The Twilight Zone had the vast CBS Music Library at its disposal (in addition to
commissioning several new scores along the way). The show employed several
significant composers (Bernard Herrmann, Fred Steiner, Nathan Van Cleave, Jerry
Goldsmith, etc.), whose combined contributions form a rich and varied body of
work; however, the inherent diversity in this approach denies the series a truly
distinctive and individual musical voice (outside of the ubiquitous theme by
Marius Constant). The Outer Limits,
by contrast, had a single composer providing all the music for every episode
(Dominic Frontiere in season one, Harry Lubin in season two). This approach creates a powerful and singular
musical identity and provides a marvelous consistency across otherwise
unrelated episodes. In other words, every episode sounds like The Outer Limits.
Dominic Frontiere was fresh
from scoring Daystar’s 1962-63 series Stoney
Burke, and repurposed some of those compositions for The Outer Limits (one in particularly, which I’ve referred to as
“The Stoney Burke Mystery Cue” in these pages, occurs so often that it’s often
misidentified as a true Outer Limits
cue). Of the first season’s 32 episodes, thirteen contain original scores; the
remaining nineteen are “stock scored” with cues from both Stoney Burke and earlier Outer
Limits episodes. Frontiere’s work ranges from sweeping romantic fantasy
(“The Man Who Was Never Born”) to the avant-garde (“Nightmare”; “The Mice”) and
everything in between, and stands as some of the greatest music ever composed for television (and film, for that matter).
Harry Lubin,
meanwhile, joined the show after scoring three seasons of One Step Beyond, and brought his library of predominantly
electronic compositions with him. Lubin’s cues tend toward the shrill and
histrionic (“Shock Happenings" is particularly grating); however, he also provides several dreamy,
ethereal pieces that perfectly evoke the loneliness of space and the
strangeness of alien worlds. For the
most part, Lubin’s stuff is more generic and unfortunately less memorable (his
cue titles are appropriately neutral: “Dramatic Tragedy,” “Dark and Scary,”
etc.).
Frontiere’s Outer Limits music has seen two distinct
soundtrack releases, so it’s easily obtained; Lubin’s, however, remains
unreleased except for a couple of tracks on the One Step Beyond soundtrack (“Fear” and “Weird”) that would also
appear on the show. There are bootlegs of Lubin’s library out there, however,
including a 2-disc sci-fi/fantasy collection and deluxe 6-disc collection that
encompasses The Outer Limits, One Step Beyond, and more (I happen to
own the later; it’s a marvelous--- if a bit unwieldy--- beast). If you’re
interested… well, I know a guy who knows a guy.