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Logan’s Run (1976 Feature Film) (1976)
Music by Jerry Goldsmith
Logan’s Run (1976 Feature Film) Logan’s Run (1976 Feature Film)
Click to enlarge images.
Price: $19.95
Limited #: 3000
View CD Page at SAE Store
Line: Silver Age
CD Release: January 2002
Catalog #: Vol. 5, No. 2
# of Discs: 1

Released by Special Arrangement with Turner Classic Movies Music.

(Looking for the TV series? We released that on CD too!)

In 1976 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer released a film which represented the state of the art in sci-fi thrills: Logan's Run. The next year, George Lucas's Star Wars changed the face of blockbuster movies, rendering Logan's Run the end of an era—a brightly lit cornucopia of disco-era settings with special effects secondary to the tried-and-tested sci-fi theme of love and humanity emerging from a computer-controlled society.

If there is a constant to sci-fi productions over the years, it is that Jerry Goldsmith has always turned out his best work for them. From Planet of the Apes to The Illustrated Man (FSMCD Vol. 4, No. 14) to Star Trek: The Motion Picture, Goldsmith has shown no end of imagination and skill for underscoring fantastic concepts—and more importantly, the human feelings underneath. Logan's Run is no exception: Goldsmith's score is based around a three-note, chromatic motive for the pleasure-packed but emotionally barren City (in which life ends at 30), with an evocative, flowing melody (for protagonists Logan and Jessica) its thematic opposite. His sound palette adheres to two separate configurations: strings, keyboards and abstract electronics for scenes inside the City; and full orchestra for the natural world outside.

Logan's Run was originally released on LP at the time of the film, a 42-minute program which has twice been available on CD. FSM's new 74-minute CD features the complete score resequenced into film order and remixed and remastered from the original multitrack elements. Hearing the entire score in order is a revelation: Goldsmith ingeniously works his three-note theme into virtually every cue, from solo celeste for the City's infants to course synthesizers for the City's central computer. He provides wild, imaginative setpieces, such as the Stravinskian cue for the Cubs (wild children) and the crystalline colors of the robot, Box. The score features a wide variety of Goldsmith gems: pounding, odd-metered action cues for Logan's former friend and later adversary, Francis; ambitious, all-electronic ensembles for the City's rituals; and impressionstic, symphonic writing with Coplandesque refrains for the ruins of Washington, D.C.

From the pulsating, avant garde electronics of Logan and Francis terminating a runner; to the austere string writing of Logan following Jessica in Arcade; to the swirling textures of the underwater passage late in the film, this is the ultimate Logan's Run soundtrack—even including cues not fully heard in the film. As always, the booklet features track-by-track descriptions and vivid illustrations. Run, runner!

Jerry Goldsmith Scores on FSM
About the Composer

What to say about Jerry Goldsmith (1929-2004), the reason so many of us are soundtrack collectors in the first place? The Los Angeles native knew early on he wanted to write music for the movies, had an extensive training in television in the 1950s (starting at CBS), and went on to an unparalleled career in the movies—capable of brilliance in every genre, and beloved by his peers and fans. FSM has released as many of his scores as we could get our hands on, from classic TV work like The Man From U.N.C.L.E. to famous features (Patton) and obscure gems like The Illustrated Man and 100 Rifles...heck, make that all of them. Jerry, we love you and miss you! IMDB

Comments (7):Log in or register to post your own comments
Goldsmith fans must not miss this title. Because it shows the incredible range of what the composer could do for a film, even when it is a medium-weight sci-fi spectacle.

What I enjoyed most about this cd is that it showed me parts of the the score that I thought were sound effects were ACTUALLY music by Goldsmith. It also illuminates music that is very different from what appeared on the LP.

It was a marvelously innovative score in many ways. That old MGM lp caught the "orchestral gloss" of the score, adding that little "Disco Logan" thingy tacked on for the 1976 masses, of which I was one. It left off so many serial compositions that reeked of pure early Goldsmith. This is another case of a score designed for something better than it represented.

What I enjoyed most about this cd is that it showed me parts of the the score that I thought were sound effects were ACTUALLY music by Goldsmith.

There's an effect like that in STAR TREK:TMP. In the movie you just think, "That's the sound V'Ger makes." You don't realize how much your music man is adding to the show.

A more obscure example is the wonderful sound that composer Joe Harnell came up with for the evil "Alex 7000" computer in an episode of THE BIONIC WOMAN.

I had this CD, but sold it off not too long ago. Mostly because I didn't care for the complete and chronological presentation. I much rather prefer the LP program. However, the sound quality and presentation otherwise were top-notch.

It's one of those very few times where I prefer the re-recording. The original sounds like a mike test in comparison.

The music is very 70's Goldsmith though broad big and very fitting of the films of those age and the atmosphere they had. Like the disaster films and Heston Sci-fi films. It just had that look to it and John Williams and Jerry Goldsmith took care of the sound department to make it the complete package that still impresses and influences me to this day.

D.S.

I don't care for the purely electronic cues such as Love Shop. But the bulk of this score is absolutely fantastic.

This has been a favorite ever since I tracked down the bay Cities CD reissue of the original album back in 1996, but admittedly the sound quality was a bit lacking. The FSM release has such improved sound that even if you only liked the original album tracks and wanted to play only those, then it's worth having the FSM edition.

Some of the purely electronic tracks can grate a bit, but I love the "Flameout/Fatal Games" combo and the cool tones of "The Assignment", plus you get all that great orchestral material, whether in only strings & percussion or with the added depth of big brass... so much to enjoy in this one.

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