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Audiobook Only Biography Doctor Who Prose Nonfiction

The John Nathan-Turner Memoirs, Volume 1

1 min read

Order this bookStory: Doctor Who producer John Nathan-Turner (1980-1990) relates the story of his tenure as the longest-serving producer of the series, virtually guiding it through the entirety of the 1980s until the BBC quietly cancelled it. In this volumes, he takes listeners,episode-by-episode, through his work on the show, starting as a studio floor assistant in the Patrick Troughton story The Space Pirates, through his work as production unit manager, through his rise to the position of producer at the end of Tom Baker’s reign. At the end of the second disc, “JN-T” discusses the 1985 cancellation/hiatus crisis and the beginning of production on The Trial Of A Time Lord.

Review: I’ve had both 2-CD volumes of the late John Nathan-Turner’s memoirs sitting on the shelf for some time, but they sat there until a recent listen to fellow Doctor Who producer Barry Letts’ memoirs spurred me to listen, contrast and compare. As with the two wildly different epochs of Doctor Who itself, trying to compare the two showrunners’ memoirs is an exercise involving apples and oranges. … Read more

Categories
Audiobook Only Biography Doctor Who Prose Nonfiction

Who And Me

1 min read

Order this bookStory: Doctor Who producer Barry Letts (1923-2009) narrates the story of his own beginnings in TV and theater, from second-string actor to writer to producer of one of the BBC’s most popular series during its first seasons in color starring Jon Pertwee. This first volume, featuring Letts reading his own memoirs, covers his early career, his first Doctor Who directing gig (Enemy Of The World starring Patrick Troughton) and his eventual ascension to the chief creative mind behind the series. Jon Pertwee’s first two seasons are covered in depth, including many remembrances of Pertwee himself and his co-stars, the introduction of Roger Delgado as the Master, and more.

Review: I had Who And Me sitting on the shelf for a long time before former Doctor Who producer Barry Letts died in October 2009, but I just hadn’t listened to it; Letts has already been interviewed, and has written up anecdotes about his time working on Doctor Who, and has done enough DVD commentaries…I wasn’t sure there was anything new to tell. Who And Me proved otherwise. … Read more

Categories
1965 1966 2009 D Doctor Who Film Soundtracks

Dr. Who & The Daleks / Daleks: Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.

5 min read

Order this CDLong before Murray Gold drenched the adventures of the TARDIS with lavish orchestral arrangements, and even long before John Debney et al. did the same with synthesized orchestral bombast, there were tales of the Doctor and the Daleks that were accompanied by unabashed, full-bodied symphonic splendor – only the Doctor wasn’t David Tennant then. The Doctor wasn’t even really the Doctor. Doctor Who was played by none other than Peter Cushing, and the Daleks graced the big screen in full color. The latest – and perhaps least-likely-to-ever-exist – Doctor Who soundtrack on the shelves brings together music from Cushing’s oft-derided pair of outings in the TARDIS, Doctor Who & The Daleks (1965) and Daleks: Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. (1966).

It’s an unlikely release because we’re talking about music from a pair of 40+ year old movies which are generally considered irrelevant by Doctor Who fan canon-keepers. There’s just no way to slot the Cushing movies into the TV series continuity, and between that and the movies’ off-the-scale campiness, the two films tends to be disregarded, perhaps a bit unfairly: even recent Doctor Who has displayed elements influenced by the movies (not the least of which is the beefed-up look for the Daleks themselves). Just as there’s no story continuity with the TV series, there’s also no musical continuity: the two films’ scores sound nothing like anything that had been heard on TV Doctor Who up to that point. Ron Grainer’s immortal TV theme music isn’t even hinted at. Malcolm Lockyer graces Doctor Who & The Daleks with a hypnotic, languid mysterioso theme with an incredibly long melody line. Most of that movie’s score, which takes up the majority of this album, is built around two or three motifs, with the result being that quite a few cues sound similar to one another.

Made a year apart, the two movies don’t even share musical continuity with each other, never mind wishing for any nods to the TV theme. Bill McGuffie takes over the composing duties for Daleks: Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. and gives that movie’s music a completely different sensibility – generally darker and more aggressive, and yet in some scenes the music plays up farcical comedy. There’s one other issue with the Invasion Earth tracks: they’re drenched in sound effects from the movie. Classic Who remixing and sound restoration maestro Mark Ayres has said that he’s been unable to locate anything but the “music + FX” tracks from the movie; this odd sound mix was kept by the studio so foreign actors could dub the dialogue in their own language, while preserving the rest of the sound mix. As such, the music is interrupted by explosions, spaceship take-offs, breaking glass, and so on – it’s very distracting…but perhaps better than having nothing from that movie.

