The first time I saw the opening lyrics to Outlander’s theme song posted on a friend’s Facebook post, I thought it sounded ridiculous, way too on-the-nose to start every episode by acknowledging the series’ premise. YES WE GET IT CLAIRE YOU DISAPPEARED.
That was before I actually listened to it, and watched the title sequence—and then, like Claire at Craigh na Dun, I fell hard. Now, I forbid my husband from fast-forwarding through the credits every time we watch… and considering that we binged a season at a time to get caught up in a matter of weeks, that means I’ve got it well memorized. But why do I find this particular TV opening so compelling?
The answer, I think, is that it presses all of my nerd buttons: It’s a remix of a mashup, with an excellent invocation of Rule 63. It is the platonic ideal of a TV theme song, reinventing itself each season so that it is always familiar but never predictable.
Spoilers for Outlander seasons 1 through 7.
I knew that Bear McCreary is behind so many excellent modern scores, from Battlestar Galactica to 10 Cloverfield Lane, but I did not truly appreciate his expertise until I traced the origins of the Outlander theme. Because first he started off with the tune of the 1884 folk song “The Skye Boat Song,” which is not just any random Scottish ditty, but which chronicles the escape of Bonnie Prince Charlie (!) during the Battle of Culloden (!!) at the heart of the Jacobite uprising. Already, amazing season 2 synergy—and, years before we knew it, season 6, too—before the damn pilot has even started:
And so forth. But, as Bear explained in his wonderfully detailed Behind the Music-esque blog posts, he wasn’t connecting with the original lyrics by Sir H. Boulton. It was Raya Yarbrough, the voice behind every iteration of the Outlander theme, who suggested swapping them out for Robert Louis Stevenson’s 1892 poem (same subject matter) “Sing Me a Song of a Lad That Is Gone”:
And on. Except that the tiresome fop Prince Charlie, the worst character from season 2 (I said it), doesn’t deserve to narrate the opening credits. And really, Outlander isn’t about any of the men—not him, not Frank, not Black Jack, not even dear Jamie. So then Bear conjured his inner fangirl and genderswapped RSL’s poem, so instead of Bonnie Prince Charlie talking, it’s Claire. And, let’s be honest, this stanza from the poem sounds more like her than any man anyway:
And it all comes together like a brilliantly remixed fanfic, or an unexpectedly inventive dish on Chopped:
UGH it’s SO GOOD. When the drums pick up after all that was me is gone and she takes off through the forest? /chefskiss
In the words of Eliza Schuyler Hamilton, that could be enough. BUT THEN. It’s not enough to have achieved this remix excellence and just float on your laurels for what would turn out to be eight seasons. Then the brilliant minds behind these credits tapped into my favorite part of golden age of TV-era openings and changed it up for every season. Just as I still have a soft spot for appointment television, I earnestly miss TV show openings that change up the footage every season. It was always a treat to start up the new season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and gawk at all of the moments to look forward to (two Xanders?? a roving monster hand? and of course, the inevitable badass Buffy pose) over the next 22 episodes. Just imagine if every season of Game of Thrones had fleeting shots of Rob Stark getting stabbed, Joffrey purple and spluttering, Cersei’s dragonfire lighting shit up…
To be fair, the Game of Thrones theme is its own work of art, and fits the show: Westeros is so massive, of course we need to see the entire world from the point of view of scholars and military strategists. Also, the twists in A Song of Ice and Fire are so big that to give even a hint of them would ruin many viewers’ experiences. Outlander had to show not so much where physically Claire would wind up, but where in time—to contrast the magic of the Dance of the Druids at the standing stones with the equal magic of turning a radio dial.
