Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’musical episode worked wonderfully thanks to two ingenious tricks woven into the characters and story. Written by Dana Horgan and Bill Wolkoff, and directed by Dermott Downs, with original songs composed by Tom Polce and Kay Hanley of Letters to Cleo,Star Trek’s first-ever musical, “Subspace Rhapsody,” may be the defining hour ofStrange New Worlds. Not only did the “Subspace Rhapsody’s” soundtrack top the Apple Music charts, but there have been singalong panels at WonderCon and IGN Live where audiences belted out the songs back toStar Trek: Strange New Worlds' characters.

Star Trek: Strange New Worldsseason 2, episode 9, “Subspace Rhapsody,” saw the Starship Enterprise investigate an unusual subspace fold. After sending a song into the phenomenon, the Enterprise crew find themselves singing and dancing according to the laws of musicals. However,Captain Christopher Pike (Anson Mount)and his crew soon learn that other starships, including the Klingons, are also affected, and thegrowing improbability field threatens to engulf the galaxy. According to the rules of musicals, a grand finale musical number is needed to overload the improbability field, and the Enterprise crew rises to the occasion, with a full-stop performance that brings back reality without singing and dancing.

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Star Trek: Strange New Worlds’ Songs Were Pure Character Development

“Subspace Rhapsody’s” songs revealed the truth

There’s no question the songs inStar Trek: Strange New Worlds’musical are catchy and memorable, but the first brilliant trick bysongwriters Tom Polce and Kay Hanleywas to tie each track to the innermost desires ofStrange New Worlds' characters, making every song, whether giddy or serious, pure character development.When each Enterprise crew member sings, it’s about something vital to their character.In most cases, each song vocalizes a hidden truth or personal pain that the Enterprise’s characters have been struggling with sinceStrange New Worldsbegan.

Star Trek Strange New Worlds Musical Episode Ending Explained

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' musical episode ended with a rousing grand finale where song was both the problem and the solution to save the galaxy.

TheStrange New Worldscharacters whose innermost demons were most affectedare Captain Christopher Pike, Lt. La’an Noonien-Singh (Christina Chong), Nurse Christine Chapel (Jess Bush), Ensign Nyota Uhura (Celia Rose Gooding), and Lieutenant Spock (Ethan Peck). In Captain Pike’s case, Chris and his paramour,Captain Marie Batel (Melanie Scrofano), were deeply embarrassed to air out their relationship issues to the Enterprise’s bridge crew in “A Private Conversation.” Uhura came to terms with her true purpose on the Starship Enterprise with the showstopping “Keep Us Connected.”

Captain Pike meets Singing Klingon In Star Trek Strange New Worlds

La’an bravely decided to “change my paradigm” with her riveting, “How Would That Feel.”

Meanwhile, Nurse Chapel comes to the revelation that she has to break up with Spock to further her career ambitions, but she does so in front of the Enterprise crew with the big musical number, “I’m Ready.“A humiliated Spock vocalized his feelings about Chapel, realizing “I’m the X.” However, La’an faced her own heartbreak that began when she fell in love with and lost an alternate reality Captain James T. Kirk (Paul Wesley) inStrange New Worldsseason 2, episode 3, “Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow.” With the Lt. James T. Kirk ofStar Trek’s Prime universe now in her life, La’an bravely decided to “change my paradigm” with her riveting, “How Would That Feel.”

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The musical wasn’t just a gimmick

Star Trek: Strange New Worldsmight have gotten away with staging a musical purely as a gimmick with no explanation for why the Starship Enterprise crew is singing and dancing. However,Strange New Worlds' producers and songwriters laudably had a greater ambition. The other ingenious trick that madeStrange New Worlds' musical work is thatthe subspace improbability field threatened the entireStar Trekuniverse. The musical phenomenon wasn’t restricted to the USS Enterprise, and the whole galaxy would soon be folded into the singularity.

Every Song In Strange New Worlds' Musical Episode, Ranked Worst To Best

The Star Trek: Strange New Worlds musical episode, “Subspace Rhapsody,” includes nine original songs. Here they are, ranked worst to best.

Although thesinging Klingon General Garkog (Bruce Horak)and his K-Pop band were comical, they were, in actuality, a genuine threat. The singing Klingons planned to fire photon torpedoes into the subspace probability field to destroy it. The Klingons didn’t know or care that attacking the quantum singularity would have devastating consequences. Lt. James T. Kirk summarized that"the entire Federation and half the Klingon Empire"would be destroyedif the Klingons succeeded. While audiences were enamored by the music, the stakes inStar Trek’s first-ever musical were truly universal.

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How Star Trek’s Musical Changes Strange New Worlds' Characters For Season 3

The Starship Enterprise’s crew can change their paradigms

Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' musical is a game-changer for the Starship Enterprise’s crew, andsets up multiple character evolutions inStrange New Worldsseason 3. Captain PikeendedStrange New Worldsseason 2in a no-win scenario against the Gorn, but his heart is with Captain Batel, whose life is threatened by a Gorn infection. If Batel survives, Pike and Marie have to find a way to further their relationship, which could be even more challenging as Batel has lost her starship, the USS Cayuga, which was destroyed by the Gorn.

Chapel and Spock are about to be tested even further when Dr. Roger Korby enters the picture.

Nurse Chapel and Lieutenant Spock put aside their relationship issues when the Vulcan rescued Christine from the wreckage of the Cayuga and the duo defeated a Gorn soldier. ButChapel and Spock are about to be tested even furtherwhenDr. Roger Korby (Cillian O’Sullivan)enters the picture inStar Trek: Strange New Worldsseason 3. Korby is destined byStar Trek: The Original Seriescanon to become Chapel’s fiancé, but how this will play out is anyone’s guess.

Perhaps the best poised to evolve inStar Trek: Strange New Worldsseason 3are Lt. La’an Noonien-Singh and Ensign Nyota Uhura. Now more assured about her importance to the Enterprise,Uhura can start to move past her personal trauma,including her grief over the death of Lt. Hemmer (Bruce Horak), and become more confident. Meanwhile, La’an could become the free and more open person she desperately wants to be. La’an spent her life ashamed of her ancestor, Khan Noonien-Singh (Ricardo Montalban), and kept people from getting too close. But La’an truly wants to change. Yet La’an also hopes for a deeper connection to Lt. Kirk, to replace the James Kirk she tragically lost in 21st century Toronto.

It’s clear that"Subspace Rhapsody” will defineStar Trek: Strange New Worldsfor a long time to come. More than a gimmick thatStrange New Worldspulled off with miraculous gusto,Star Trek’s first-ever musical was cleverly designed to deepen the audience’s understanding and connection to the Starship Enterprise’s crew.Star Trek: Strange New Worldsseason 3 will have other big swings, but “Subspace Rhapsody” is inevitably going to be a tough act to follow, thanks to how finely woven the songs and character development, and the greater sci-fi crisis, were inStar Trek’s first-ever musical.