Things are rounded off by a selection of “related” tracks: vintage singles tied in to each movie, including upbeat “single” versions of the respective theme music. There are also sound effects from each film as well, including a TARDIS interior ambience that’s so typically “’50s/’60s B-movie sci-fi lab sound FX” that it’s nearly laughable; interior FX from the Dalek city are marginally more interesting.

The remastering job undertaken by Ayres for all of the music presented here is impressive, resulting in crisp, clean recordings, marred only occasionally by brass swells which sound like they were “overdriven” (i.e. too loud for the limitations of the recording gear) at the original sessions. Aside from just a few instances of that, it sounds pristine – it could’ve been recorded yesterday. And maybe that’s the best reason to pick up this album: as the first full-blooded orchestral Doctor Who music, it’s not a million miles away, frankly, from the unashamedly bold sounds used by Murray Gold today. Elements of the music act as sonic time stamps: James Bond-esque bass guitar (and equally John Barry-esque brass blasts), for example – but then, doesn’t the “Westminster Bridge” on the first modern-era Doctor Who soundtrack 4 out of 4CD have both of those sonic signatures too? But this was the first time that Doctor Who had been taken into an orchestral context, as opposed to electronic abstraction or the low-key small ensemble sounds of Dudley Simpson and his contemporaries. Perhaps it’s another way in which the two Peter Cushing Doctor Who movies have proven to be influential (if not downright prophetic).

    Dr. Who & The Daleks – music by Malcolm Lockyer
  1. Fanfare and Opening Titles (1:48)
  2. TARDIS (0:48)
  3. The Petrified Jungle (1:58)
  4. The Petrified Creature and The City (0:52)
  5. Four Return to TARDIS (1:06)
  6. The Medicine Box and The Climb To The City (2:24)
  7. City Corridors (1:54)
  8. Captured By The Daleks (1:19)
  9. Susan Leaves The City (1:17)
  10. The Jungle At Night (2:13)
  11. Susan Returns To The City (1:12)
  12. Escape From The Cell (3:05)
  13. The Trap (3:44)
  14. The Swamp (2:37)
  15. The Mountain (2:34)
  16. The Cave (1:57)
  17. The Jump (0:54)
  18. The Thals Approach The City (1:40)
  19. The Countdown (2:39)
  20. The Countdown Stops (2:17)
  21. Finale and End Titles (1:12)

    Daleks: Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. – music by Bill McGuffie

  22. Smash and Grab (1:43)
  23. TARDIS Departs (0:12)
  24. Opening Titles (1:59)
  25. TARDIS (1:15)
  26. London, 2150 A.D. (0:50)
  27. Daleks and Robomen (5:01)
  28. Message To Grandfather and The Dalek Saucer Takes Off (1:26)
  29. The Mine Workings and The Cottage (1:25)
  30. Preparing the Bomb Capsule (1:22)
  31. Smash and Grab (Reprise) and End Titles (2:09)

    Bonus Tracks

  32. The Eccentric Doctor Who (2:25)
  33. Daleks and Thals (2:09)
  34. Fugue for Thought (2:17)
  35. Fanfare and Opening Titles (with effects) (1:48)
  36. TARDIS Effects (3:06)
  37. Dalek City Effects (6:31)

Released by: Silva Screen
Release date: 2009
Total running time: 75:08

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Doctor Who Media Prose Nonfiction

On The Outside, It Looked Like An Old-Fashioned Police Box

1 min read

Story: Presenter Mark Gatiss revisits a now-bygone era of Doctor Who appreciation – in the pre-video, pre-DVD days when Target’s compact, economically-worded novelizations of past television stories were all that younger fans had to rely on for knowledge of the show’s early years, and got a great many young people hooked on reading into the deal. Interviewed guests include Terrance Dicks (writer of the majority of Target’s Doctor Who books), frequent cover artist Chris Achilleos, Philip Hinchcliffe, Russell T. Davies and Anneke Wills.

Review: An affectionate overview of the origins of the Target Books Doctor Who novelizations of the 1970s and ’80s, On The Outside, It Looked Like An Old-Fashioned Police Box is a good “introductory essay” to the phenomenon that has now sadly faded into a specific period: to the modern generation of Doctor Who fandom, Target’s novelizations, seldom exceeding (or even approaching) 200 pages, are more likely to be something younger fans have read about than read first-hand. … Read more

Categories
2008 D Doctor Who Soundtracks Television

Doctor Who: Series 4 – music by Murray Gold

4 min read

It just goes to follow that, as I liked season 4 of the new Doctor Who better than season 3, I hold its soundtrack album in a similar regard. In terms of both story and soundtrack, the new Who’s fourth season is everything I wanted – but didn’t get – from the third season, and composer-in-residence Murray Gold delivered music to match the more effective storytelling.