That said, the series still very much leans in to its predilection for choosing a new country (sometimes a new continent) for each season. To wit, season 2 saw the Frasers going to France—so Bear and co. replaced the Scottish fiddle and drums with a baroque viola da gamba and even translated a verse into French:
But France was short-lived, with Jamie and Claire returning to Scotland and the fated Battle of Culloden in the latter half of the season. The folks behind the credits could have just washed their hands of it and kept to the Frenchified titles. But do you think they were content with that? OF COURSE NOT. This is war, and the military Scottish snare drums, bagpipes, and shots of shirtless Highlanders versus musket-wielding British soldiers needed to reflect that:
By the time I got to season 3, it was clear that changing the main titles every season has become an Outlander tradition. At first, the changes appear a bit subtler, but there: The radio is replaced by a flickering television, broken chains carry incredible significance, and while many of the Scottish elements remain, they’re more somber, more retrospective. Then, instead of adding or replacing something, Bear strips out the bagpipes—signifying the crushing defeat at Culloden. Seriously, every detail, every choice, is so delightfully deliberate:
Thankfully, we do not linger on sadness for long. While the first half of season 2 was very classy and baroque, the latter half of season 3 is shaped by McCreary’s most out-there choice yet: “I cannot imagine any project other than Outlander that would allow me to set a soaring bagpipe melody over blistering congas!” Not unlike Hamilton’s Act 1 ending number “Non-Stop” (one of my favorites in the show), the next iteration of Outlander titles utilized congas and other Afro-Cuban influences to impressive dramatic effect. Pack your bags, kiddos, we’re going to the Caribbean:
Then season 4’s credits seemed like the biggest departure for the series, as the Afro-Cuban percussion was replaced with the sounds of frontier life in America: the fiddle, perhaps (thanks to a sharp-eared commenter) some banjo and mandolin as well to evoke the kind of bluegrass tradition that came in part out of the music that Scottish immigrants brought to the New World. And, most intriguingly, more than one voice. There’s a chills-inducing moment where Brianna touches the stones on all that was me is gone, and then the chorus is suddenly a literal chorus of voices harmonizing Sing me a song of a lass that is gone / Say could that lass be I—stretching the “I” out so that what originally was one woman singing about her own disappearance becomes many women each telling the same tale with their own personal variations.
Seriously, this show never fails to surprise me:
But then season 5 said, Hold my 18th-century beer. In 2020, McCreary did away with all of the instrumentation, replacing it with an a cappella choral rendition. While season 4 layered in more voices, in what I took to be a representation of Brianna literally following her mother’s footsteps through the stones, here there are too many voices to count, all raised up in some mix of hymn and folk song. It represented a challenge for McCreary, who instead of drawing inspiration from a foreign land had to explore what other forms of American music existed beyond the bluegrass that dominated season 4. “I can tease that there’s going to be a continuation of the philosophy that music moves to the forefront of the journey,” he told Express at the time. “As our story continues in Colonial America, you will hear some near even more bold musical moments.”
Bold here might mean polarizing; early fan response was less swayed by this rendition, nor was it my favorite. There is something lost in replacing one voice with many—Claire used to seem a singular time traveler, only for us to learn that she is but one of many who have stumbled their way back and forth across time. As time goes on, how she made it to Jamie becomes less special; instead, what becomes more important is how she stays alive. It’s a difficult adjustment to make.
It would seem that this updated arrangement intentionally leaned into that dissonance; as Nerdeek Life’s Andee Galeno pointed out in her analysis, the soprano voices are singing an octave higher than the others. This sharpness (the best word I could come up with) in the repetition of Sing me a song of a lass that is gone and Over the sea to Skye could be meant to highlight those lines, just as the only images from the original credits that remain are the Dance of the Druids and Claire’s running feet. If the point is that the Frasers and MacKenzies are still finding their footing in America at least through this season and the next, then acknowledging and embracing that friction is part of the song itself.
That footing, McCreary detailed in his season 5 retrospective, is about putting down roots: Rather than adjust the theme to match location, their goal was to explore how the song changes when Clan Fraser is growing in one place. As McCreary noted, “All these versions retained a huge instrumental crescendo at the return to the chorus, the final emotional swell that builds into the title card. This new version would be distinct not because of what was added, but what was removed. Just like the characters in the show, this Main Title Theme was not exploring a new frontier, but instead building something more sophisticated on the foundation we’d already laid down.”
Yet they didn’t want to entirely lose the effect of Yarbrough’s voice, so they rerecorded the original theme song, a capella, to play after the harrowing season 5 finale. It’s a fitting choice to revisit the iconic start to the theme song, in stripped-down form, as Claire is returning to herself following the violence and violation of her rape and recommitting to her decision to stay in the past.
McCreary also told Express that future iterations of the theme song may change in different fashions from before: “I think that will be my challenge moving forward, not completely reinventing the main title but finding way of tweaking it now that we’re planting a flag in American soil for the next couple of seasons.”
For season 6—which premiered two years after the prior season, in a world forever transformed by the pandemic—that “tweak” appeared to be completely upending the original Outlander theme song’s premise:
YEP, THAT’S A MAN’S VOICE, after all this time with our beloved gender-swapped “Skye Boat Song.” Joining Yarbrough in this rendition is Griogair Labhruidh, who McCreary said has sung on cues in seasons 2 and 5, quoting Robert Louis Stevenson and bringing back memories of Bonnie Prince Charlie. Except that it seems clear that this is meant to represent Jamie: his voice and his story intertwining with Claire’s, both returning to the roots (!) of the theme song and also trying something new.
