The second one, a Broadway-style pastiche, is possibly from Opus 1 and was used as end credits music for a couple of episodes of the documentary series Hollywood Singing & Dancing (2009):
Until this pilot was loaded, there was ZERO information about it anywhere I searched. Until this load, it might as well not have existed. I checked BMI and ASCAP and found nothing as well. None of the actors are even credited (if you recognize any, feel free to speak up; I submitted the pilot to IMDb -- I can go back and add cast).
Until this pilot was loaded, there was ZERO information about it anywhere I searched. Until this load, it might as well not have existed. I checked BMI and ASCAP and found nothing as well. None of the actors are even credited (if you recognize any, feel free to speak up; I submitted the pilot to IMDb -- I can go back and add cast).
Including the two cues listed in the description, here's what I was able to come up with thanks to Shazam...
YouTube copyright has tagged it as being titled "Reflections", but I can't find it on the De Wolfe website and searches elsewhere have turned up in vein. I'd really love to know who did it and find a video of the whole Georges Delerue-like piece.
Can anybody identify the music from the end credits of "Enough Rope" (1960)? It's also used in smaller portions earlier, but this is the real longest one.
Yeah, it's "Mannix" alright. I can't believe they'd track a score cue from the series that so prominently displays Schifrin's theme. I seriously doubt if I went threw track-job episodes of "Mannix" that I'd find a score cue prominently displaying Parker's theme from "CHiPs".
Can anybody identify the music from the end credits of "Enough Rope" (1960)? It's also used in smaller portions earlier, but this is the real longest one.
Would anyone know the identify of some of the library music heard in this stock sound effects track? The first one (0:01-0:15) has already been identified as being "Ride'em Cowboy" by David Lindup, off of the venerable KPM library, but there are a few other orchestral tracks that I'm intrigued by. Timestamps for these cues are as follows: 0:15-0:24 (a brassy dramatic sting) 0:29-0:35 (another dramatic sting) 0:35-1:02 (a more romantic sounding theme)
Justin, I'm very grateful for this thread. The Johnny Pearson KPM cues have finally been named.
The following piece of music has driven me crazy for decades. It's library music used in a one-off UK TV show called Mr. Axelford's Angel (1974). The main title & end title both seem to have come from the same cue, then were split for each title sequence.
I'm guessing the music from written anywhere from 1970-1974.