Most of the season’s highlights are represented here, with a wealth of music from Voyage Of The Damned, Silence In The Library / Forest Of The Dead, Turn Left, The Stolen Earth / Journey’s End, and even slightly less obvious gems like Midnight. Voyage is represented by a ten-minute suite of highlights from that expanded, nearly-movie-length Christmas special, while there’s no shortage of music from the season’s two-parters – with one disappointing exception. The Sontaran Stratagem and The Poison Sky sported some suspenseful, brassy music to accompany the attempted invasion by the warlike spuds, only one piece of which – a rehash of the first soundtrack volume’s UNIT theme – shows up here. As fearsome as this two-parter made the Sontarans out to be, their music is notable by its absence here.

Fan favorites such as the Ood songs from Planet Of The Ood (reprised in the climactic moments of Journey’s End), the reverse-echoed rendition of the Doctor’s theme from Turn Left, and even the rapid-fire techno-action piece “Hanging On The Tablaphone” (which, aside from being a play on a Blondie song title, underscored frantic preparations in Torchwood during the finale) can be found here. My favorite surprise is the brutal music from Midnight, truly scary in its intensity (and apparently the composer’s homage to Jerry Goldsmith’s music from Planet Of The Apes). It’s an exhausting listen, even with its just-over-three-minute running time, and really makes you feel like you’ve been beaten up by the end of it. It’s interesting to note that some of the Midnight music – whose howling, descending trombones call to mind Michael Giacchino’s music from Lost – also shows up in the “Davros” track.

4 out of 4The real question now is: will Murray Gold stay? Several major behind-the-scenes figures are following departing showrunner Russell T. Davies out the door after what has almost certainly been an exhausting four years, and even David Tennant is going to bow out in the last of the 2009 special episodes (airing in place of a full season). Having collaborated on such projects as Second Coming, Torchwood and Queer As Folk with Davies, Murray Gold is definitely a Davies loyalist. It remains to be seen if he’ll follow his boss out the door, though – if I’d been asked a season ago, I would’ve said that it was perhaps time for a chance in the show’s creative and musical directions. But season four was so engrossing that I’d like to see Gold stick around long enough to score some Steven Moffat episodes with the 11th Doctor – and yet at the same time, I’ll admit that I could do with fewer appearances of the “orchestra plus a rock drummer” sound. Time, as always, will tell.

Order this CD

  1. Doctor Who Season Four Opening Credits (0:46)
  2. A Noble Girl About Town (2:14)
  3. Life Among the Distant Stars (2:30)
  4. Corridors And Fire Escapes (1:12)
  5. The Sybilline Sisterhood (1:53)
  6. Songs Of Captivity And Freedom (4:03)
  7. UNIT Rocks (1:11)
  8. The Doctor’s Daughter (1:38)
  9. The Source (3:21)
  10. The Unicorn And The Wasp (3:11)
  11. The Doctor’s Theme Season Four (2:47)
  12. Voyage Of The Damned Suite (10:21)
  13. The Girl With No Name (2:45)
  14. The Song Of Song (2:14)
  15. All In The Mind (1:18)
  16. Silence In The Library (2:57)
  17. The Greatest Story Never Told (6:17)
  18. Midnight (3:07)
  19. Turn Left (2:20)
  20. A Dazzling End (2:22)
  21. The Rueful Fate Of Donna Noble (2:44)
  22. Davros (2:07)
  23. The Dark And Endless Dalek Night (3:44)
  24. A Pressing Need To Save The World (4:55)
  25. Hanging On The Tablaphone (1:07)
  26. Song Of Freedom (2:51)
  27. Doctor Who Season Four Closing Credits (1:07)

Released by: Silva Screen
Release date: 2008
Total running time: 76:27

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2008 Doctor Who Soundtracks T Television

Torchwood – music by Ben Foster & Murray Gold

4 min read

Featuring the darker, moodier music of Doctor Who’s darker, moodier and decidedly more “adult” spinoff, the Torchwood soundtrack album is full of surprises, but some listeners may be dismayed to find that part of the surprise is what isn’t on it.

From the beginning, Torchwood’s musical score has been the work of two composers, Doctor Who maestro Murray Gold and Ben Foster, who has served as his orchestrator for several years. Foster steps into the limelight here, as the Torchwood CD concentrates almost entirely on his work. However, what this means is that some of the most recognizable pieces of music associated with Torchwood are missing from the album. Many of Gold’s themes, established in the series premiere, were reused throughout season one, and they’re absent from the album, including the drum beat lead-in to the opening teaser (over which John Barrowman explains the show’s premise), and an energetic, pulsating theme that often accompanied the appearance of the team’s trademark black Land Rover in season one. There’s one suite of music from the premiere episode, Everything Changes, and it’s hardly the most striking music from that episode.

