The delays and poor reproductions of the
Blade Runner score led to the production of many
bootleg recordings over the years. A bootleg tape surfaced in 1982 at science fiction conventions and became popular, given the delay of an official release of the original recordings. In 1993 "Off World Music, Ltd." created a bootleg
CD that would prove more comprehensive than Vangelis' official CD in 1994. A disc from "Gongo Music" features most of the same material, but more of it. The Deck Definitive Edition came about in 2001, with 27 tracks. In 2002, the "Esper Edition" bootleg surfaced, followed by "Los Angeles, November 2019" in 2003. The double-disc "Esper Edition" combined tracks from the official release, the Gongo boot and the film itself. Finally, "2019" provided a single-disc compilation almost wholly consisting of ambient sound from the film, padded out with some sounds from the Westwood game
Blade Runner.
Studio tape The first release of the
Blade Runner score in any form was a tape suspected of coming from a
sound engineer during the film's mixing. It was popular, despite subpar audio quality, given there were no plans to release a Vangelis score.
Off World Music A second bootleg,
Original Motion Picture Soundtrack: Blade Runner, appeared in 1993 by "Off World Music, Ltd." on CD. Issued as a limited edition of 2000 numbered copies, it was of high quality and more comprehensive than the official release by Vangelis in 1994. This release includes the 1939 recording "
If I Didn't Care" by
R&B group
The Ink Spots that originally appeared in the workprint of
Blade Runner, but was replaced by the Don Percival cut "One More Kiss, Dear" in the final version.
Gongo Music In 1995, a disc from Romanian label "Gongo Music, Ltd" was issued as a limited edition of 3000 copies. It contained mostly the same music as the Off World Music release, but included one track, "Blimpvert", which had not appeared on any previous releases. This track contains an excerpt from "Ogi no Mato" by Ensemble Nipponia. Esper Edition notes: • Original music composed and performed by Vangelis • "Harps of the Ancient Temples" (Bicycle Riders) written and performed by Gail Laughton • Vocals performed on tracks 3, 9 (disc I) and track 5 (disc II) by Demis Roussos • Vocals performed on "Rachael's Song" by
Mary Hopkin • Saxophone on tracks 2 and 9 (disc II) by
Dick Morrissey • Lyrics and vocals on "One More Kiss‚ Dear" by Don Percival (Note: the official 1994 release credits the vocals to Don Percival but the lyrics to English singer/composer
Peter Skellern) • "Salome's Dance" includes a snippet that the band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark expanded into the single "Junk Culture" from the album of the same name, released in 1984. The Esper bootleg edition was expanded in 2017 and renamed the ''Esper 'Retirement' Edition'', consisting of six discs (five CD-DA and one DVD-ROM). It incorporated the missing tracks from the trilogy release. Other authors, and iTunes, state the Gail Laughton piece is called "Pompeii 76 A.D." from his album
Harps Of The Ancient Temples. == Legacy ==