Aliens: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack | ||||
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Soundtrack album by | ||||
Released | October 25, 1987 | |||
Studio | Abbey Road Studios, London, UK | |||
Genre | Soundtrack | |||
Length | 39:57 | |||
Label | Varèse Sarabande | |||
Producer | James Horner | |||
Alien soundtrack chronology | ||||
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Alternative cover | ||||
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Filmtracks | (Original) [2] |
Filmtracks | (Deluxe) [2] |
MovieMusicUK | (Deluxe) [3] |
Aliens: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack album for the 1986 James Cameron film Aliens.
The score was composed and conducted by James Horner, performed by the London Symphony Orchestra and recorded at Abbey Road Studios in London between 15-26 April 1986.[4]
The film was the first of Cameron and Horner's three collaborations, though they were already acquaintances from their time at Roger Corman's New World Studios in the early 80s, where both men had started their careers.
The production of Aliens fell behind schedule in post-production, leaving Horner less than two weeks to write the score to the finished film, rather than the six weeks he had initially been promised. [5] Despite the lack of time, Cameron and producer Gale Ann Hurd requested frequent changes to the music and made last-minute changes to the film's edit, which forced Horner to re-write the music. The combination of a lack of time and constant changes resulted in a falling-out between Horner and Cameron, who didn't work together again until Titanic more than a decade later.
The score features some of Horner's most complex and modernistic writing, making widespread use of dissonance, aleatoric and extended orchestral techniques and sound design. Horner also used tape delays to create "echoes" on some separately-recorded orchestral parts, a technique Jerry Goldsmith had used in the original Alien score. It also includes musical references to Gayane's Adagio from Aram Khachaturian's Gayane ballet suite, which had been used in Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968).
Despite the difficulties during the score's production, it was nominated for an Academy Award in 1986. The soundtrack album was released the following year, in 1987.[6]