What is on the CD is no slouch, mind you; there isn’t anything that’s so bad that I’m reaching for the skip track button. But sometimes it all seems to blend together – there are lengthy stretches of fairly similar music that reach across several tracks. There are some standout cues: “Sleeper”, “Look Right, Then Leave” and the one-two punch of “Jack Joins Torchwood” and “Captain Jack’s Theme” are action-oriented highlights. The best of the lower-key fare includes “Out Of Time”, “Owen’s Theme” and the eerie back-tracked piano work on “Pearl And The Ghost Maker.” Some pieces, like “Into The Hub”, straddle the fence between gentler orchestral music and the show’s trademark electro-inspired action music. A nicely expanded version of the Torchwood theme (which is almost painfully short on TV) rounds out the collection.

Compositionally, there are some incredibly clever things about the music from Torchwood – in the track “Owen Fights Death”, it’s possible to hear how the themes for the various characters are in a common key, making it possible to interweave the themes for Jack and Owen in this track, or the themes for Owen and Toshiko in “Goodbyes”. Toshiko’s theme also finds its way into the extended version of the show’s main theme.

3 out of 4I can understand that it vastly simplifies things to limit an album to one composer almost exclusively. But the problem here is that there are memorable major themes that have been left out in the cold. Casual fans may not notice…but then again, how many truly casual fans will bother to pick up the soundtrack? Perhaps some of Gold’s compositions should be piggybacked onto a future Doctor Who soundtrack release (particularly the rumored “best of the first four seasons’ music that didn’t make it onto any of the other CDs” album that, like the TARDIS, may or may not materialize), or offered as download-only pieces; without his work from the first season, as nice as Foster’s music is, the Torchwood CD just seems to be missing something.

Order this CD

  1. Everything Changes (1:24)
  2. The Chase (3:28)
  3. Ghosts (2:00)
  4. Sleepers, Awake! (1:14)
  5. Toshiko And Tommy (3:09)
  6. Into The Hub (2:08)
  7. The Mission (2:36)
  8. Gray’s Theme (2:45)
  9. Jack’s Love Theme (1:53)
  10. Another Day, Another Death (2:48)
  11. Look Right, Then Leave (2:50)
  12. Welcome To Planet Earth (1:54)
  13. The Plot (3:25)
  14. Out Of Time (1:31)
  15. The Death Of Dr. Owen Harper (2:13)
  16. King Of The Weevils (4:12)
  17. Owen Fights Death (1:52)
  18. The Woman On The Roof (2:26)
  19. Owen’s Theme (3:13)
  20. Pearl And The Ghostmaker (2:28)
  21. Flat Holm Island (2:12)
  22. A Boy Called Jonah (4:55)
  23. Toshiko Sato: Betrayal And Redemption (3:49)
  24. Gwen And Rhys (1:15)
  25. Jack Joins Torchwood (1:37)
  26. Captain Jack’s Theme (3:20)
  27. I Believe In Him (1:34)
  28. Memories Of Gray (2:32)
  29. Goodbyes (2:23)
  30. The Death Of Toshiko (2:23)
  31. The End Is Where We Start From (2:28)
  32. Torchwood Theme (1:36)

Released by: Silva Screen
Release date: 2008
Total running time: 79:33

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2007 D Doctor Who Soundtracks Television

Doctor Who: Series 3 – music by Murray Gold

4 min read

Keen observers may have noticed that I wasn’t as thrilled with the third season of the new Doctor Who as I was with the first two. When the tracklist for the eagerly-anticipated Doctor Who Series 3 CD was revealed, I’ll admit that I was a little underwhelmed there too: half of it seemed to come from the two-parter Human Nature / The Family Of Blood, and those just weren’t my favorite episodes. Apparently I’d forgotten that they sported some of the season’s most distinctive music by a long way.

And when I say “distinctive,” it brings me neatly around to something that did bug me about the third season’s music – it seemed to repeat, a lot. Whether intentionally or otherwise, the third season’s music took on the feeling of library music drawing from a limited number of pieces, much like the original Star Trek, which tracked many of its 80 episodes from only 20 or so original scores. But compress that effect into 13 episodes of a single season, and the effect becomes more apparent even to the casual viewer/listener. “All The Strange, Strange Creatures (The Trailer Music)” is a tune that cropped up incessantly throughout the season, almost like the Amok Time fight music from Star Trek. It’s a fine tune, but man, did we hear it over and over again. Let me point out that it sounds great on CD, and its habit of turning up every other episode may have been an editorial decision on the producers’ part, not the composer’s.

There are quite a few episodes that broke that mold, and they’re the ones that are featured most prominently here: The Shakespeare Code, Evolution Of The Daleks (the best excerpt from which is the borderline-risque Broadway-by-way-of-burlesque song “My Angel Put The Devil In Me”), Human Nature / The Family Of Blood, Blink, and the closing trilogy of episodes, Utopia / The Sound Of Drums / Last Of The Time Lords. The Runaway Bride is represented by three cues, one of which may well be the new Who’s best chase scene ever, and there’s a “preview” number from this year’s Christmas special, a seasonal (but original) tune called “The Stowaway”.

