I actually prefer this Season 1 recording of the TOS theme without the vocalist. I just don't understand why they had to re-record the theme for the remastered editions for the sake of the new digital sound mix. Also I recently downloaded a higher quality version of this arrangement as an mp3 file. What is great about this is that it omits Captain Kirk saying the prologue and the sound effects of the Enterprise at warp speed. Even though I like listening to Captain Kirk saying the prologue and the sound of the Enterprise at warp speed, it is still great to hear the actual arrangement as an isolated track.
"The Man Trap", "Charlie X", "Where No Man Has Gone Before", "Mudd's Women" and "The Naked Time" were the five episodes that had the electric violin opening and closing on the original NBC broadcast. All but the pilot episode lost them when Paramount transferred the show from film to videotape for syndication in the early 1980s, and the first nine episodes got the electric violin theme for the opening when the episodes were remastered again for DVD release.
Andrew Chapman Much like Cooper S, I wouldn't mind downloading the higher quality mp3 version w/o Kirk's speech myself. I found a downloadable copy of "The Best of Star Trek: Volume Two", which is supposed to have the theme from Season 1 in string arrangement, but the version that was in the download I found had the TOS theme song from the first Best of Star Trek album. So, , could you upload the mp3 file to a file-sharing website, so that Cooper & myself can download it? Thanks a bunch!
The original theme music included a soprano vocal part recorded by Loulie Jean Norman. After the first season, her vocal was replaced with an organ. Because Ms Norman was a member of the Screen Actors Guild, they would have had to pay her royalties to continue using the music beyond the first season. Since the show was on such a tight budget, her vocal part was cut from the theme.
😅😢 noice bro. I am happy that atleast star Trek fans are still alive today. I will show the star Trek from 1966 to the latest to my kids. Star trek 1966 will be their first show in their life they'll watch 😊😂😢😢😢😢 Star trek is love and leonard Nimoy is an emotion, and of course a brand. 😊
0:06 - “Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of Starship Enterprise. It’s five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before.”
There are three different versions of the theme. The first one had soprano Loulie Jean Norman singing over a muted trumpet, which was scored during shooting for the first unsold pilot, _The Cage_ (footage of which was later reused in the 2-part episode "The Menagerie"), in January 1965. An unrelated title theme was written by Alexander Courage for the second unsold pilot _Where No Man Has Gone Before,_ but was ultimately never used when it was re-edited and broadcast as the third episode (bearing the same title) on NBC. LJN was brought back to sing the lead melody on the S2 and S3 themes at the behest of series creator Gene Roddenberry. The second one, and the first to be scored for the first season, which had Courage playing an electric violin for the part replacing LJN's vocals, was scored during shooting for "The Man Trap" in August 1966. However, William Shatner's opening monologue was a bit different-sounding (same words) on this episode and "Charlie X" when originally aired on NBC; the more familiar recording of his monologue debuted on "The Naked Time." And then we have the most commonly heard version, orchestrated by Fred Steiner (previously famous for his musical work on _Perry Mason_ and _Rocky & Bullwinkle_ ), with a cello playing the lead melody. This one was scored during filming for "The Corbomite Maneuver," "Balance of Terror" and "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" and was first heard on episode 1x05, "The Enemy Within." It should also be known that Gene Roddenberry only wrote down the lyrics for the theme song so he could share profits off of it, to the chagrin of Alexander Courage, who consequently did not score music for S2 but would return for S3.
When I use to stay at my grandparents house when I was a little girl, I was being abused there. They use to watch this show and the theme haunted me every week. I hated it. But then a wonderful friend re-introduced me to the show when I was in college and I grew to love it. Now I watch it a lot. I'm glad I was able to overcome my past to watch this awesome series!
Space, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Her five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before.
i dont understand how people can hate this show i only saw a couple of minutes of "the trouble with tribbles" and then i now that it was gonna be one of the best shows i ever seen (and of course i falled in love with uhura like anybody else)
RIP, Alexander 'Sandy' Courage. Although you've written numerous themes and for numerous films, this theme- this 'Star Trek' theme- puts you into immortality.
