- Episode 10: Despite Yourself
- Episode 11: The Wolf Inside
- Episode 12: Vaulting Ambition
- Episode 13: What’s Past Is Prologue
- Episode 14: The War Without, The War Within
- Episode 15: Will You Take My Hand?
CBA have also released (via IGN) four new character posters to promote the return of the series in January. All feature characters from behind, with Burnham, Lorca, and Saru spotlighted with their heads turned to the viewer, and most oddly Voq, who isn't bothering to look at us (which is either telling us something, or just, weird).
Over on StarTrek.com they recently ran an interview with the show's composer, Jeff Russo, who talked about how he got the gig, and his process:
Here's the thing. I started out by writing a bunch of themes and figuring out what those melodic motifs might be; most importantly, the melodic motif of the main title, which I do nod to throughout the series. I do also nod to the themes I wrote for Michael Burnham, Georgiou and Lorca, the bridge crew and the Klingons. Then there's multiple Klingon themes and there's Voq, L'Rell and all these little motifs that I tried to figure out what that was going to be a little earlier than when I'm in full-on scoring every episode mode. So, having those helps me when I look at picture, and I'm sitting down with my keyboard. It helps me think, "OK, so maybe I bring in this melodic motif. How do I do that?” I do that for every episode. That goes pretty quickly. From spot to recording session is usually about 10 days. We spot it, me and usually Alex Kurtzman. We sit down, look at the show and discuss where it is he's feeling music should or shouldn't be, what he wants to feel here or there. We've gotten to a point now where our communication is pretty easy, where he's like, "OK, so here we do that thing we do." It's gotten easier along the whole series, but we start by looking at it, talking about it, and then I take it back to my studio. I write the cues, and as I'm writing them, I'm doing orchestral mock-ups. Then it goes to an orchestrator and then that gets orchestrated. The next thing you know, we're standing in front of an orchestra recording the score.That interview was of course timed to promote the imminent release of the first Discovery soundtrack, which arrives digitally today. Nerdist released this preview of the tracks it will include (embedded below), or better yet, you can hear a sample from every single track on the Amazon listing right now.
We also try to do some editing of thematic material. So, when something comes up that has come up before, we usually go back to that melodic motif, and that gets used. Then, it gets recorded in a day. We usually do an entire day's worth, from 10 to five, of recording. Then, we mix over the next few days and they put it in the show, and it airs usually a week later. It's pretty ridiculously fast-paced.
Finally, Entertainment Weekly have release ten new behind the scenes photos showing the cast enjoying themselves:
For an overview of the series, behind the scenes coverage, and tie-in products, visit my Star Trek: Discovery guide page. Or for details of each episode, including links to previews and reviews, see my episode list.
1 comment:
Hm... some of those titles are uncomfortably similar to older episode titles. I think it's probably safe to assume the similarities are intentional, but superficial -- IE the actual content of the DSC episodes will have nothing to do with their respective namesakes.
The Wolf Inside = Wolf in the Fold (TOS)
What's Past is Prologue = Past Prologue (DS9)
The War Without, The War Within = The Enemy Within
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