“The Master Vainglorious” is the cue that represented Professor Yana’s regeneration into the Master as well as the arrival of the Toclafane, while “YANA (Excerpt)” accompanied the launch of the rocket to Utopia and Yana’s hijacking of the TARDIS. These two tracks, along with “The Futurekind”, which is a much heavier take on the same basic melody as “All The Strange, Strange Creatures”, are great stuff, as is the wild “The Runaway Bride” cue, which was heard during Donna’s freeway-rescue-by-TARDIS in the episode of the same name.

What I had forgotten was how nice the music from Blink was – and that was an episode I actually liked and rewatched a lot. “Blink (Suite)” is unique and atmospheric, almost like a modern take on ’70s TV detective show music. Gridlock is represented by “Gridlocked Cassinis”, which has some unique sounds (even a little cheesy in places, but it works), and “Boe”, which heralded that character’s demise. It’s the same basic tune as “The Face Of Boe” from the first new series soundtrack, but takes on a more elegiac tone before turning into a gentle, pleasant variation on the same melody. The choral version of “Abide With Me” is also heard here, from the end of Gridlock, but it’s pretty enough to silence even that persistent voice that’s still wondering if we’re ever going to get the music from School Reunion on CD.

The Human Nature music is pleasant, reflecting on the shattering of simpler times by leaning on simple, sparse music played by a smaller ensemble than you’re used to from the show’s big action setpieces. In retrospect, and away from the context of the episode and my opinion thereof, it’s actually quite nice music, and it’s easy to see why it became the centerpiece of the whole album.

4 out of 4Doctor Who: Series 3 may well be an example of the Star Trek: The Motion Picture effect – i.e. the music was better than what it accompanied – and it’s a great listen.

  1. All The Strange Strange Creatures (The Trailer Music) (4:07)
  2. Martha’s Theme (3:42)
  3. Drowning Dry (1:54)
  4. Order this CDThe Carrionites Swarm (3:23)
  5. Gridlocked Cassinis (1:17)
  6. Boe (3:43)
  7. Evolution Of The Daleks (1:53)
  8. My Angel Put The Devil In Me (3:08)
  9. Mr. Smith and Joan (2:05)
  10. Only Martha Knows (2:31)
  11. Smith’s Choice (1:42)
  12. Just Scarecrows To War (1:30)
  13. Miss Joan Redfern (1:51)
  14. The Dream Of A Normal Death (1:55)
  15. The Doctor Forever (4:18)
  16. Blink (Suite) (2:55)
  17. The Runaway Bride (4:18)
  18. After The Chase (1:26)
  19. The Futurekind (1:44)
  20. YANA (Excerpt) (0:54)
  21. The Master Vainglorious (3:22)
  22. Martha’s Quest (3:19)
  23. This Is Gallifrey: Our Childhood, Our Home (3:17)
  24. Martha Triumphant (2:49)
  25. Donna’s Theme (3:14)
  26. The Stowaway (3:36)
  27. The Master Tape (1:55)
  28. Abide With Me (2:28)

Released by: Silva Screen
Release date: 2007
Total running time: 74:17

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2006 D Doctor Who Soundtracks Television

Doctor Who – music by Murray Gold

7 min read

After months of requests, demands, and probably everything short of threats of unpleasant acts from the fans, the soundtrack from the new Doctor Who series is here at last. Held up initially by a sweeping reorganization of the BBC’s in-house media divisions (a reorganization that has virtually shut down BBC Music, which had been releasing a series of CDs of music and effects from the series created by the now-defunct BBC Radiophonic Workshop, and has also seen BBC’s video division now farming out DVD publishing to a company called 2Entertain), the soundtrack was finally licensed to Silva Screen, a UK indie soundtrack label which released the first-ever complete recordings of Doctor Who scores in the early 90s.

The CD that has finally landed in the players of fans everywhere is a compilation of music from both of the new show’s first two seasons on the air, as well as both of its Christmas special episodes to date. It’s an impressive sampling that virtually fills the CD and only omits a few of the series’ 27 episodes (at the time of its release) from being represented on the track list. In case you haven’t been watching/listening, this isn’t the Doctor Who music of the 60s and 70s; the evocative but sparse chamber-style music of Dudley Simpson’s 70s reign and the occasional experiments with purely electronic music of the 60s have given way to something more akin to the 1996 TV movie. For the new series’ first season, composer Murray Gold (who also worked with producer Russell T. Davies on Casanova and The Second Coming, among other projects) did what John Debney, Louis Febre and John Sponsler did in 1996: fell back on synths and samples to produce an orchestral-sounding score. With the 2005 Christmas special, Gold brought things full-circle, bringing real, acoustically-recorded orchestral instruments into the mix.

