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Unfortunately, many of the crime dramas I most wanted to watch were broadcast after that witching hour. Therefore, if I was to enjoy, say, Columbo or The Streets of San Francisco or Ironside, I had to find some way other than simply flipping on the tube. My solution: a TV-band radio. That thing was about the size of Pittsburgh (be thankful for the present age of miniaturization), and it belonged to my dad, so I had to be extremely sneaky about smuggling it into my bedroom, and then prevent my mother from catching me with the earphone plugged into my head.
Many a night in the 1970s I spent either in bed, in the dark, listening to TV series that were often barely comprehensible without seeing the action as it transpired onscreen; or else sitting up in a chair, with a book in front of my face but that radio earphone concealed beneath my long hair (hey, this was the shaggy 1970s, after all) and the unit itself secreted behind me. Amazingly, my mother never once caught me at this entertaining pastime--or if she did, she never said anything about it.
One of the consequences of my having had to resort to these measures in order to enjoy TV crime series of the ’70s, is that I am now left with strong memories of the introductory music employed on those shows. For instance, I can still whistle the themes from the NBC Mystery Movie, Barnaby Jones, Cannon, and myriad other shows, even though I haven’t seen most of those series in 30 years. It’s interesting nowadays to revisit, on DVD, some the programs I only listened to originally, and watch them through for the very first time. Just hearing their main title themes makes my heart beat faster.
Which is why I was so excited to discover a French Web site called Coucoucircus.org. In addition to music from international cartoon and anime series, it also features a lengthy selection of themes from U.S. and British TV programs--many of them crime shows.
You want to shut your eyes and revisit the Mike Connors private-eye series Mannix? Just click here. How ’bout The Mod Squad? Click here. Coucoucircus.org’s collection of themes runs the spectrum from the famous (Peter Gunn, Hawaii Five-O, Miami Vice, and Mission: Impossible) to the forgettable (Kojak, Joe Forrester, and Vega$).
But many non-crime series themes are available here, too. Including those from Bonanza, The Munsters, China Beach, Here Come the Brides, and a number of more easily forgotten shows such as Claude Akins’ trucker drama, Movin’ On, James Arness’ post-Gunsmoke western, How the West Was Won, and Mel Brooks’ truly awful Robin Hood sitcom, When Things Were Rotten. (That theme is pretty damn rotten, as well.)
Browse to your heart’s--and your ears’--content. I know I shall.
LISTEN UP: Still more TV tunes can be found on Mark Little’s MyThemes.TV, Tellytunes.com, and the Wave Themes Home Page.
READ MORE: “The Onion Picks the Openings that Fit Their Shows Perfectly,” by Bob Sassone (TV Squad).
2 comments:
I think TV themes are an important bit of social literacy. But I have a similar experience with the old Perry Mason TV theme. It scared the hell out of me. I ran off to bed as the music began and stuck myhead under the pillow so I couldn't hear it. I saw Raymond Burr mount those endless steps and the music seemed to crescendo to some unholy event I certainly didn't want to know about! Funny now, isn't it?
Having to listen instead of watch what a putz! I on the other hand talented in the ways of sneaking a peek, found that the upstairs vent/register when removed showed the T.V. perfectly reflected in the side of the shiny ductwork.
Unfortunately the images were upside down but at least I got to watch Streets of SF, Name of the Game and all the others....so there:)
PS Still love all the old theme music!
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