The Original Shuttle Hangar Deck of the 1960s Enterprise is what made the shows Sets work as Much as teh Engine Room Set did. When you saw a Shuttle come Aboard or Depart, You believed this was something important and not something everyday and nothing major like on the Next Generation. A huge Shuttle Deck being Depressurized and the whole Ship's Crew taking note of the whole rear of the Ship opening up was impressive. This did not happen everyday...
William Shatner is 80 years old today ... how the hell can that be possible. Leonard Nimoy will be 80 years old this Saturday ... Here they are, as vibrant as ever ... and I'm the one who feels old! I have loved Kirk and Spock now for about 41 of my 48 years, and rooted for Shatner's and Nimoy's career successes along the way. (Except "Barbary Coast." I needed that to fail for Shatner -- it could have nixed any Trek revival.)
That's the 40th Anniversary DVD remastered version that they put on Netflix. They redid shots of the Enterprise throughout all 80 episodes to make them not look so dated.
Awesome!!! Even though this is well over 40 years old-it still rocks...Shatner's Kirk and Nimoy's Spock are legends and the t.v show is a classic...Nuff said.
when l first saw this l thought wow l want to watch telly every day,,l was never the same after it,,brilliant entertainment,,lost in space came very close,
@argebarse I was talking about the melody not Shatners monologue, the "wordless" rendition of the melody line was sung by soprano Loulie Jean Norman. For the second season onwards, her vocals were dropped from the theme.
The show that Pioneered All and got people to be more open minded at a difficult Era (interacial relationships etc..) Cheers once again to Director and cast
THIS INTRO answered all the TANTALUS . SUFFERINGS, about not beeing able to see mankind so far in outer space, had been answered through this highly professional done intro. Already from the first second on I got hucked and that is why. first episode aired of the show by the German ZDF had been The IMMUNITY SYNDROME ( Das Loch im Weltraum ) in 1971
after the first season it was the main character from i love lucy that told the producer to keep it on fore one more season and BAM a grond braking tv show
Space, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Her five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before. The best intro to any programme..ever.
Long Overdue credit should be given to Lucille Ball and her Management of Desilu. As one of the Board of Directors has been quoted, 'without Ms Ball there would not have been a Star Trek series'. After the first pilot flopped Ms Ball authorized a second pilot, very expensive to shoot and no promise it would ever sell. Star Trek was joined by another iconic Desilu series Mission Impossible to debut in the fall of 1966. Desilu had 2 of the most important series in TV history debut in 1966
Originally, Star Trek was pitched to CBS, who rejected it (and at first, NBC). They refused to purchase the show, as they already had a similar show in development, the 1965 Irwin Allen series Lost in Space.
I remember Frank Blair interviewing Shatner,and Nimoy on NBC during that very hot summer of 1966. They were telling us about how living on a ship in space would be like. Barbara Walters was working for NBC back then but it was considered inapproiate for a woman to interview men back then. Frank Blair did the NBC morning news and Weather. Jo Goregola did the sports. I bet I misspelled Joe's name. Jo was making an apoloby after cursing one morning I missed out on that by 2 minutes.
OMG this always reminds me of the Dexter's Lab spoof and Dexter and his friends are going to a "space trek" convention and his mother is singing the theme song in the intro hahahahaha XD
@Tapwater2226 Yeah DeForest Kelley (Bones) was only intended to be a minor character at first with no much air time but the producers wisely increased his role.
Space... The final fronteire... These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise... Its 5 Year Mission to explore strange new worlds... new life and new sivilization... and to go where no man has gone before!
If you listen carefully you can hear Mr Zulu whispering "Leonard,I'm ready" at 0:33. Apparently this was the famous Spock gloryhole scene that was wiped and the tape re-used for the theme.