In a few cases, the recordings here split the difference between the original synth-posing-as-orchestra versions and the later revised versions of the same cues with real instruments. The first track after the obligatory opening theme music is an example of this – “Westminster Bridge” is the music that opened the series in the very first episode; it was also rerecorded a year later for New Earth with twangy bass guitar that almost evokes the James Bond theme. On CD, “Westminster Bridge” opens Rose-style, and then gradually segues into the New Earth version. That’s a nifty way of satisfying sharp-eared listeners who might prefer one version or the other.

In many cases, the music from the new series of Doctor Who is reused in later episodes, almost as library music a la the original Star Trek. Many of the tracks here are frequent flyers in the show; for instance, I love the “Tooth And Claw” track, though aside from the killer percussive opening from that episode’s teaser (flying monks!), I remembered that music more for featuring in The Satan Pit. The Cybermen’s music reappears in Army Of Ghosts and Doomsday. And then, of course, there are “Rose’s Theme” and “Harriet Jones, Prime Minister,” which, while they’re both lovely pieces of music (and I enjoy listening to them on their own merits), became overused within the context of the series itself. Every time Billie Piper’s lower lip started quivering, you could bet there was a “Rose’s Theme” coming on just any second. If you felt that any given piece of music was heard too often on TV, chances are you’ll find that piece on this CD.

There are also plenty of stand-alone scores, and these are even referred to in the detailed track-by-track liner notes by Murray Gold himself. Episodes such as The Girl In The Fireplace and Bad Wolf have their own unique sound, and I’m glad they’re included. There’s a theme for UNIT (the military organization with whom the Doctor worked in the 1970s) which has, much like the organization itself, been retired from use on the show, and it almost sounds like something from the equally wonderful music from Torchwood, though I’m baffled as to why it cuts off with all the subtlety of someone hitting “stop” on the CD, without even a hint of fading out. (I’m also a bit disappointed that School Reunion isn’t represented here, since it had some smashing, end-of-the-world choral music, as well as some interesting cues built around “Song For Ten.”)

Ah yes, lest we forget, there are two actual songs with lyrics here, and they’re not “Toxic” or “Tainted Love.” Both sung by Neil Hannon, “Song For Ten” and “Love Don’t Roam” are original, specially-composed songs from, respectively, the 2005 and 2006 Christmas special episodes (the latter of which had yet to even air at the time of the CD’s release). Normally I’d be shaking my head at the thought of a “teaser track” filling space that could’ve been occupied by some School Reunion music, but “Love Don’t Roam” is so damned catchy that it gets a free pass.

“Song For Ten,” on the other hand, isn’t quite the same as we first heard it. For one thing, Tim Phillips sang on the original version heard toward the end of The Christmas Invasion, and the song wasn’t fully written out to a three-verse, three-chorus pop song structure (it only needed to fill about a minute or so of airtime). That version, fortunately, can be found here (thank you, BBC). The version on this CD loses the wonderfully atmospheric Phil Spector-style production that made it sound like something recorded in the early 70s, not the early 2000s, and has additional lyrics added that allude to the events of Doomsday. I don’t have a beef with the lyrics, though they do suddenly take the song’s original cheerful tone on a big downer, but the changes in the lead vocals and the production style are major issues. I’m growing to like this rendition, but it’s hard for me to regard it as anything but a cover version.

Overall, though, any quibbles I have are minor ones; even since about halfway through season one, I’ve been one of the many eagerly hoping for a soundtrack CD for the new Doctor Who, not just for the sake of being a completist, but because I genuinely like most of the music. Hopefully this CD is the first of many (come on, if Lost and Battlestar Galactica can get one soundtrack CD per season, new Who could do it at least every other season). That decision, ultimately, is up to the consumers. I feel obliged to point out theLogBook.com’s nearly-ten-year-old interview with original series composer Mark Ayres, who spearheaded Silva Screen’s schedule of Doctor Who and related music releases in the early 1990s, and who pointed out in no uncertain terms that piracy put a halt to that schedule, long before the BBC would have pulled the plug in its post-’96-TV-movie reclaiming of all things Doctor Who from outside licensees. While the signs here are encouraging – Doctor Who now tops the ratings in the UK, attracting a large new audience for the CD, and this soundtrack was the #1 iTunes album in the UK when it was released – the playing field has changed significantly too, with the advent of file sharing. My point? If you want more releases like this one (and personally, 4 out or 4I do, and I’d like a side order of Torchwood music if Mr. Gold and Ben Foster wouldn’t mind), buy this CD. I don’t get into sermonizing here because that’s not what you’re here to read, but in this case it’s important enough to mention.

And the CD is definitely worth the money, too. Every note.

