Woo! Alright, it's hard not to get emotional back there Holloway and I were sitting back there, oh Um, you know people ask me sometimes You know, what is- what's your favorite moment of- of Lost And it really happened at the end of the first season of the show Uh, you know we were exhausted We made 24 episodes of the show in less than a year Um, to put that in British terms That's like 75 years of Sherlock Without the pressure of having to create next week's episode Damon and I went to the scoring stage To watch Michael record the music for the season finale And Lost was one of the very few shows that have an actual orchestra And this size orchestra um, you know doing the music most times TV shows that point and even today are just one guy Sitting in a room with a synthesizer Not only that, you know Michael had people playing stuff like Pieces of wrecked airplane wing and crazy instruments Anyway, we're on the scoring stage for the final cue Which was the raft launch And we had written this scene where some castaways Attempt to leave the island for the first time on a raft And it was a scene with a very few words And we were counting on the music to carry the day Now, here's something you may not know The studio musicians who play music for film They don't rehearse the pieces they play They sight read them right then and there So, up came the raft scene on the screen with beep tones for sync And then the scene started playing And the musicians begin playing along And they were playing this piece of music altogether For the very first time that ever been played And it was beautiful and everyone was frozen, mesmerized And when it ended everyone just burst into applause The players was tapping their bows and there wasn't a dry eye in house And it was this cathartic moment that you know To me really showed the power of artistic collaboration Which is what making television is all about Um, my theory about making movie or television shows That you make it four times You sort of make it when you write it, make it when you shoot it You make it when you edit it and you make it a final time When you added the music And like Star wars or Jaws, Lost would not be anything close to what it is Without the incredible music that Michael wrote for the show So as you've heard in the couple of the reading that Jorge did We even started acknowledging the importance of Michael's music in the scripts themselves Uh, also an excuse for laziness, we just would- So, for instance, the raft scene, part of the description reads And now, Michael Giacchino does the heavy lifting Music comes up, moving And allegates score and plays over a series of shots I won't read more, let's watch it instead Ladies and gentlemen, "Parting Words"