Now I'm going to include "Star Trek" (The original series 1966 - 1969) on my list of TV programmes that influenced me in my childhood, because in the early 1980's, the series was repeated on TV in the U.K. and I would watch it with my GrandMother when she would look after us after School (Along with the 1960's "Avengers" series, she didn't seem to mind us watching it). The series was sometimes quite cerebral for 5 - 8 year olds and the special effects looked a bit ropey by the 1980's, but the acting was always great and of course we would watch it in colour (My Mum would tell us that even she watched in the 1960's, it was on black and white TV sets, which must've lost some of it's appeal, especially as it was such a colour show!). Many, many moments stick in the childhood memory. One of the early episodes had Spock being attacked by things that looked like flying pizzas, which would just fall from the ceiling! There was also women in dresses that were amazing (And still are!). The fact that we still watch these shows, even today, shows how great they were - they were made to last, even though the Actors in them, didn't feel that way, at the time.
That's what caused the rift between Roddenberry and composer Alexander Courage- Gene wrote the lyrics so he could "cut himself" in on the royalties from the theme (even though they were never used in the series). Courage objected, and never wrote another piece of music for him again.
Good point! I actually happen to like what I've seen of "Voyager," and I strongly believe that Janeway was the best of all the captains. However, I will never impose that view as fact, as there are those who prefer Picard, Sisko, Kirk, and even Archer (none of which I liked). As you said, it is generally a matter of opinion as to which one you like and prefer, and subsequently, Janeway is my choice.
Lieutenant James Kirk survived the attack on the Starship USS Farragut years before he took Command of the USS Enterprise. After the attack on the Farragut, Ship's Executive Officer Commander Ron Tracey was also bitter about the attack on the ship. He also wanted revenge for the death of Captain John T. Garrovick. Ron Tracey's anger started there. Exec Officer Tracey commended young James Kirk on doing his duty. Kirk would have been promoted to Lieutenant Commander on another Starship.
This is my favorite version of the original theme. I like that it doesn't have the psychadelic female voice / synth on the melody. I think it was used for most of season one, with the exception of the earliest episoded.
@hanghang71 Not Spock; Lieutenant Kevin Riley under the effects of the intoxicating water molecule in "The Naked Time," just before he shuts down the ship's engines in Engineering. The only episode in which I can remember Spock singing was the horrid third season's "Plato's Stepchildren" ("Bitter dregs ... bitter dregs!" which just about summed it all up).
0:09 my teacher said “no you can’t have this not right now” for my frozen fruit sauce in school but now I was think about Captain Kirk said These are the voyages of the starship enterprise when the ship and song popped up from 0:08 when my teacher said something
I have all three seasons on DVD, the remastered versions with the CGI effects replacing the originals. It's cool, and much more realistic visually, of course, but the original, man...the original....it can't be beat.
If i remember when i saw on cnn. The model of the enterprise was save. Then they having a press con and they going to displayed on some Hollywood museums right? I remember this when i still a kid when they air in the Philippines on GMA 7
You don't have TV intros like this anymore! Intros that would give the viewer a high rush of adrenaline!
That's exactly how I feel every time during the intro. I feel like 'daaaaaaaammnnnnnn soooooonnnn, STAR TREK!!!!"
It really does. I want to watch the old Star Trek, but I guess there is a charge. :(
"Of all the souls I have encountered in my travels, his was the most... human.." LLAP - RIP Mr. Spock!
And dr Mccoy and james doohan
I actually prefer this Season 1 recording of the TOS theme without the vocalist. I just don't understand why they had to re-record the theme for the remastered editions for the sake of the new digital sound mix.
Also I recently downloaded a higher quality version of this arrangement as an mp3 file. What is great about this is that it omits Captain Kirk saying the prologue and the sound effects of the Enterprise at warp speed. Even though I like listening to Captain Kirk saying the prologue and the sound of the Enterprise at warp speed, it is still great to hear the actual arrangement as an isolated track.