    Order this CD
  1. Doctor Who Theme – TV version (0:41)
  2. Westminster Bridge (2:08)
  3. The Doctor’s Theme (1:18)
  4. Cassandra’s Waltz (3:08)
  5. Slitheen (1:22)
  6. Father’s Day (1:55)
  7. Rose In Peril (1:40)
  8. Boom Town Suite (3:02)
  9. I’m Coming To Get You (1:12)
  10. Hologram (2:15)
  11. Rose Defeats The Daleks (2:31)
  12. Clockwork TARDIS (1:18)
  13. Harriet Jones, Prime Minister (2:13)
  14. Rose’s Theme (2:14)
  15. Song For Ten (performed by Neil Hannon) (3:29)
  16. The Face of Boe (1:16)
  17. UNIT (1:44)
  18. Seeking The Doctor (0:44)
  19. Madame de Pompadour (3:44)
  20. Tooth and Claw (3:50)
  21. The Lone Dalek (4:59)
  22. New Adventures (2:19)
  23. Finding Jackie (0:54)
  24. Monster Bossa (1:37)
  25. The Daleks (3:01)
  26. The Cybermen (4:32)
  27. Doomsday (5:09)
  28. The Impossible Planet (3:11)
  29. Sycorax Encounter(1:13)
  30. Love Don’t Roam (performed by Neil Hannon) (3:57)
  31. Doctor Who Theme – Album Version (2:36)

Released by: Silva Screen
Release date: 2006
Total running time: 75:26

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1987 1998 D Doctor Who Soundtracks Television

Space Adventures: Music from Doctor Who, 1963-1971

4 min read

Compiled by Julian Knott, Space Adventures was a very limited-edition release (packaged first as a cassette and later, with bonus tracks, as a CD) compiling stock library music tracks from various sources that were used in the early years of Doctor Who. For a variety of reasons – budget being a frequent one – library music was often used in the show’s black & white days, simply because it was cheaper to pay for a needle drop on a stock music record than it was to have an original score composed. And while this may sound like a cheap way out today, several of these cues are now as indelibly associated with the Doctor’s journeys as any piece of specially composed incidental music that was ever created for the show.

Some time back, I reviewed a CD released to coincide with The Tenth Planet, containing several stock music cues that became a sonic signature for the sinister Cybermen. Space Adventures (which actually takes its title from the very same piece of music that accompanied the Cybermen’s early appearances) was the first public premiere of that work, and apparently it was no easy task. Music libraries, if they want to stay in business where paying clients are concerned, have to evolve with the times, creating newer, more modern pieces of music to offer and retiring older ones whose styles have fallen out of use. Such was the case with the various music libraries from which theese tracks were culled: with no demand for their more distinctly 60s-flavored tunes, the companies put the master tapes away in a vault with very little in the way of protection or preservation taking place. To make a long story short, it was up to an amateur soundtrack producer (with the benefit of expert advice) to restore the damaged tapes; if not for Knott, there would’ve been no Tenth Planet CD, because those library master tapes would have all but disintegrated.

The material archived here covers the first eight years of Doctor Who on TV, going all the way back to a piece of source music (that is, music that the characters in a scene can hear) used in part one of the first story, An Unearthly Child. The library tracks included feature both electronic and more traditional instrumentation, and while it’s nice stuff and lovingly restored, there’s a “diehards only” vibe about it all: it’s background music, with a capital “back” and capital “ground.” There are few real standout tracks, and it’s highly likely that a listener’s enjoyment of those tracks would be dependent on his familiarity with the episodes in which the music was used.

3 out of 4That aside, though, it’s a pity that the BBC has never relicensed this material, paid Knott for his hard work and re-released this collection as an official Doctor Who branded product, rather than as the fan-made CD that it is. The niche nature of the material does explain that a bit, but on a purely selfish level, copies of this CD are outrageously expensive on the collectors’ market, and listeners who don’t feel like having to choose between Space Adventures and paying their bills for a month would probably be forever grateful.

  1. Three Guitars Mood 2 (2:04)
  2. Machine Room (3:01)
  3. Illustrations No. 4 – Little Prelude (1:28)
  4. Asyndeton (0:29)
  5. Illustrations No. 4 – Hunted Man (2:58)
  6. Palpitations (0:36)
  7. Telergic (0:45)
  8. Lunar People – Andromeda (2:42)
  9. Music For Technology Part One (1:36)
  10. Electronic Music: Bathysphere (3:01)
  11. Spine Chillers (1:25)
  12. Space Adventure (2:17)
  13. Power Drill (1:15)
  14. Universe Sidereal (2:28)
  15. Illustrations No. 4 – Frightened Man (4:44)
  16. Electronic Music: Meteoroids (1:26)
  17. Space Time Music Part One (1:25)
  18. Space Time Music Part Two (1:21)
  19. Musique Concrete II (2:22)
  20. Impending Danger (2:13)
  21. World Of Plants (2:32)
  22. Desert Storm (1:54)
  23. Musique Concrete (0:57)
  24. Blast Off! (2:24)
  25. Astronautics Suite (2:40)
  26. Youngbeat (2:54)
  27. Spotlight Sequins No. 1 (1:58)
  28. Mutations (0:44)

