An interesting bit of trivia about this scene's music: John Williams composed the original track ("Aboard the Executor")'s opening with the understanding that the shots of Death Squadron were going to be relatively short and few. The amazing crew at ILM ended up creating a much longer sequence, which made the opening of the track too short to fit. So the opening of "The Imperial March", William's orchestral version of the new theme's suite, was used in the scene until 0:45 where the original track picked up. Williams has created several orchestral suites of various themes that he's composed for Star Wars films for the express purpose of being played in concerts. I believe that this is the only one which was actually used, in any form, in the corresponding film. Despite very little of it being used in the movie, the orchestral suite is the version recognized the most. His original version of the suite can actually be heard in the end credits of The Empire Strikes Back while the orchestral version never fully played in a Star Wars film until the end credits of The Rise of Skywalker. Throughout Star Wars, Williams has composed an abundance of music that, for various reasons, never was heard in the actual film(s). Much of this music has been used in other Star Wars media including the opening of "Aboard the Executor", or been repurposed for a later film, such as the "Jedi Temple March", originally composed for the Entrance of the Monsters in AOTC, but eventually used for Vader and the 501st approaching the Jedi Temple.
When everybody is class makes fun of you because you like star wars but then you snap your finger and star destroyers appear and land some deathtroopers: 0:01
An interesting bit of trivia about this scene's music: John Williams composed the original track ("Aboard the Executor")'s opening with the understanding that the shots of Death Squadron were going to be relatively short and few. The amazing crew at ILM ended up creating a much longer sequence, which made the opening of the track too short to fit. So the opening of "The Imperial March", William's orchestral version of the new theme's suite, was used in the scene until 0:45 where the original track picked up.
Williams has created several orchestral suites of various themes that he's composed for Star Wars films for the express purpose of being played in concerts. I believe that this is the only one which was actually used, in any form, in the corresponding film. Despite very little of it being used in the movie, the orchestral suite is the version recognized the most. His original version of the suite can actually be heard in the end credits of The Empire Strikes Back while the orchestral version never fully played in a Star Wars film until the end credits of The Rise of Skywalker.
Throughout Star Wars, Williams has composed an abundance of music that, for various reasons, never was heard in the actual film(s). Much of this music has been used in other Star Wars media including the opening of "Aboard the Executor", or been repurposed for a later film, such as the "Jedi Temple March", originally composed for the Entrance of the Monsters in AOTC, but eventually used for Vader and the 501st approaching the Jedi Temple.
I....I...I can't handle this.... there's so much glory in this.
When everybody is class makes fun of you because you like star wars but then you snap your finger and star destroyers appear and land some deathtroopers: 0:01
One of the most powerful Navies in Sci Fi history, and definitely the most iconic.
Star Wars isn’t SciFi 😂
@@dylanmorgan2374 I know it's really Science Fantasy, but tsk tsk tsk, details details...
@@dylanmorgan2374 Still not possible to happen in real life
@@gabrielaugustoyoshidaarauj4009 Not yet...
@@dylanmorgan2374Yes, it is. It's also a Space Opera
We really need a music only version of these movies.
imperial fleet arrived at dragon Land
The fleet of space doritos
The Rise of Skywalker? When?
In the end credits.
EAW vibes!
So true
My friend: So why'd you turn to the dark side?
Me: Because I liked their music selection better