In common with many TVT soundtrack releases, the original Lost in Space album is half songs and half Broughton's score (slightly weighted in favour of the songs), but it does feature many of the best cues. About the only song track of interest to soundtrack fans is likely to be Apollo Four Forty's remix of John Williams' original TV theme (the better remembered one from the third series) which, unsurprisingly, features plenty of window rattling percussion, but isn't too awful for all that. Of course the good stuff is from track nine with the brief Main Title before the more sinister Reprogram the Robot. However, with The Launch Broughton's terrific main theme is presented in its more heraldic and adventurous guise as the Robinson family take to space, perhaps the most robustly enjoyable cue of the entire score; it's just the kind of soaring and majestic cue that ought to accompany every launch.
The shorter album covers some of the best action sequences, particularly the galloping Robot and Spiders Attacks, but here the expanded album comes into its own, linking everything together. The entire Spiders sequence is edited into a longer suite and includes the creepy build up to the attack. Some of the fairly brief cues that cover the Robinson's exploration of the planet into which they crash aren't especially exciting, but Broughton is too good a composer to let the pace flag for long and the extra tracks during the finale are well worth discovering. From the melodrama of Attempted Escape and The Time Portal, to the breathless excitement of Through the Planet (which isn't the same as Thru the Planet on the short version) and the concluding Back to Hyperspace. The album closes with a brief pair of epilogue cues; Fanfare for Will is a great work out for brass, while Lost in Space is actually an expanded version of Thru the Planet from the original disc. Unfortunately, the edits made originally actually seem quite judicious and produce a tight and exciting finale, but it's nice to have two version of the same cue.
It's really no surprise that the expanded edition (cover featured at the top) is quite hard to come by now, but the original album is still widely available. Despite my complaints that many score albums run on a bit, pretty well all of the extended release is worth hearing and the clear choice, but the TVT release does contain most of the best tracks and is certainly still worth obtaining should the Intrada album prove elusive. It also has the advantage of some of the cues being separated (such as Reprogram the Robot and The Launch and combined into a single cue on the extended edition, to no great benefit) and Thru the Planet which is just that bit more exciting (and it truly has underwear soiling energy and momentum) than Lost in Space on the extended release. Whichever you choose/find, it's a great score and the ever reliable Sinfonia of London perform with distinction, captured in splendid sonics.
The regular edition can be purchased here.
Rating ~
Expanded Edition (Intrada) ~ 65:32
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Original Release (TVT) ~ 67:59
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