Difference between revisions of "The Star Trek Songbook"

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Revision as of 05:24, 6 December 2012

The Star Trek Songbook
Edition 3 1976
Cover art by George Barr

The Star Trek Songbook was a media science fiction fanzine by Ruth Berman.

The Star Trek Songbook was devoted to music associated with the 1960s television series Star Trek. The first edition was published in Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A. in Summer 1971, and the last edition appeared in 1976. It featured articles, photographs, art work, letters, and song lyrics and music.

In the first edition, Ruth Berman introduces the zine, saying, "The Star Trek Songbook is a compendium of all the songs sung in episodes of 'Star Trek' and some that weren't, along with scenes discussing Federation music."

Contributions of writing included "Of period music, jewel song & bird-song", by Harlan Ellison (Science Fantasy Bulletin).

Contributors of art work included George Barr, Connie Faddis (Interphase), and Doug Herring.

Songs included Star Trek Intro and Theme, Naked Time - I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen, Alab Wes-Crainish, Conscience of the King - Beyond Antares, City on the Edge of Forever, Please, Charlie X, Amok Time - Of Vulcan Music, The Squire of Gothos, Sonata K 159, Way To Eden, Requiem for Methuselah - Pseudo Brahms, Music for the Dance, Two Variations of a humor theme//Animation Star Trek Theme, Plato's Stepchildren - Maiden Wine, Mudd's Passion, Elan of Troyius, Once Upon a Planet - Uhura's Hum, and The Lorelei Signal - Ur Hufen Melyn.

In the 1950s, Ruth Berman had co-published All Mimsy with Eleanor Arnason and Ron Whyte. In the early 1960s she published Dinky Bird, and then in the later 1960s, Inside Star Trek, one of the few fanzines to appear during the original run of the television series, followed by her next Star Trek related fanzines, T-Negative and The Star Trek Songbook. In the 1960s and 1970s, Ruth Berman was also publishing the Sherlock Holmes anthology, SH - sf Fanthology.