The Music of John Williams
- Sep 4 – 6, 2026
- Blossom Music Center
- 2026 Blossom Music Festival
About the Music
Program Pieces in Order
Superman March from Superman
Main Theme from Jurassic Park
Marion’s Theme from Raiders of the Lost Ark
Hedwig’s Theme from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone
Scherzo for Motorcycle and Orchestra from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
Flight to Neverland from Hook
Suite from Far and Away
INTERMISSION
March of the Resistance from Star Wars: The Force Awakens
Adventures on Earth from E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial
Fawkes the Phoenix from Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Shark Theme from Jaws
Across the Stars from Star Wars: Attack of the Clones
Throne Room and End Title from Star Wars: A New Hope
Program Essay
John Williams is the most influential composer alive.
A substantial claim, no doubt — but consider the facts: Williams has written the musical themes for some of the most iconic and memorable creations ever. If he had only written the music for the Star Wars universe, it would have been enough to enshrine him in the soundtrack heavens. But he has written scores in almost every genre of film imaginable, not to mention music for concert halls, television series, news programs, sports broadcasts, and the Olympics. His music emanates from amusement parks and children’s toys, appears in pop culture parodies (from Spaceballs to Family Guy), and has been incorporated into ceremonies and memorials around the world.
John Towner Williams — born in 1932 — had significant exposure to both music and film from an early age, both in his native Queens, New York, and eventually in Los Angeles, where he, his parents, and his three siblings moved in 1948. His father, Johnny Williams, was drummer for the radio- and record-famous Raymond Scott Quintette, whose songs featured in dozens of Bugs Bunny and other Warner Bros. cartoons in the 1940s. John apprenticed with, among other illustrious teachers, Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, the Italian émigré composer who, besides working in film music himself, was the teacher and mentor for a generation of film composers including Scott Bradley, Henry Mancini, and André Previn (one of Williams’s close friends).
Williams has been writing for film and television since 1954 — yes, since he was 22 years old. The major turning point in Williams’s career, however, occurred in the 1970s: within four years he scored Jaws (1975), Star Wars and Close Encounters of Third Kind (both 1977), and Superman (1978), four scores that still shape the way we hear and understand film music today.
Let’s start with Jaws: Can you think of another score where two notes tell us what’s going to happen? Besides launching the great shark panic of 1975, Jaws became Steven Spielberg’s first hit film, Spielberg and Williams’s first hit collaboration (they’d already worked on The Sugarland Express together), and is considered the first modern summer blockbuster. Williams’s ability to boil down the suspense, the impending danger, the mystery of the great unseen to just two notes remains one of the greatest compositional feats of modern times. Even people who have never seen the film, let alone seen a shark, know that those two notes — deep, uneven, and menacing — signify terror and potential peril.
Before the 1970s, the idea of a story stretching out over multiple films — let alone multiple generations — largely existed in lower-budget “B” movies or in serials (shorter films that told an endlessly unfolding story) like Buck Rogers, The Lone Ranger, or Flash Gordon; James Bond may be the biggest exception. As of this writing, however, the ongoing story of the many inhabitants of “a galaxy far, far away” has continued into its sixth decade, with no end in sight.
But we’re not only talking about Star Wars, of course: Williams would also write enduring themes for Superman, Indiana Jones, the dinosaurs of Jurassic Park, and Harry Potter. The key word here is “enduring”: all of the main themes, as well as many of the character themes, that Williams devised for these films live on in their sequels, even when other composers scored them. One example: Williams wrote the music for the first three Harry Potter films, but his melodies — particularly “Hedwig’s Theme” — continue to appear, even in the prequel Fantastic Beasts films.
While Williams has defined the musicscapes for many of our favorite film franchises, he has spent far more time writing scores for one-off stories which shape the emotional tenor of the film, help us get to know the characters, and remind us when to cheer and when to cry. He has scored tales of heroes and adventures, comedies and tragedies, epics and biographies. These include films like Hook (1991), an imaginative take on J.M. Barrie’s Peter Pan universe, and Far and Away (1992), an expansive tale about Irish immigrants and the Oklahoma Land Run of 1893.
Perhaps it’s the occasion of his 90th birthday in 2022, or the upcoming 50th anniversary of his score for the first Star Wars film next year, but there has been a recent outpouring of interest in Williams’s work. These include musicologist Frank Lehman’s online database documenting all the musical themes in Williams’s Star Wars scores, the 2024 documentary Music by John Williams, and the first major, authorized biography of the composer, written by journalist Tim Greiving and published in 2025.