Andrew Chapman Do you have a link to this?
The original season 1 theme, on the first nine episodes, was performed not with cellos, but an electric violin.
"The Man Trap", "Charlie X", "Where No Man Has Gone Before", "Mudd's Women" and "The Naked Time" were the five episodes that had the electric violin opening and closing on the original NBC broadcast. All but the pilot episode lost them when Paramount transferred the show from film to videotape for syndication in the early 1980s, and the first nine episodes got the electric violin theme for the opening when the episodes were remastered again for DVD release.
Andrew Chapman
Much like Cooper S, I wouldn't mind downloading the higher quality mp3 version w/o Kirk's speech myself. I found a downloadable copy of "The Best of Star Trek: Volume Two", which is supposed to have the theme from Season 1 in string arrangement, but the version that was in the download I found had the TOS theme song from the first Best of Star Trek album.
So, , could you upload the mp3 file to a file-sharing website, so that Cooper & myself can download it? Thanks a bunch!
The original theme music included a soprano vocal part recorded by Loulie Jean Norman. After the first season, her vocal was replaced with an organ. Because Ms Norman was a member of the Screen Actors Guild, they would have had to pay her royalties to continue using the music beyond the first season. Since the show was on such a tight budget, her vocal part was cut from the theme.
REST IN PEACE LENARD NIMOY 3/26/1931-2/27/2015 (83) :(
Live Long and Prosper! It took me four years between Star Trek 2009 and Into Darkness to master the Vulcan salute
😅😢 noice bro. I am happy that atleast star Trek fans are still alive today. I will show the star Trek from 1966 to the latest to my kids. Star trek 1966 will be their first show in their life they'll watch 😊😂😢😢😢😢
Star trek is love and leonard Nimoy is an emotion, and of course a brand. 😊
0:06 - “Space: the final frontier. These are the voyages of Starship Enterprise. It’s five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before.”
Happy 50th Anniversary (9/8/1966-2016) Star Trek, one of the worlds greatest sagas of all time.
THE World's best Saga of all time.
NOTHING can beat star Trek and that too the 1966 one, the classic, the original.
Still going strong after 50 years, not bad for a show that was only expected to last a single season.Loved it back then in 66,and still do.
Pretty damned good for a TV show that the network "experts" did all they could to kill and still they failed.
We can thank Lucille Ball for Star Trek because had her production company not picked up the show, we woulda never heard of it
Happy 50th anniversary to Star Trek!
There are three different versions of the theme.
The first one had soprano Loulie Jean Norman singing over a muted trumpet, which was scored during shooting for the first unsold pilot, _The Cage_ (footage of which was later reused in the 2-part episode "The Menagerie"), in January 1965. An unrelated title theme was written by Alexander Courage for the second unsold pilot _Where No Man Has Gone Before,_ but was ultimately never used when it was re-edited and broadcast as the third episode (bearing the same title) on NBC. LJN was brought back to sing the lead melody on the S2 and S3 themes at the behest of series creator Gene Roddenberry.
The second one, and the first to be scored for the first season, which had Courage playing an electric violin for the part replacing LJN's vocals, was scored during shooting for "The Man Trap" in August 1966. However, William Shatner's opening monologue was a bit different-sounding (same words) on this episode and "Charlie X" when originally aired on NBC; the more familiar recording of his monologue debuted on "The Naked Time."
And then we have the most commonly heard version, orchestrated by Fred Steiner (previously famous for his musical work on _Perry Mason_ and _Rocky & Bullwinkle_ ), with a cello playing the lead melody. This one was scored during filming for "The Corbomite Maneuver," "Balance of Terror" and "What Are Little Girls Made Of?" and was first heard on episode 1x05, "The Enemy Within."
It should also be known that Gene Roddenberry only wrote down the lyrics for the theme song so he could share profits off of it, to the chagrin of Alexander Courage, who consequently did not score music for S2 but would return for S3.
