IS IT REAL OR A REPLICANT?
 
Edgar Rothermich Re-Creates Vangelis’ Blade Runner Score for BuySoundtrax 
Records

(September 5, 2012) – BuySoundtrax Records is proud to announce the release of 
the 30th Anniversary Celebration, Music from the Motion Picture Blade 
Runner available at for pre-order at www.buysoundtrax.com on September 5th and 
digitally and via other soundtrack boutique retailers on September 19, 2012.
 
The dystopian film, directed by Ridley Scott and starring Harrison Ford in his 
second starring role after Raiders of the Lost Ark, Blade Runner has become a 
cult film favorite.  Loosely based on a Philip K. Dick novel, Ford stars as 
Rick Deckard – a bounty hunter assigned to terminate four replicants who have 
come to earth to find their maker. 
 
Through the years, however, multiple edits of the film have been created for 
the home video, DVD and Blu-Ray markets.  Similarly Vangelis’ score has been 
released in several different incarnations, but none of them are accurate 
representations of what was heard in the original 1982 film. 
 
“Largely because of a dispute between Vangelis and Scott over the director’s 
use of his music in the film, a proper soundtrack of the music as it is heard 
in the film has never been commercially issued (despite the promise of a 
soundtrack album from Polydor Records given in the film’s end 
titles),” described Randall D. Larson in the liner notes of the BuySoundtrax 
recording. 
 
BuySoundtrax Records seeks to rectify that, with this new recording faithfully 
recreating the original music from the film, which proved a difficult 
task.  Vangelis’ score was composed entirely by performing on keyboards 
and recording it directly, so no written transcriptions exist. Edgar Rothermich 
was charged with reverse engineering the score – listening to the original 
music and a 1982 album mock-up and transcribing it by ear.  He also had to 
recreate the sound of 1982 synthesizers and decipher if noise heard was due to 
recording on tape or stylistic choices by the composer.
 
“Blade Runner is the most difficult kind of score to deconstruct,” said BSX 
producer Ford A. Thaxton.  “Symphonic music can usually be determined because 
the instrumental palette is known.  But the 1970s-era electronic technology and 
the improvisational style in which Vangelis created the score made it 
especially difficult.  But we feel Edgar’s made a very close replication of 
what the score sounded like in the film.  He’s true to the sound the original 
but he’s brought it into today’s world.”
 
“The objective from the very beginning was to be as close as possible to 
the original score as heard in the film,” Rothermich said.  “It was never a 
case of my interpreting the soundtrack.  It was essentially a re-recording of 
the soundtrack music.”
 
Born in Germany, Edgar Rothermich studied music at the University of Arts in 
Berlin and graduated in 1989 with a Master’s Degree in piano and sound 
engineering. He worked as a composer and music producer in Berlin and moved to 
Los Angeles in 1991 where he continued his work on numerous projects in the 
music and film industry (The Celestine Prophecy, Outer Limits, Babylon 5, What 
the Bleep do we know, Fuel, Big Money Rustlas).
 
For the past 20 years Edgar has had a successful musical partnership 
with electronic music pioneer and founding Tangerine Dream member 
Christopher Franke. Recently in addition to his collaboration with Christopher, 
Edgar has been working with other artists as well as on his own projects. 
December 2010 marked the release of his first two solo albums Why Not 
Electronica and Why Not Electronica Again followed by Why Not Solo Piano, the 
first release in 2011.
 
Blade Runner will be available at www.buysoundtrax.com for pre-order 
on September 5th and digitally and other soundtrack boutique retailers on 
September 19, 2012.

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www.buysoundtrax.com
www.DingDingMusic.com
 
For more information contact: [email protected], or @cinemediapromo on 
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