翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Sounds of Sand
・ Sounds of Silence
・ Sounds of Silence (disambiguation)
・ Sounds of Silence (documentary)
・ Sounds of Summer Tour 2015
・ Sounds of Sunshine
・ Sounds of Swami
・ Sounds of Synanon
・ Sounds of the 20th Century
・ Sounds of the 60s
・ Sounds of the Animal Kingdom
・ Sounds of The Four Tops
・ Sounds of the Loop
・ Sounds of the Satellites
・ Sounds of the Season
Sounds of the Seventies
・ Sounds of the Seventies (Time-Life Music)
・ Sounds of the Sixties
・ Sounds of the Soul Poetry Slam
・ Sounds of the Spirit
・ Sounds of the Underground
・ Sounds of the Universe
・ Sounds of Then
・ Sounds of Unity and Love
・ Sounds of Vancouver 2010
・ Sounds of Violence
・ Sounds Orchestral
・ Sounds So Good
・ Sounds So Good (song)
・ Sounds That Can't Be Made


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Sounds of the Seventies : ウィキペディア英語版
Sounds of the Seventies

''Sounds of the Seventies'' was a BBC radio programme broadcast on weekdays, initially 18:00-19:00, subsequently 22:00-00:00, on Radio One during the early 1970s. Among the DJs were Mike Harding, Alan Black, Pete Drummond, Anne Nightingale, John Peel (who alone had two shows per week), and Bob Harris. For contractual reasons one of Peel's two weekly shows was known as Top Gear, but the format and content of the show on every weekday were in essence identical for most of the early 1970s.
Unlike most other Radio One programmes, Sounds of the Seventies concentrated on albums rather than singles, and rock rather than pop. Sessions recorded exclusively by the BBC and featuring major musicians of the day were a regular feature; the Musicians' Union insisted that "needle time"--time given to playing recorded music—should be limited.
In 1974 the Thursday show was replaced by a show without DJs known as the "Thursday Night Sequence". Album tracks were played without interruption or introduction, and Pete Drummond gave the artist name, album name and track name after the piece.
In early 1975 Sounds of the Seventies was dropped. In September of that year the loss of a nightly slot for progressive rock music was restored by the introduction of the nightly John Peel show, which initially broadcast from 23:00 to 00:00. Peel carried on and expanded the practice of hosting exclusive sessions by major musicians. The Peel show format lasted until Peel's death in 2004.
==Theme Tune==
The theme tune for the programme was usually a George Martin piece known as "Theme One", played in baroque style on a church organ. It was the version by Van der Graaf Generator. Martin had written the piece some years earlier as a theme tune for Radio 1. Variations included Mike Harding's use of the central guitar solo from "Heartbreaker" by Led Zeppelin, and Alan Black's regular closing theme, which was the piano and voice coda from Pilgrim's Progress by Procol Harum.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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