+ClassicTVMan1981X
damn dude you're a fucking expert
I came here after watching the pilot :0
Happy 50th Anniversary Star Trek !!!!!
I'm dressing up as Captain Kirk tomorrow for Halloween
When I use to stay at my grandparents house when I was a little girl, I was being abused there. They use to watch this show and the theme haunted me every week. I hated it.
But then a wonderful friend re-introduced me to the show when I was in college and I grew to love it. Now I watch it a lot. I'm glad I was able to overcome my past to watch this awesome series!
I'm still in love with Lt. Uhura after all these years.
it's been 10 more years now. how about now?
Star Trek premiered today in 1966 on NBC.
I had to watch this on a black and white TV when first aired. I was 7 years old. Awesome show.
I watched this so much as a grade schooler and high schooler. I would look forward to this and Space 1999.
Is it just me who listens to this on loop? XD
Man,I love Star Trek! Live long and prosper!
God season 1 was amazing only thing missing was DeForest Kelley in the opening credits. This show still stands up to anything on t.v. today. Awesome
There isn't another TV show that sparked the imaginations of America's youth more than the Original Star Trek.
Live, long & prosper.
May this be the Star Trek, above all others, that continues to stand the test of time.
Space, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Her five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before.
I loved the electric violin version of theme!😊
i dont understand how people can hate this show i only saw a couple of minutes of "the trouble with tribbles" and then i now that it was gonna be one of the best shows i ever seen (and of course i falled in love with uhura like anybody else)
Theme composer Alexander Courage made the swishing sound of the Enterprise passing WITH HIS MOUTH!
My favorite Sci-Fi show!!!and the Best...greater than Star Wars!!!
kirk ,spock mccoy,, legendary star trek,, good music
Star Wars fans, never forget your beloved (and indeed great)sci-fi space opera was inspired by Star Trek!
My heroes Kirk and Spock .
My Hero, Gene Roddenberry
R.I.P mr.spock
RIP, Alexander 'Sandy' Courage. Although you've written numerous themes and for numerous films, this theme- this 'Star Trek' theme- puts you into immortality.
The Original Shuttle Hangar Deck of the 1960s Enterprise is what made the shows Sets work as Much as teh Engine Room Set did. When you saw a Shuttle come Aboard or Depart, You believed this was something important and not something everyday and nothing major like on the Next Generation. A huge Shuttle Deck being Depressurized and the whole Ship's Crew taking note of the whole rear of the Ship opening up was impressive. This did not happen everyday...
William Shatner is 80 years old today ... how the hell can that be possible.
Leonard Nimoy will be 80 years old this Saturday ...
Here they are, as vibrant as ever ... and I'm the one who feels old!
I have loved Kirk and Spock now for about 41 of my 48 years, and rooted for Shatner's and Nimoy's career successes along the way. (Except "Barbary Coast." I needed that to fail for Shatner -- it could have nixed any Trek revival.)
Great program. Tks
Just added this video 2 my PLAYLIST of American TV Programme Intro's :)
That's the 40th Anniversary DVD remastered version that they put on Netflix. They redid shots of the Enterprise throughout all 80 episodes to make them not look so dated.
Imagine telling somebody in 1966 that nine spin-off series and thirteen feature films would follow this.
Awesome!!! Even though this is well over 40 years old-it still rocks...Shatner's Kirk and Nimoy's Spock are legends and the t.v show is a classic...Nuff said.
when l first saw this l thought wow l want to watch telly every day,,l was never the same after it,,brilliant entertainment,,lost in space came very close,
Always loved the mad bongo drummer playing the rhythm line in this...
i just have to see this vidio to make my homework R.I.P
Hey mau! :D
+TeknoGeden
@argebarse I was talking about the melody not Shatners monologue, the "wordless" rendition of the melody line was sung by soprano Loulie Jean Norman. For the second season onwards, her vocals were dropped from the theme.
The show that Pioneered All and got people to be more open minded at a difficult Era (interacial relationships etc..)
