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34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Maddeningly memorable background music
These sixteen production library compositions, used variously in educational shorts, commercials, television shows and feature films, constitute some of the most invisible, yet best remembered, musical melodies in American culture. Even stranger is that most of this music was produced by the British KPM company. Further examples (including EMI and Pye's contributions to...
Published on February 12, 2002 by hyperbolium

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6 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Entertainingly dated corporate music (3.5 stars)
You gotta love an album where every song sounds like "Ren & Stimpy" music. One word comes to mind when listening to this music - industry. This music was prepackaged by industries for industries. It was most likely used in (but not limited to) commercials and early educational films (the really campy ones). Viewed today, this music is an entertaining slice of camp. Its so...
Published on October 16, 2005 by TimothyFarrell22


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34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Maddeningly memorable background music, February 12, 2002
This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
These sixteen production library compositions, used variously in educational shorts, commercials, television shows and feature films, constitute some of the most invisible, yet best remembered, musical melodies in American culture. Even stranger is that most of this music was produced by the British KPM company. Further examples (including EMI and Pye's contributions to the canon) can be found on UK anthologies such as "The Sound Gallery" and "The Sound Spectrum." The collected composers and arrangers construct brilliantly memorable productions whose purpose is to serve as musical beds beneath narration or to signal mood and plot shifts in films and television programs.

Though not designed as firmly for the background as true Muzak [tm], there is still an unnerving contextual shift in compiling these tracks for foreground listening. Though originally used in more subliminal contexts, these tunes have been drawn on in recent years as a simple way to evoke nostalgic moods, with or without irony in mind. In addition to appearances on boomer throwbacks like Nick at Night and Ren & Stimpy, these titles also appear in films like "The Hudsucker Proxy" and "Natural Born Killers." The most recognizable tune (at least, for 1960's television viewers) will be Wilfred Burns' "Stop Gap," which served as the theme to "Truth or Consequences." You can't help but feel that Bob Barker will step out in front of the curtain at any moment.

As calculated as this music may be, its composition, arrangement and performance hold tremendous charms. This is more mood music than easy listening, in that its purpose is to attract your attention and shape your experience, rather than provide any sort of sedation. Many of the musical cues will haunt you with inscrutably faint memories of products like Vaseline Intensive Care Lotion and Midol. This is an excellent volume for listening or for adding unique musical cues to your home video.

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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars So that's what it's called., May 20, 2003
This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
What a knockout collection of all the snippets of music that you never seem to hear all the way through or know anything about. Here is some of the most popular production music produced from 1950 to 1980. Most of the tracks come from England but three are from continental Europe (Curley Shirley, Speaking Guitar and Toys for the Boys) with the orchestration just a bit more quirky and strident than English library music. Unfortunately the notes give very little information about the arrangers and orchestras. All of the tracks are beautifully performed and recorded, as one would expect from music that was produced to be sold over and over again in the commercial arena. I always found it annoying that a lot of production music is not available to the public so I was very pleased to get this CD.

If you are a fan of this musical genre click over to Amazon UK and look out for the `Test Card Music' series on Apollo Records (or checkout their website) they are up to volume eight so far. Each CD has sixty minutes plus and this brings me to why I only gave `Music for TV Dinners' four stars, I would have expected a lot more than the thirty-four minutes it contains, after all there is plenty of production music available. The second volume (almost thirty-five minutes) would easily have fitted on this disc making it real value for money.

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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely heavenly, November 14, 2001
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This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
I was born in 1978, so all of this music is before my time. But man oh man, this is the kind of stuff that makes me wish I was alive in the 50s. This compilation of production music is positively stunning. It effectively captures the feel of late 50s mass consumerism in music. This CD has got it all - plucky pizzacato strings, fast, upbeat tempos, and the lure of the vibraphone.

This CD is a wonderful listen, although it is a bit short clocking in at just under 35 minutes.

This is an excellent album, and I would hope that we'll see more of these releases from Scamp records in the future. They've already released a "TV Dinners" album from the 60s and it was o-kay, but let's hope they crank it back a decade to give us another album of this caliber.

Gotta have it!

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars SONIC EQUIVALENT OF KLEENEX, AND EVERY BIT AS USEFUL!, October 20, 2003
This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
Do you know what "production music" is? It's disposable music (hence my allusion to Kleenex,) composed by lesser-known musicians, sort of like the indy MP3-download bands in our times. It is sold by the yard for use (and reuse after reuse) in TV shows, advertisements, industrial films etc.

You wouldn't expect a Ninth Symphony from this genre, at least by its definition, but this compilation of "TV Dinners" is fabulous! Every number is perfectly, splendidly evocative of memories that may not even be our own. If you buy the notion that we have a collective unconscious, this is what our collective unconscious whistles when it's the late night show.

Come to think of it, although the title says "TV Dinners", I use it as background music for studying, sleeping, doing laundry...it is a bit more psychedelic and thus interesting than jazz for instance, which is just another musical doctrine.

Open your mind, and give it a try. Especially if you like lounge music in general (K&D, Thievery, etc.)

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Goofy but wonderful, May 27, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
If you've ever wished to live within an episode of "Leave it to Beaver" or "The Donna Reed Show" you'll need a sound track. This disc is perfect for that. Put it on while your stuck in traffic and everything will seem a little less serious or urgent. It's a lighthearted cure for a sick world.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very good...and so nostalgic!, December 6, 1998
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This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
People who grew up with these songs will find this CD incredibly nostalgic. Who can forget "Sleepy Shores" and its wonderful piano solo, or "In the Limelight", so uplifting. This is instrumental music from the 50's and 60's that was written for TV commercials and sitcoms. Once you listen to it, you become attached to it and you never want to let go. It is not for everyone, but if you want to remember and smile, buy this CD.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fun, nostalgic, January 30, 2003
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This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
This CD is a fun collection of quirky 60's type plucky music. We listen to it just to give us a lift. Recently we listened to it with friends at a BBQ. All four of us laughed like we had no cares in the world that night, and it was definitely the music that spurred us along. Great party CD.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Can i have a second helping?, September 21, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
Ever wanted to escape? This is the cd to help you do that very thing. Pick a favorite track, i think not. Each one has it's own flavor! It would be like picking one of your children as your favorite over the others.I love this cd so much i want...no, I need more music like it. Anyone have any ideas for me?
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Wrap my World in Foil and Heat It Up, March 10, 2007
This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
Music for TV Dinners is a compilation of music composed by artists working for KPM, a British firm that developed a niche for providing music scores for commercial and industrial films during the 1950's and 1960's. I purchased this CD so I could liven up my home videos by adding some campy music tracks to them. The CD is great and while you may not be able to listen to the disk in a single sitting, listening to a few tracks at a time can immediately transport you back to childhood days and the scratchy 1950's/1960's era educational films they were still showing in my grade school when I was growing up in the 1970's. After loading this disk on to my I-pod, I discovered it adds a certain surreal quality to my morning commute- nothing quite like walking through the streets of a large American city in the middle of a morning rush hour while listening to "Happy Go Lively". It's a hoot.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome Buy, March 11, 2006
By 
James Burke (California USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Music for TV Dinners (Audio CD)
This item is great, I dunno why I find the 50's era so facinating. Is it the cars....? Nope. Is it the stylish appliances? Nope. I know....its gotta be the music.

Pop this CD in and prepare to be transported back 50 years. Some tracks make you feel like you are in one of those vintage infomercials, or even move you to go and bake a cake for your perfect family.

If you are a fan of this type of vintage music, I recommend you go and buy this one. You shouldn't be disappointed.
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Music for TV Dinners
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