Library Music Themes
Info Database => Track IDs => Topic started by: Pegbars on July 10, 2019, 07:54:36 AM
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2025 BUMP!
Can you ID this library, please? It is a 1970s production music library, some cuts had optional sound effects (like birds) pre-mixed.
This library was used in broadcast, as I remember two different radio stations in my region that had it.
Thanks for listening! Individual cuts are:
Opener
Scenic Vistas
Garden segment
Bird segment
Animals segment
1-minute closer
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No idea on any of these, but I really dug the first one at 3:49. And ya know...fast food and candy looked and tasted (from what I remember) so much better in the 70's and 80's. This video just reminded me of that fact.
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It's ok here to insert the YouTube links in your posts ;)
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Thanks, Stack! :)
Yes, this one really bugs me because I *knew* the library was at a station in town where I lived in the 90s. I always meant to ask them, but never did.
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Replaced video in original post with new clips. Better audio.
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Bumping this one more time, since it's been a while and we have many new entries and members with fresh ears.
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Bumping this one more time, since it's been a while and we have many new entries and members with fresh ears.
Cinema Concepts “All American” intermission clock music is going to be a difficult find. It has 7 different cues.
The only libraries popular in the 1970s are Capitol Hi-“Q” / Media Music, TM Productions, Robert Hall / New World, De Wolfe and Emil Ascher Inc. Another I can throw in is Southern Library of Recorded Music.
Since there are sound effects into the music tracks, it has to come from a rare library.
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Cinema Concepts “All American” intermission clock music is going to be a difficult find. It has 7 different cues.
The only libraries popular in the 1970s are...<snip>.
Since there are sound effects into the music tracks, it has to come from a rare library.
Thanks for the ideas. I wouldn't discount a library from Tanner... these were cheap stations. The sound effects were alternate cuts, FWIW.
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I'm afraid I can't help, but if it might whittle things down, I'm guessing it's a US library that had these cues recorded in England by session musicians there. The music cues here, especially the "animals" one have a bit of an English session group feel regarding the overall "sound".
PL here does have a friend, though, who worked in broadcasting in the mid-late '80s and held on to a ton of tape-reel only library material from back in the day ("Background Cues #1" from WinWalt Productions/Helene Matalon being from his collection). Wonder if that person might know a thing or two about this library.
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Cinema Concepts “All American” intermission clock music is going to be a difficult find. It has 7 different cues.
The only libraries popular in the 1970s are...<snip>.
Since there are sound effects into the music tracks, it has to come from a rare library.
Thanks for the ideas. I wouldn't discount a library from Tanner... these were cheap stations. The sound effects were alternate cuts, FWIW.
I'm afraid I can't help, but if it might whittle things down, I'm guessing it's a US library that had these cues recorded in England by session musicians there. The music cues here, especially the "animals" one have a bit of an English session group feel regarding the overall "sound".
PL here does have a friend, though, who worked in broadcasting in the mid-late '80s and held on to a ton of tape-reel only library material from back in the day ("Background Cues #1" from WinWalt Productions/Helene Matalon being from his collection). Wonder if that person might know a thing or two about this library.
I also want to add that some of the music is looped. The bird and scenic vista segments are the ones in particular are originally 60 seconds in length. It has to come from a very cheap US based library where the tracks are issued at commercial length.
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My bump on this for 2025. Going on 6 years, LOL. Hoping these ring a bell with new members and/or newly posted libraries.
This was indeed from a US broadcast library, if that helps. Thanks all!