Left Bank Two

"Left Bank Two" is a jazz music piece of De Wolfe library music for vibraphone, double bass, acoustic guitar and brushed drums composed by Wayne Hill[1] in 1963 and performed by the Noveltones, a group of session musicians from the Netherlands. The session was directed by Dutch musician and studio manager Frans Mijts. [2] In the United Kingdom, it was used in "The Gallery" sequence during the children's television programmes Vision On, in which the art sent into the programme by young viewers was displayed, and subsequently in the equivalent segment in early series of Take Hart, a programme presented by Tony Hart, formerly a co-presenter on Vision On.[3] It was also used later on in the 2000s for the Gallery segment in SMart.

The recording was issued as a 10 inch single by De Wolfe in 1964 as the B-side of the title Left Bank One [4] and re-issued as a 7 inch single during the 1970s (with Left Bank Two as the A-Side)[5] to tie in with the popularity of Vision On. Left Bank One sounds rather similar to Left Bank Two'but isn't the same song. It is a vibraphone led instrumental with guitar vamping and brushes for backing with a matching/similar tempo but is a completely different composition.[6]

Library music by Wayne Hill was also used for the theme tune of the ATV television show The Power Game (1965-1969), the startup music for Ulster Television called The Antrim Road[7] and some film soundtracks.[8][9] The Noveltones name was also used for a number of other De Wolfe recordings.[10]

The track was used as background music in the 2008 PlayStation 3 video game LittleBigPlanet and used again in LittleBigPlanet 2, the latter as an 8-bit version of the track. The piece has been used in a number of adverts, including for Volkswagen and Castrol Oil.[3]

gollark: Also, there would be animations constantly which add no actual value but add 50% to the CPU use.
gollark: Anyway, if you could make it past that to one of the content pages, they would each have their own loading screens, probably prompt you for the newsletter again, have more irrelevant shiny images, and have excessively large text and a UI designed for 3.5" mobile phone screens.
gollark: They would have close buttons but they would only work 50% of the time.
gollark: Oh, and ones asking for cookie consent and newsletter signup.
gollark: But there would also be a popup asking you to download the app, which would not actually work because I'm not making an app, as well as one asking you to add it to your home screen as a PWA.

References


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