Latest Release

- AUG 4, 2023
- 36 Songs
- Home Alone (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) [Anniversary Edition] · 1990
- Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) · 1980
- Star Wars: The Phantom Menace (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) · 1999
- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone · 2001
- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone · 2001
- Jurassic Park (20th Anniversary) · 1993
- Star Wars: The Force Awakens (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) · 2015
- Star Wars: A New Hope (Original Motion Picture Score) · 1977
- Star Wars: A New Hope (Original Motion Picture Score) · 1977
- Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone · 2001
Essential Albums
- We can think of only one composer whose deft musical ability can do justice to a story as moving as Schindler's List’s: John Williams. On the plaintive "Immolation (With Our Lives, We Give Life)," the veteran scorer forges gently ahead with a single, mournful melody, and the heartbreaking refrain makes a beeline straight to our hearts. Elsewhere, on stirring tracks like "Making the List" and "I Could Have Done More," Williams collaborates with violinist Itzhak Perlman, whose tremulous strings convey the frailty of hope.
- John Williams again asserts his mastery of blockbuster scores with the soundtrack to Richard Donner's 1978 hit, Superman: The Movie. Leading the London Symphony Orchestra, he showcases his command of carefully balanced dynamics. Tracks range from the mighty to the modest, with the mammoth brass, timpani, and strings of the "Main Title" theme drawing sharp contrast to the delicate legato chime of motifs like "Love Theme from Superman." It all ties together beautifully.
- Revisit the score that started a worldwide phenomenon—all in Spatial.
- The importance of John Williams’ score in transforming Steven Spielberg's Jaws from a B-movie about a killer shark into a truly chilling morality tale cannot be overstated. We all know how the principal theme goes—an iconic musical pulse that suggests a stalking evil. And those quickening rhythms, sudden queasy lulls, and sharp musical stabs are used across the entire soundtrack to keep listeners in a state of unease, so that even a relatively chirpy moment like “Out to Sea” quickly becomes undermined by creeping tension.
Artist Playlists
- His dramatic scores have powered some of Hollywood's greatest blockbusters.
- Discovering the ingredients for creating an indelibly epic movie theme.
- Gary E. Franks
- Gary E. Franks
- Gary E. Franks
- Gary E. Franks
- Gary E. Franks
- Gary E. Franks
- Gary E. Franks
About John Williams
The music of John Williams is the sound of pop culture. His vibrant themes are indispensable to the magic of the American blockbuster, from the menacing two-note motif of Jaws, to the stellar pomp of Star Wars, to the poignant violin theme of Schindler’s List. Born in 1932 in New York, Williams studied composition in Los Angeles before returning to his hometown to work as a jazz pianist. His first break came with his 1971 Oscar-winning score for Fiddler on the Roof, rocketing a career that would bring back the epic style of orchestral film music that Erich Korngold had pioneered in Hollywood’s Golden Age. In the 1970s, he began two collaborations that would define his legacy. Williams' decades-long partnership with Steven Spielberg started with the director's theatrical debut, The Sugarland Express, and came to encompass E.T., Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and Minority Report, among other movies. Williams’ other great collaboration, with George Lucas, resulted in the iconic music of Star Wars, whose influence on film composition has been immeasurable. His use of motifs, such as the adventurous outbursts in Jurassic Park and the heroic brass in Raiders of the Lost Ark, makes the music inseparable from the scenes it enlivens. But it's worth exploring Williams' concert music, too: A highlight is the rhapsodic and technically demanding Violin Concerto No. 2 (2021), for soloist Anne-Sophie Mutter.
- HOMETOWN
- Queens, NY, United States
- BORN
- February 8, 1932