Anniversaries aside, Williams’s legacy both inside and outside Hollywood speaks for itself. In addition to his now 30 collaborations with Spielberg, he has worked with dozens of directors including George Lucas, Ron Howard, Clint Eastwood, John Singleton, Chris Columbus, Brian de Palma, Alfred Hitchcock, and even scored Frank Sinatra’s sole directorial credit (None but the Brave, 1965). In the process, Willams has been recognized by practically every music, arts, and humanistic society on the planet, with honorary degrees, governmental orders and titles (including an honorary Knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II and a Chevalier of Arts and Letters from France). He has also been a mentor — official or otherwise — to the countless composers and musicians inhabiting the soundtrack world he has crafted for the past seven decades.
But his influence extends far beyond the industry. John Williams’s music has gone beyond being simply popular: his pervasive and perennial melodies have traversed the globe for generations and will continue to shape our musical world far into the future.
— Daniel Goldmark
Daniel Goldmark is professor of music and director of the Center for Popular Music Studies at Case Western Reserve University. He is an author and editor of books on animation, film, and music, including The Grove Music Guide to American Film Music.
Featured Artists
Sarah Hicks
Conductor
Sarah Hicks's versatile and vibrant musicianship has secured her place as an in-demand conductor across an array of genres, and as an educator, arranger, producer, writer and speaker committed to creating connections through music. Her career has seen collaborations with diverse artists, from Hilary Hahn, Olga Kern and Dmitiri Hvorostovsky to Smokey Robinson, Roseanne Cash and the Dirty Projectors; during the summer of 2011 she toured with Sting as conductor of his Symphonicities Tour. Her passion for cross-genre partnerships led to a 2019 album with rap artist Dessa and the Minnesota Orchestra, with whom she holds a titled position. In 2021 she collaborated with gamer DrLupo for an innovative live-play project for Intel Gaming and in 2023 premiered Rufus Wainwright’s Want Symphonic at the BBC Proms.
A highly sought-after guest conductor, Ms. Hicks has worked extensively both in the States and abroad. Notable ensembles include the Cleveland Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, Chicago Symphony, San Francisco Symphony, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Boston Pops, Toronto Symphony, Czech National Symphony Orchestra, Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, WDR Funkhausorchester Köln, St. Petersburg Philharmonic, and Tokyo Philharmonic, among many others. The 2024-25 season sees her returning to Cleveland, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Dallas, and marks her debut with the New York Philharmonic
A specialist in film music and the film in concert genre, her live concert recording of “The Music of Coco” and “The Lion King 30th Anniversary” can be seen on Disney+ and her work on “Little Mermaid Live” was broadcast on ABC; her first major feature film credit, “Renfield”, was released in April of 2023. Her concerts with the Danish National Symphony Orchestra of film music, “The Morricone Duel” was released as an album and worldwide broadcast, and has garnered over 200 million view on YouTube.
Her opera appearances include the East Slovak State Opera Theater and the Curtis Opera Theater, as well as operas in concert with the Minnesota Orchestra and the RTÉ Orchestra. Her commitment to new music led to the creation of an innovative micro-commission project, and her recording of new concertos, “Triple Doubles” was released on the Bridge label.
Since 2019 Ms. Hicks has acted as advisor on numerous projects for Disney Music Group and is a consultant and frequent collaborator at Disney Concerts. Since 2020, she has been the primary host and writer of “This is Minnesota Orchestra”, broadcast on Twin Cities PBS and streamed globally; in 2022 she won a regional Emmy for her work as producer, writer and host and has been nominated twice in 2024.
Ms. Hicks is a frequent guest lecturer, teacher and panelist and was on faculty of the Curtis Institute of Music from 1999 to 2005 and Staff Conductor until 2012. An increasingly in-demand keynote speaker, her presentation, “Orchestrating Excellence” has illustrated collaborative leadership to numerous civic groups and corporations. A mindfulness and mental health advocate, her most recent project, Music and Healing, is a collaboration with the Minnesota Orchestra. Available digitally, the project includes a concert, commissioned works, interviews, and conversations with neuroscientists, wellness experts and musicians. Her advocacy for mental wellness and mindfulness continues on her blog and YouTube channel, and she is currently pursuing studies in MBSR and teacher training in Vipassana meditation.
Sarah Hicks was born in Tokyo, Japan and raised in Honolulu, HI. Trained on both the piano and the viola, she was a prizewinning pianist by her early teens. She received her BA magna cum laude from Harvard University in composition and holds an Artists' Degree in conducting from the Curtis Institute of Music. In her spare time, Ms. Hicks enjoys running, hiking, her Papillon, cooking (and eating) with her husband, traveling and blogging.
Learn More