I've recently been on an Alien score kick -- whatever your thoughts on the merits of Alien 3 (personally, it's in my top two), Elliot Goldenthal's score is magnificent -- and so I've listened to Horner's Aliens score.
Given that he wrote it in about two weeks, because James Cameron and Gale Ann Hurd didn't know what they wanted and didn't have a locked picture when sessions were booked, I really don't blame Horner for falling back on his signature motifs. He had to deliver something, and yeah, his Klingon theme is there, and so is Ripley stealing the Enterprise, and in isolation from the film they do stand out.
I do wonder what a Horner Star Trek IV would have sounded like. I imagine he knew early enough in the process that Nimoy intended to go in a different direction so he booked other work in 1986. I understand Nimoy wanted to work with his friend, and had Rosenman incorporated some of Horner's motifs from the previoius two films I might look at his score with more fondness, but nothing about it says "Star Trek" to me.
Given that he wrote it in about two weeks, because James Cameron and Gale Ann Hurd didn't know what they wanted and didn't have a locked picture when sessions were booked, I really don't blame Horner for falling back on his signature motifs. He had to deliver something, and yeah, his Klingon theme is there, and so is Ripley stealing the Enterprise, and in isolation from the film they do stand out.
I do wonder what a Horner Star Trek IV would have sounded like. I imagine he knew early enough in the process that Nimoy intended to go in a different direction so he booked other work in 1986. I understand Nimoy wanted to work with his friend, and had Rosenman incorporated some of Horner's motifs from the previoius two films I might look at his score with more fondness, but nothing about it says "Star Trek" to me.