Planet Wax: Sci-Fi/Fantasy Soundtracks on Vinyl

As a first grader, I distinctly remember sitting by my dad in front of the stereo cabinet, as he recorded a friend’s borrowed Star Wars soundtrack LP to reel-to-reel tape for my brother and I to listen to whenever we wanted, which was always. My only regret at the time is I wouldn’t — and didn’t — have the cardboard sleeve to gaze at while reliving George Lucas’ movie through John Williams’ instantly iconic score. (This was before the VCR invaded American households, folks.)

Aaron Lupton and Jeff Szpirglas would understand. That’s the experience Planet Wax: Sci-Fi/Fantasy Soundtracks on Vinyl exists to commemorate and celebrate. A sequel to their last year’s Blood and Black Wax, Lupton and Szpirglas pivot from the music that fuels famous horror films to the tunes of that misunderstood genre’s more beloved big brothers of science fiction and fantasy. This follow-up is every bit the keeper.

Once again from 1984 Publishing, the full-color hardcover looks sleek and gorgeous. As with the previous volume, Lupton and Szpirglas give each featured album a page to itself, with a brief (but highly knowledgeable) essay running underneath the cover art commanding the space from left margin to right. Some discs earn extra pages, such as the multiple releases of the big Star franchises — Wars and Treks. Peppered throughout are sidebar interviews with select composers, from Stu Phillips (TV’s Battlestar Galactica) to Brad Fiedel (The Terminator).

SF fans will be delighted with the such soundtrack behemoths represented as Vangelis’ Blade Runner, Jerry Goldsmith’s Planet of the Apes, Basil Poledouris’ Conan the Barbarian (and the Destroyer) and John Williams’ Close Encounters of the Third Kind (not to mention Superman and Raiders and E.T. and Jurassic Park and …). The story behind the classical gas that is the 2001: A Space Odyssey LP is almost worth the purchase alone.

What those fans may not be as enthused about are the oddball choices the guys throw readers’ way, which actually kicks the book up several levels for me. This includes the accidentally kitsch disco rock of Cannon’s The Apple, Queen’s anthemic and unconventional Flash Gordon score, the largely electro compilation for The Matrix, the library cues used by the Spider-Man cartoon series of the late ’60s, Harry Nilsson’s much-derided Popeye songs and, of course, the chart-topping funkster known throughout the Milky Way as simply Meco. All hail Meco.

Hell, speaking of, there’s even a spread on Star Wars novelty albums! (As someone who wrote an article on the subject for issue #13 of the late Cool & Strange Music Magazine, I can attest a galaxy’s worth of those puerile platters could fill an entire book.)

You don’t have to be a vinyl collector to appreciate the wonder of Planet Wax. But if you are, do your damndest to seek out the Record Store Day edition dropping Aug. 28. Only available through participating stores, that limited edition of 1,000 copies includes a bonus 7-inch of Christopher Young’s two-part theme for Tobe Hooper’s Invaders from Mars, on an exclusive, slime-green slab! (You also get a numbered bookmark signed by both authors, but I wouldn’t attempt to play that.)

Whatever these two tackle next, my eyes — and ears — eagerly await. —Rod Lott

Get it at Amazon.

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