The Secret Service


Silva Screen 07/15/2022 CD
 

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# Track   Duration
1.Century 21 Logo 
2.Robbery at Healey Automation 
3.The Secret Service Main Titles 
4.Calling Father Unwin 
5.Operation Intercept 
6.250 Hours 
7.Sabotage 
8.Aerial Spies 
9.The Unwilling Accomplice 
10.Feathered Bombers 
11.Ambush 
12.Bufflers Halt Reopens 
13.The Train Hijack 
14.The Secret Service End Titles 
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The Secret Service

Added on Monday, June 27, 2022  

The Secret Service

Silva Screen Records presents the world premiere commercial soundtrack release for the 1969 British sci-fi series The Secret Service created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and starring Keith Alexander, Gary Files, David Healy, Stanley Unwin, Jeremy Wilkin and David Graham and composed by Barry Gray !

Silva Screen Records presents the world premiere commercial soundtrack release for the 1969 British sci-fi series The Secret Service created by Gerry and Sylvia Anderson and starring Keith Alexander, Gary Files, David Healy, Stanley Unwin, Jeremy Wilkin and David Graham and composed by Barry Gray !

The origins of the series The Secret Service began in 1968 whilst working at Pinewood Studios, Gerry Anderson bumped into a familiar face of stage and screen: comic actor Stanley Unwin.

With his whimsical charm and hilarious gibberish double talk (playfully christened ‘Unwinese’) Unwin had earned great popularity throughout the 50s and 60s and the Anderson’s immediately knew that they had found someone to base their next puppet series on.

For several years the Century 21 team had toyed with directly basing a puppet character on a real-life actor, now the time had come to make it a reality.

Duly, the Andersons developed a premise around Unwin, returning to their ‘unlikely spy’ scenario which had worked so well with Joe 90, they created ‘Father’ Unwin, a kindly priest who, despite outwardly disappearing into whimsy, doubles as a determined agent for British Intelligence. In the series the lines would be blurred even further between the miniature Supermarionation world and reality, as live action footage of Stanley Unwin would also be used in the series.

To appropriately reflect the The Secret Service’s premise and compliment the gentle title sequence created to introduce the series, Barry Gray decided step completely away from his usual attention-grabbing themes and write a three-part fugue in the style of the Baroque composer Bach.

To perform the vocals, the Mike Sammes Singers were hired, the vocal group who Gray had used on the Supercar theme back in 1961. Once coupled with soft organ and minimalist percussion, a truly unique piece of inventive music was born to bookend Father Unwin’s adventures, which perfectly captured the off-beat nature of the series.

( - Silva Screen Records - )


More info at: Official Web Site Silva Screen Records

More info at: Gerry Anderson Fandom



The Secret Service

Added on Tuesday, June 14, 2022  

The Secret Service

The origins of the series The Secret Service began in 1968 whilst working at Pinewood Studios, Gerry Anderson bumped into a familiar face of stage and screen: comic actor Stanley Unwin. With his whimsical charm and hilarious gibberish double talk (playfully christened ‘Unwinese’) Unwin had earned great popularity throughout the 50s and 60s and the Anderson's immediately knew that they had found someone to base their next puppet series on. For several years the Century 21 team had toyed with directly basing a puppet character on a real-life actor, now the time had come to make it a reality. Duly, the Andersons developed a premise around Unwin, returning to their ‘unlikely spy’ scenario which had worked so well with Joe 90, they created ‘Father’ Unwin, a kindly priest who, despite outwardly disappearing into whimsy, doubles as a determined agent for British Intelligence. In the series the lines would be blurred even further between the miniature Supermarionation world and reality, as live action footage of Stanley Unwin would also be used in the series.
To appropriately reflect the The Secret Service’s premise and compliment the gentle title sequence created to introduce the series, Barry Gray decided step completely away from his usual attention-grabbing themes and write a three-part fugue in the style of the Baroque composer Bach. To perform the vocals, the Mike Sammes Singers were hired, the vocal group who Gray had used on the Supercar theme back in 1961. Once coupled with soft organ and minimalist percussion, a truly unique piece of inventive music was born to bookend Father Unwin's adventures, which perfectly captured the off-beat nature of the series.



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