Cheers once again to Director and cast
THIS INTRO answered all the TANTALUS . SUFFERINGS, about not beeing able to see mankind so far in outer space, had been answered through this highly professional done intro. Already from the first second on I got hucked and that is why. first episode aired of the show by the German ZDF had been The IMMUNITY SYNDROME ( Das Loch im Weltraum ) in 1971
Great science-fiction show since the 80s. Loved to watch.
after the first season it was the main character from i love lucy that told the producer to keep it on fore one more season and BAM a grond braking tv show
Space, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Her five-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man has gone before.
The best intro to any programme..ever.
Long Overdue credit should be given to Lucille Ball and her Management of Desilu.
As one of the Board of Directors has been quoted, 'without Ms Ball there would not have been a Star Trek series'. After the first pilot flopped Ms Ball authorized a second pilot, very expensive to shoot and no promise it would ever sell. Star Trek was joined by another iconic Desilu series Mission Impossible to debut in the fall of 1966.
Desilu had 2 of the most important series in TV history debut in 1966
Originally, Star Trek was pitched to CBS, who rejected it (and at first, NBC). They refused to purchase the show, as they already had a similar show in development, the 1965 Irwin Allen series Lost in Space.
Bones: Damn it roddenberry, this should have continued
best intro
FANTASTIC SHOW STAR TREK
I remember Frank Blair interviewing Shatner,and Nimoy on NBC during that very hot summer of 1966. They were telling us about how living on a ship in space would be like.
Barbara Walters was working for NBC back then but it was considered inapproiate for a woman to interview men back then.
Frank Blair did the NBC morning news and Weather. Jo Goregola did the sports.
I bet I misspelled Joe's name. Jo was making an apoloby after cursing one morning
I missed out on that by 2 minutes.
that music coded somewhere of my mind. childhood memories i'd used anything as spaceship :)
THE MOVIE WAS AMAZING.
Spock is my favorite Star Trek character
Listen carefully... this is the best music score ever made for a tv series. Even mission impossible can't beat this!
I love Star Trek! I am a trekkie.
OMG this always reminds me of the Dexter's Lab spoof and Dexter and his friends are going to a "space trek" convention and his mother is singing the theme song in the intro hahahahaha XD
@Tapwater2226 Yeah DeForest Kelley (Bones) was only intended to be a minor character at first with no much air time but the producers wisely increased his role.
What. A. Classic.
The new movie was great, and I loved it...HOWEVER, it did fail to catch the certain magic and warm feeling this one had.
FACSINATING!
0:25 Chills get sent down my spine and a bit of nostalgia. Weird thing is, I was born in 1995. Star Trek sure does know how to amaze every age.
0:25
Space... The final fronteire... These are the voyages of the Starship Enterprise... Its 5 Year Mission to explore strange new worlds... new life and new sivilization... and to go where no man has gone before!
+BingoBearFilms It's actually "...to boldly go where no man has gone before!.", not "And to go where no man has gone before!"
If you listen carefully you can hear Mr Zulu whispering "Leonard,I'm ready" at 0:33. Apparently this was the famous Spock gloryhole scene that was wiped and the tape re-used for the theme.
awesome. simply awesome memories
Still Trekking across the Universe with the SS ENTERPRISE.
Love the original effects. Only way to watch it like this now is to buy the box set. Still better than not at all
Now I'm going to include "Star Trek" (The original series 1966 - 1969) on my list of TV programmes that influenced me in my childhood, because in the early 1980's, the series was repeated on TV in the U.K. and I would watch it with my GrandMother when she would look after us after School (Along with the 1960's "Avengers" series, she didn't seem to mind us watching it).
The series was sometimes quite cerebral for 5 - 8 year olds and the special effects looked a bit ropey by the 1980's, but the acting was always great and of course we would watch it in colour (My Mum would tell us that even she watched in the 1960's, it was on black and white TV sets, which must've lost some of it's appeal, especially as it was such a colour show!).