It’s a big swing, initially jarring as it could be interpreted as undermining the idea of the song coming solely from Claire’s perspective. However, every transformation of the theme has been deliberate, and season 5 did introduce other voices to indicate the context of other time travelers in which she exists. At this point, the series hinges less on Claire deciding whether to go back and forth through the stones than on her committing to staying with Jamie, so it does make sense that the song would change to reflect that renewed partnership and communication between them. For that reason I was willing to trust the reversal and the reasoning behind it. Plus, Labhruidh turns in a lovely Gaelic translation of the theme:
And after all that, Outlander delivered twofold on the song change, with a cheeky flashback that taps into the show’s mythology and the multilayered theme: The episode “Give Me Liberty” opens with the return of Bonnie Prince Charlie (Andrew Gower), acting out the original “Skye Boat Song” narrative, as he is smuggled out of Scotland after living in hiding for years. It’s a full-circle moment for the series, without undermining how the song has evolved through the seasons. And how do they do that? Why, by having Bonnie Prince Charlie embark on his voyage in a bonnet and corset—so that to all eyes watching, the lad remains a lass, sailing over the sea to Skye.
Mark me, that’s how you keep things clever.
For season 7, there was no need to top that excellent interpretation of their own song, so instead McCreary brought in a new powerhouse voice: Grammy award-winning Sinéad O’Connor presented her haunting take on “The Skye Boat Song,” with McCreary thanking the “legendary” singer for bringing her “voice and spirit to my music.” That the singer died a month after the credits were released amplifies the effect she had on the familiar song.
While it was a polarizing adjustment from Yarbrough’s comforting renditions, this creative choice brought to mind Yellowjackets having Alanis Morissette perform a cover of their equally excellent theme song, “No Return,” as a way to amp up the nostalgia factor in season 2. It was a new voice, but someone so familiar that it helped bridge the gap.
This version has more grit to it, more pain, reflecting Claire’s uncertain fate in jail at the start of the season. The visuals are also more difficult to parse, with wider shots where it’s harder to tell who’s who on the battlefield or on the open water; or where it’s clear that it’s Claire and Jamie (as in the preview photo below), yet it’s blurrier, like a half-remembered moment.
What is clear is multiple shots of gems tucked into pockets and medals folded into palms—hinting at potential time travel or a fall at the battlefield, a symbol of wealth or honor standing in for the absence of someone beloved. It’s also very telling that the (again, blurry) shot on that key line Say, could that lass be I? looks to be Jamie, studying his own reflection in the water. With the usual caveat that I haven’t read the books, I will always wonder if Jamie could ever step through the stones on his own.
Or, failing that, to Skye, for a long-awaited homecoming for the Frasers The setting may have changed, but the song stays the same: McCreary told inquiring fans that they had decided to keep O’Connor’s rendition through the second half of this season, to honor her memory.
Perhaps that’s why, when releasing this season’s new credits, Starz encouraged viewers to look closely for Easter eggs via the new clips and title cards for each actor. This season is less about listening for a difference and instead letting the same music take on new layers of meaning.
Without getting too spoilery here, we’ll say that there’s plenty to be curious about this season. Could a set of clasped hands belong to a pair of new characters from the book Written in My Heart’s Own Blood? Whose hands are bloody, and who are they trying to save? Does Claire opening a set of shutters have anything to do with an episode intriguingly titled “Carnal Knowledge”? The Sassenach Files podcast has an excellent breakdown with plenty of theories, but be warned that it gives away several book-centric plot twists; ditto this Reddit thread.
What we can appreciate here is how the new credits juxtapose the Frasers’ lives in the 1780s with the MacKenzies’ existence in the 1980s, from sunlight in the past giving way to Edison bulbs in the present, to Brianna’s car looking like one of the wooden toys that Roger carved for the kids back on Fraser’s Ridge.
And then there’s the enduring visual of the ship, which has shown up in nearly every rendition. The Sassenach Files makes a similar observation about the title card for Caitríona Balfe, featuring the season 1 shot of Claire’s feet; our Sassenach seems to constantly be running, whether fleeing a threat or chasing hope. The ship’s place in the credits may shift, but it represents a similar constant movement between lands and between times.
And finally, a detail that I didn’t catch until now: The final shot of the standing stones, usually static, is instead more dynamic as it pans over the place where it all began. And off to the side, an uprooted tree. This was in the season 7 part 1 credits, which led to an amusing exchange on Reddit; one fan wondered how it connected to the books and another responded that it didn’t, that instead it reflected real life. A storm felled that tree at Craigh na Dun, forever altering the iconic look of the place. To include it in the Outlander credits feels like a very fitting tribute, acknowledging how even for the relatively short time that the series has been connected to Craigh na Dun, it too has changed.
Originally published in August 2018, and updated in November 2024.