Low_Roads
4th Level Black Feather
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2004
- Messages
- 8,971
- Points
- 48
Another YouTube project in the works!
I grew up with science-fiction movies from the so-called Golden Age (from the start of the 1950s to roughly the middle of the 1960s) and one thing you notice when you watch a lot of them (especially the low budget, youth-oriented stuff) is a wealth of pop tunes from obscure combos intended to appeal to teenage sensibilities. Back before the internet was a thing, I'd collect the movie audio tracks from TV broadcasts and save them on cassettes for later replay; for a long time, that was the only way to re-experience a movie you happened to like. As a sideline, I sorted out a lot of these cheezy musical numbers and saved them on separate audio cassettes; I had about five 60-minute tapes jammed full of this nonsense, which gives you some idea of how prolific the trend was. Now that YouTube allows for more convenient access, I'll be doing some of the same thing online: here's the first, a rather generic-sounding dance number from "Frankenstein's Daughter", which I've spiced up with edited visuals from the film. If you've never before seen this picture, you'll get a good idea here of what highlights to expect.
https://youtu.be/gMY6R7yT_94
I intend to do a lot of these, maybe one a week. Will post additional links as soon as I get something new done.
I grew up with science-fiction movies from the so-called Golden Age (from the start of the 1950s to roughly the middle of the 1960s) and one thing you notice when you watch a lot of them (especially the low budget, youth-oriented stuff) is a wealth of pop tunes from obscure combos intended to appeal to teenage sensibilities. Back before the internet was a thing, I'd collect the movie audio tracks from TV broadcasts and save them on cassettes for later replay; for a long time, that was the only way to re-experience a movie you happened to like. As a sideline, I sorted out a lot of these cheezy musical numbers and saved them on separate audio cassettes; I had about five 60-minute tapes jammed full of this nonsense, which gives you some idea of how prolific the trend was. Now that YouTube allows for more convenient access, I'll be doing some of the same thing online: here's the first, a rather generic-sounding dance number from "Frankenstein's Daughter", which I've spiced up with edited visuals from the film. If you've never before seen this picture, you'll get a good idea here of what highlights to expect.
https://youtu.be/gMY6R7yT_94
I intend to do a lot of these, maybe one a week. Will post additional links as soon as I get something new done.
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