Many, many moments stick in the childhood memory. One of the early episodes had Spock being attacked by things that looked like flying pizzas, which would just fall from the ceiling! There was also women in dresses that were amazing (And still are!).
The fact that we still watch these shows, even today, shows how great they were - they were made to last, even though the Actors in them, didn't feel that way, at the time.
the new one?.. its freakin amazing!
are you out of your vulcan mind?
BOSS! :D
The intro of intros
Classsssssssssic - so 60s ! Looove it
brilliant tv show for all my generation, 1960s,,god bless gene roddenberry for hie foresight,,
OMG THE NEW ONE WAS EPICALLY EPIC
HAHA
I LOVE THIS MOVIE
fav movie!
One of the top intros of all time!
17 people have never heard of true greatness
That's what caused the rift between Roddenberry and composer Alexander Courage- Gene wrote the lyrics so he could "cut himself" in on the royalties from the theme (even though they were never used in the series). Courage objected, and never wrote another piece of music for him again.
thank you Alexander Courage for this masterpiece!
Let's not forget Alexander Courage's great theme music as well! A truly "classic" opening.
Good point! I actually happen to like what I've seen of "Voyager," and I strongly believe that Janeway was the best of all the captains. However, I will never impose that view as fact, as there are those who prefer Picard, Sisko, Kirk, and even Archer (none of which I liked). As you said, it is generally a matter of opinion as to which one you like and prefer, and subsequently, Janeway is my choice.
22 people were born after 1966.. So did I, but I liked ;)
wonderful! I love Star Trek!
Lieutenant James Kirk survived the attack on the Starship USS Farragut years before he took Command of the USS Enterprise. After the attack on the Farragut, Ship's Executive Officer Commander Ron Tracey was also bitter about the attack on the ship. He also wanted revenge for the death of Captain John T. Garrovick. Ron Tracey's anger started there. Exec Officer Tracey commended young James Kirk on doing his duty. Kirk would have been promoted to Lieutenant Commander on another Starship.
Kirk might be an action guy but he would go for peace just as much as picard would.
This is my favorite version of the original theme. I like that it doesn't have the psychadelic female voice / synth on the melody. I think it was used for most of season one, with the exception of the earliest episoded.
That was wonderful. Thanks for this great share.
@hanghang71 Not Spock; Lieutenant Kevin Riley under the effects of the intoxicating water molecule in "The Naked Time," just before he shuts down the ship's engines in Engineering. The only episode in which I can remember Spock singing was the horrid third season's "Plato's Stepchildren" ("Bitter dregs ... bitter dregs!" which just about summed it all up).
0:09 my teacher said “no you can’t have this not right now” for my frozen fruit sauce in school but now I was think about Captain Kirk said These are the voyages of the starship enterprise when the ship and song popped up from 0:08 when my teacher said something
Loyally crusading for your favorite science fiction does not a scholar make.
LOVE IT! Total trekkie!
this is what my mom saw when she was my age ? holy shit !!!!!!!!
You know I always Liked the first season intro.
@argebarse The soundtrack was remastered for the DVD set, the original sountrack from the brodcast series was as I said, look it up :-)
thanks a lot. you know so much. i think it's a silly idea any way (the flashbacks).
this show is awesome lol
I have all three seasons on DVD, the remastered versions with the CGI effects replacing the originals. It's cool, and much more realistic visually, of course, but the original, man...the original....it can't be beat.
If i remember when i saw on
cnn. The model of the enterprise
was save. Then they having a press con
and they going to displayed on some
Hollywood museums right?
I remember this when i still a kid
when they air in the Philippines
on GMA 7
Ahhh, the only Star Trek show that ever mattered. Everything after is negligible and unneeded.
So do Star Trek. I'm a big fan of the first SW trilogy and all ST series (TOS, TNG, DS9, Voyager and Enterprise).
STAR TREK is great
You cant see it but i am giving you the vulcan salute