, in many cases, fail to use the popular themes from the original film and often neglect to establish strong themes of their own. The producers of "Stargate SG-1" mandated that its composers not only make use of Arnold's themes for the film but do so liberally. Over the first two seasons of the show, this meant a significant amount of adaptation work by Joel Goldsmith and Richard Band, who frequently alternated duties. Over the years, Kevin Kiner and Dennis McCarthy joined as regular contributors. Several albums have been released with music from those first few years of the show, with a particular emphasis on the Goldsmith and Band compositions. When the first album of music from "Stargate SG-1" debuted in 1997, it surprised the film score's enthusiasts not familiar with the television show. The integration of the original music by Goldsmith, son of the legendary Jerry Goldsmith, and that of Arnold was overwhelming in the pilot episode featured on that product. A second album of episodic "Stargate SG-1" music was released four years after the first, providing a comprehensive survey of music from the show's musically successful first season. In 2017, Intrada Records offered music from four episodes scored by Band in the first two seasons, and, in 2018, Dragon's Domain Records provided Goldsmith's reconstruction of his partially rejected score for the pilot.

The original 1997 album for "Stargate SG-1" from Milan Entertainment was a curiosity because of MGM's decision after Goldsmith's score for "Children of the Gods" was recorded to replace much of it with excerpts from Arnold's music for the film. Of the 50 minutes of music on the show's original album, as many as twenty minutes of Arnold's original cues for the feature film were directly inserted into the episode's mix. Some fans of the concept loved the usage while others loathed it, but the decision was soundly denounced by both Goldsmith and Arnold, both of whom preferred not to take any credit for the end result. What editors had done at that early time in the show's history was take the most memorable 20 minutes or so from the film, if not more, and place them in and around Goldsmith's own orchestral material, much of which referenced Arnold's themes anyway. So prolific was the incorporation of Arnold's music into the show from that point forward that Goldsmith became a sort of negotiator and arranger of that transferred music, writing just enough material in between references to Arnold's work to make the whole soundtrack sound consistent. Sometimes, the transfers from Goldsmith's music to Arnold's are plainly evident for those with the tested ears of Arnold collectors, and some awkwardly abrupt moments throughout the album exist where Goldsmith's interludes could not smooth out the segue. Other transitions are very adept, and in the heated action sequences, the mass of everyday fans is certainly not going to notice many of the edits. Working in Goldsmith's favor is the fact that Arnold's orchestral recording and his own were comparably mixed so that the sound quality did not vastly change during these transitions. Notable tracks from the original Arnold score for Stargate that were mixed wholesale into "Children of the Gods" include "Stargate Overture," "Giza, 1928," "The Stargate Opens," "Entering the Stargate," and "The Other Side." The only exceedingly poor transition on the 1997 album comes at 2:15 into the "Apophis" cue. Goldsmith's music in between these Arnold cues is painfully loyal in theme and style to the film's score. The opening titles are a great compilation of the original Stargate themes; though exceedingly hasty, the composer managed to fit all three of Stargate's primary melodic ideas into a single one-minute cue. Most of the choral cues on the 1997 "Stargate SG-1" album belong to Arnold's recording, but Goldsmith adds some very stirring action sequences dominated by grandiose brass performances. His softer melodies are also effective at their task.

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