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Danger Man – Series 1 "The Danger Man Theme" Edwin Astley, series 2–4 "High Wire" Edwin Astley, series 2–4 in the U.S. as Secret Agent, "Secret Agent Man" theme composed by P. F. Sloan and Steve Barri, and recorded by Johnny Rivers.
Sleep is an eight-and-a-half hour concept album based around the neuroscience of sleep [3] by German-British composer Max Richter. [4] [5] It was released on September 4, 2015, accompanied by a one-hour version with variations, From Sleep, [6] later remixed as Sleep Remixes.
All-Time Top 100 TV Themes, prefaced on the cover with "Tee-Vee Toons Presents", is a two-disc compilation album of television theme songs released by TVT Records in 2005 as a spinoff of the Television's Greatest Hits series. [1] It included 100 themes taken from the seven volumes of the series plus newer themes from television programs that ...
"Dream", sometimes referred to as "Dream (When You're Feeling Blue)", is a jazz and pop standard with words and music written by Johnny Mercer in 1944. He originally wrote it as a theme for his radio program . [ 1 ]
The Best of Bob Dylan's Theme Time Radio Hour is a series of four compilation albums featuring songs Bob Dylan played on his shows as a deejay on the XM Satellite Radio and Sirius XM Satellite Radio program, Theme Time Radio Hour, from May 2006 through April 2009. Each album in the series includes 52 songs on two CDs.
On the back of the success of "Theme for a Dream" (a top-three hit in March 1961), Richard decided to record several "dream" themed pop standards. [3]Recorded in May at EMI Studios, these tracks were released as an EP, appropriately named Dream, in November 1961. [4]
Lux Æterna (Classical Latin: [ˈluːks ae̯ˈtɛrna], Ecclesiastical Latin: [ˈluks eˈterna]; "eternal light") is an orchestral composition by Clint Mansell.Performed by the Kronos Quartet, it forms a leitmotif in the 2000 film Requiem for a Dream, and is the penultimate piece in the movie's soundtrack.
"The Story of an Hour" is a short story written by Kate Chopin on April 19, 1894. It was originally published in Vogue on December 6, 1894, as " The Dream of an Hour ". It was later reprinted in St. Louis Life on January 5, 1895, as "The Story of an Hour".