By Michael Beek

Published: Friday, 16 December 2022 at 12:00 am


 Star Wars – Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker is the final part of an incredible body of work by a single composer, John Williams.

John Williams, one of the best film composers in the world, has written each of the nine original scores for the generation-spanning film saga over a period of some 43 years, beginning in 1977.

While each individual entry was written as such, for a single film, Williams continually looked to what came before and built on the soundworld and growing library of thematic threads he had created each time. As such, themes and motifs composed for that first 1977 film crop up again, and again.

 

 

Indeed, the composer sees this set of scores as one body of work and Williams’s Ninth doesn’t disappoint. The Rise of Skywalker adds many new items to the canon while reflecting viscerally, and emotionally, on all that has come before. But where does this new, and final, score sit compared to the other eight?

Here’s our ranking of all of John Williams’s Star Wars music scores…

Best Star Wars music

#9 / Star Wars – Episode II: Attack of the Clones (2002)

London Symphony Orchestra; London Voices/John Williams

Even in last place, this score delivers thrills, spills and romance. Williams’s score suffered from heavy editing – particularly in the third act, but there are standout moments.

Top of the list is a tragic love theme, ‘Across the Stars’, for the forbidden romance between Anakin Skywalker and Padme (future parents of Luke Skywalker and Princess Leia).

There’s a chase in the skies above the city-planet Coruscant that will leave you breathless, but beyond that it’s a lot of action-heavy music designed to tie up disparate locations and story threads.