[quote name=\'Dsmith\' date=\'Jan 2 2004, 01:43 AM\'][quote name=\'chris319\' date=\'Jan 1 2004, 04:52 PM\'] Score Productions/Edd Kalehoff still have some stuff up their sleeves: P+, Super Password, Tattletales I, Concentration, Trivia Trap, Card Sharks II, TTTT '80, He Said/She Said to name a few. Hal Hidey has Play the Percentages and Bullseye. Bob Cobert has just about been exhausted. There may not be a clean version of the '60s IGAS march as that show used a studio band -- same with the various versions of BTC. There is no shortage of titles, IMO. Perhaps Kalehoff is one of the people reluctant to license his stuff.
If you went back to the Paul Taubman era there's Twenty One, Tic Tac Dough and others but, having used studio bands, there may not be clean versions sans announcers and applause. Yet there has to be a clean version of Jack Meakin's version of "Hooray for Captain Spaulding" somewhere.
This is not intended to start a series of "wish list" posts but is merely a recital of what's available. [/quote]
Who did some of the Barris themes? (later Newlywed Game, 3's a Crowd, Treasure Hunt). I don't seem to recall ever seeing much for music credits on his shows.[/quote]
Barris wrote the themes for almost all of his shows. From 1978 until he sold the company and left the country for the Riviera, the arrangements and new music were done by Milton DeLugg--DeLugg also shared credit with Barris for "The Gong Show" theme and probably shared credit for the "$1.98 Beauty Show" closing theme ("You win the croooowwwwnnnnn/And a dollar-ninety-eigggghhhttt..."). Lee Ringuette was much like Stan Blits--he selected the music, supervised any edits or remixing and cued the audio men during tapings--but he wasn't a composer or arranger. Ringuette's predecessor, Frank Jaffe, was credited as a producer on the 1973 Barris LP "Themes from TV Game Shows," but I imagine that neither he nor *his* predecessor, Barris' first wife Lyn, were musicians.