This collection of essays analyzes the style and context of music and sound design in Science Fiction television. It provides a wide range of in-depth analyses of seminal live-action series such as Doctor Who, The Twilight Zone, and Lost, as well as animated series, such as The Jetsons. With thirteen essays from prominent contributors in the field of music and screen media, this anthology will appeal to students of Music and Media, as well as fans of science fiction television.
1. Music in the Twilight Zone James Wierzbicki 2. Time Warp: The Jetsons Sound Out The Future Rebecca Coyle and Alex Mesker 3. Lost in Space Ron Rodman 4. Hearing the Boldly Goings: Tracking the Title Themes of the Star Trek Television Franchise Neil Lerner 5. Whimsical Complexity: Music and Sound Design in The Clangers Philip Hayward 6. Schizophrenic Chords and Warm Shivers in the Stomach: The 'new astronautic sound' of Raumpatrouille Guido Heldt 7. Television's Musical Imagination: Space: 1999 K.J. Donnelly 8. The Sound of Civilization: Music in Terry Nation's Survivors Derek Johnston 9. Rematerialization: Musical engagements with the British TV series Doctor Who Jon Fitzgerald and Philip Hayward 10. Babylon 5: Science Fiction, Melodrama and Musical Style Louis Niebur 11. The Work of Music in the Age of Steel: Themes, leitmotifs and stock music in the new Doctor Who David Butler 12. Lost in Music: Heidegger, the Glissando and Otherness Isabella van Elferen 13. Sanctuary: How monsters and alients get 'real' Lisa Schmidt
K.J. Donnelly is reader and convenor of the Film Studies MA at the University of Southampton. He has written a number of books on screen music and has been a fan of Gerry Anderson's productions since childhood.
Philip Hayward is a researcher at Southern Cross University who has a substantial body of publications on science fiction cinema soundtracks, including the edited anthology Off The Planet (2004).