Released by: Julian Knott
Release date: 1998 (original version released on cassette in 1987)
Total running time: 55:39

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1994 D Doctor Who Soundtracks Television

The Worlds Of Doctor Who

4 min read

The last hurrah for Silva Screen’s license to release Doctor Who music on CD in the 1990s, Worlds Of Doctor Who largely consists of music you’ve heard before if you’ve heard the same label’s other Doctor Who output, give or take a surprise or two.

The album opens and closes with two new versions of the famous theme music, the “Lightning Version” at the beginning and the lively “Spoons Version” at the end. As you might’ve guessed, the latter rendition of the theme is practically built around a guest performance on the spoons by Sylvester McCoy himself; it’s an interesting novelty, right up there with Jon Pertwee’s “I Am The Doctor”, but not much more than that. Both of these new arrangements wouldn’t have been out of place on the Variations On A Theme EP.

After the “Lightning Version”, things proceed very much along the lines of Silva’s original Earthshock compilation CD, providing classic clips arranged more or less chronologically, starting with the original BBC 45 version of the 1960s theme tune and then going straight into the Dudley Simpson single “The World Of Doctor Who” (built around music from the 1971 Pertwee adventure The Mind Of Evil). Selections from The Sea Devils and several Tom Baker adventures follow, the latter material coming from Heathcliff Blair’s Pyramids Of Mars re-recordings of classic Simpson scores from that era. At least some canny choices were made here to present the most listenable and accessible material.

After the 1980 Doctor Who theme arranged by Peter Howell, we segue into the more modern, synth-heavy sound of the Davison era; again, the material heard here has been heard before (not just on previous Silva Doctor Who soundtrack compilations, but on the 1980s BBC LP releases that those compilations drew from). To vary things up a bit, material that isn’t necessarily strictly from Doctor Who begins sneaking into the playlist during the 80s section, including Mark Ayres’ theme for the Myth Makers interview videos. This material, too, has been presented before by Silva, on Ayres’ Myths And Other Legends solo release.

Things get a bit more interesting with the suites of Ayres’ music from the last two seasons of the original series. The material has been heard before, but here it’s edited into three eight-minute-or-longer suites (one each for The Greatest Show In The Galaxy, Ghost Light and The Curse Of Fenric) where, again, the best material is brought to the fore. Those three episode scores have also been released in their entirety by Silva, but Ayres picked out his own best material (and it has to be said that I agree with him just about 100% on the selections he made for the suites) and put it all into a single track per episode. No new interstitial material tries to introduce cohesion to the suites; there are stops, starts and pauses between individual cues, but nothing too jarring.

Things are capped off with the first CD release of Ayres’ “Return To Devils’ End” suite, composed for a documentary video of the same name which reunited the cast and crew of the Pertwee-era classic story The Daemons at the original shooting locations. A true Dudley Simpson afficionado, Ayres creates an even better homage to “the Simpson sound” here than Heathcliff Blair managed with the original Simpson sheet music. The “Spoons Version” of the theme music wraps things up.

3 out of 4If you’re wondering about the music from Shakedown: Return Of The Sontarans and Downtime, two of the better fan-produced video drama spinoffs of the 90s, both of those projects’ scores were released in their entirety on Silva CDs as well, but not until after this CD’s release.

It’s a nice sampler CD of Doctor Who soundtrack cues, with a smidgeon of new (but hardly canonical) material, so there are worse ways for Silva Screen to have closed out their Who catalog.

Order this CD

  1. Doctor Who (Lightning Version) (5:17)
  2. TARDIS – Doctor Who (2:37)
  3. The World Of Doctor Who (2:39)
  4. The Sea Devils (3:19)
  5. The Ark In Space (0:50)
  6. Pyramids Of Mars (3:59)
  7. The Brain Of Morbius (3:11)
  8. Doctor Who Theme: 1980-85 (2:37)
  9. Meglos (1:32)
  10. The Five Doctors (5:24)
  11. The Caves Of Androzani (6:07)
  12. Myth Makers Theme (2:11)
  13. Doctor Who (Terror Version) (4:16)
  14. Terror In Totters Lane (1:55)
  15. The Greatest Show In The Galaxy (8:31)
  16. Ghost Light (8:05)
  17. The Curse Of Fenric (8:57)
  18. Return To Devils’ End (2:51)
  19. Doctor Who (Spoon Version) (4:27)

Released by: Silva Screen
Release date: 1994
Total running time: 78:45

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