Author Topic: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release  (Read 1886 times)

musictheorist

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Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« on: January 23, 2025, 01:15:28 AM »


Timestamp: 25:11
This Music House track, Energy Flow by Geoffrey Bastow which was copyrighted in 1987 was featured on an episode of 3-2-1 Contact aired in 1986. A rare instance of a library track that debuted before the track on its respective album debuted widely.

MHI 2 - New Look - Industry 2

Music House was founded by Robin Phillips, who was also the mastermind for KPM and Bruton Music. FirstCom did not distribute Music House until its first album in 1987. Probably it was custom made when Children's Television Workshop (APM/FirstCom) and FR3 in France (L'Illustration Musicale) were using the music libraries at their disposal.

Could APM Music and other distributors have access to unreleased tracks before most clients?




In a similar scenario, the Channel 4 News theme "Best Endeavours" debuted in 1983 before it made its proper album debut on Bruton Music's BRG 25 - Televisual in 1984.

Lord Thames

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Re: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« Reply #1 on: January 23, 2025, 02:54:27 PM »
Johnny Pearson's Gemini Suite was recorded in 1968, but not released by KPM until 1976, reportedly due to Johnny Pearson and Robin Philips being unhappy with the performance due to the Cologne heatwave affecting the tuning of the orchestral instruments - but the third movement was used on a BBC test card tape in 1974.


tim gueguen

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Re: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« Reply #2 on: January 24, 2025, 02:01:39 PM »
This is sort of the equivalent of releasing a single from an upcoming album in the pop etc. world.  Letting a large customer have first crack at one or more tracks could help sell the album to smaller customers. 

It would be interesting to know if Pearson's "Gemini Suite" was named that at the time of recording, as Deep Purple's Jon Lord released an album of the same name in 1971.

I wonder how common not releasing tracks soon after recording has been in the library world.  A lot of library material is very obviously intended to mimic current trends, so not releasing it promptly increases the risk of not finding a buyer.
« Last Edit: January 24, 2025, 02:09:50 PM by tim gueguen »

Lord Thames

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Re: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« Reply #3 on: January 24, 2025, 02:12:16 PM »
I think Johnny Pearson got there first!

KPM did some incidental tracks for The Sweeney which they were allowed to release in the library after the series had gone to air - I believe Yorkshire Television got Alan Tew's Hanged Man score before it was released by Themes International so presumably there was a similar arrangement there.

A lot of Standard Music tracks were originally recorded for LWT shows, and as Standard was LWT's own library it was probably inevitable they were recycled.

tim gueguen

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Re: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« Reply #4 on: January 24, 2025, 04:45:47 PM »
Yeah, Pearson using that tile in 1968 would totally make sense, The Age of Aquarius and all that.

Walk the Skies 202

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Re: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« Reply #5 on: January 25, 2025, 12:21:59 AM »
As discovered by user Two-Sheds, Peasant Flute (Version 1) by John Leach was featured in Monty Python's The Meaning of Life in 1983, prior to the track's official release on Ready Music LPDG 110 in 1984.

This early usage seems to be due to the original score for the film involving the likes of Andre Jacquemin, John Du Prez, and Dave Howman, all of whom were heavily involved with the Ready Music label.

Two-Sheds

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  • monty-python-music.blogspot.com
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Re: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« Reply #6 on: January 25, 2025, 10:19:30 PM »
Additionally, Monty Python's Previous Record (1972) features two Studio G tracks not released until 1974: "Sporting News" by Paul Lewis (LPSG 2003) and The Great Adventure Suite, Mvt. IV- "Achievement" by Cliff Johns (pseudonym of Studio G founder John Gale) (LPSG 2005). Jacquemin was also involved with Studio G, the source of all known library cues on this album.
https://monty-python-music.blogspot.com/2024/06/monty-pythons-previous-record.html

Bruton Music

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Re: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« Reply #7 on: February 03, 2025, 09:20:46 PM »
British libraries - I don't know how it worked overseas - registered each recording with the MCPS and the PRS soon after it had been given a title, in order to receive the mechanical and/or performance royalties it may generate once it had gone out to editors, TV and radio stations etc. So there was always an interim period when a recording was on the MCPS's and PRS's books but had yet to appear on LP, 45 or, if we're going way back, 78. Such titles were registered under 'T' numbers, indicating that for the present they existed purely on tape.

KPM, and subsequently Bruton, kept what they called a "book of 'T' numbers." So, for instance, if a client visited Bruton's office, and there was music from a recent session which had yet to appear on LP, but which Robin Phillips and Aaron Harry thought might interest the client, they'd play the client the tape and explain that the music could be licensed even though it was still only on tape. And thus that music's usage would be processed through the MCPS/PRS under its 'T' number(s).

Some of Francis Monkman's 'Energism' material was licensed in this manner before being issued on LP. John Scott's 'Thriller' music on BRJ 4 'Thriller/Suite of the Hurricane/Suite of the Shark' (1978) was certainly initially registered under 'T' numbers because, as many of you probably know, that music was originally written for the 'Return of the Saint' TV series via a deal with Bruton/ATV Music. In return for paying for the sessions, Bruton was allowed to issue the music following its usage in the series.

ζBUS

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Re: Library Tracks Debuting Before Album Release
« Reply #8 on: February 07, 2025, 08:41:07 PM »
I've found a couple examples of this myself.

The first being two tracks composed by Ronald Compton and published by Parry/Promusic that were heard in MotorWeek's coverage of the 1997 Pikes Peak Hill Climb:

htXXs://video.fc2.com/content/20231015hPXwZYs1 (timestamps - 0:30 and 1:38)

At the start is "America the Beautiful (alt 2)" from PML 1181, and later on is a unique cut of "Arrowhead/Trophy" from PML 1186; both of these albums didn't drop until late '98 or early '99. I'm not sure if these two were simply registered under "T" numbers or if they were released on another label under different names and composers beforehand ("Arrowhead/Trophy" having a deeply late '70s or early '80s sound to me, anyway), and these two tracks are the only ones I know that came from Parry/Promusic to be heard on MotorWeek.

htXXs://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deiBAg8CE54&t=108s

And the other being an example I've found from TNN, the Nashville Network. The track heard in TNN's information service/tickets hotline bumper from 1997 is "The Real Deal" composed by Randy Wachtler for 615 Music. The track apparently didn't see a public release until 2002, when it was included on the company's SFL 1109 album. "The Real Deal" is most likely one of the tracks made by 615 specifically for TNN's bumpers, and the company did also make music tracks for clients many years before launching the Platinum Series of albums.