Cowboy G-Men (western)
(Syndicated by Telemount-Mutual, 1952)
[its 26 episodes were shot in color, and the last 13
were shot in "3-D" !!, anticipating new TV technology]
Theme: "Western Theme"
[aka: "Western Theme Reel 3 (MUTEL Music Service Title)";
aka: "Theme No. 215" (Capitol "Q" Series Title);
This broad melodic western THEME with its dramatic intro,
resembles "The Old Trail" THEME by Rex Koury used on the
radio and TV series "Gunsmoke". But it is NOT however
the same melody.
The dramatic orchestral introduction was used as a kind
of "logo" for Gene Autry's Flying 'A' productions, and
it was also spliced onto the beginning of several other western
series produced by the company -- including The Range Rider and
Buffalo Bill Jr.
This was a closing THEME remembered by many as a Closing Theme
for Annie Oakley, produced by Gene Autry's Flying 'A' Prods.
although its origins are a bit murky; The MUTEL (Music for
Television) library of David Chudnow often hired B-picture
composers to revise cues originally written for low budget films;
MUTEL suggested the composers could save time for such a low fee
if they used a previously written cue and change a few notes of
the melody; These cues were re-arranged for a 40-piece orchestra
and re-recorded in France under the baton of George Tzipine;
It is not known if Joseph Mullendore was the sole composer of
this piece or whether it was co-written with Herb Taylor, who was
one of the MUTEL composers (who also composed the "Twenty Mule
Train" THEME for "Death Valley Days), by Herschel Burke Gilbert,
or by someone else MUTEL hired;
It is also possible that this piece -- which closely resembled Rex
Koury's "Old Trail" THEME for "Gunsmoke" -- was written as a
"sound-a-like" of "Old Trail" expressly for the MUTEL library, or
whether it was taken from a B-picture End Title originally written
years earlier by Mullendore, Taylor or Gilbert;
MUTEL also licensed this piece as one of the THEMEs for the series
"Sky King" under the MUTEL title "Western Theme" with a fictitious
name on cue sheets of "Joseph Solon" as verified by the CBS Music
Director in the 1980s; Later the name "George Lee" was attached to
the BMI credit for "Western Theme Reel 3"; these names apparently
were used to collect royalties since no known U.S. radio/TV/film
composers existed by those names;
MUTEL sub-licensed their library to Capitol Special Products, a
division of Capitol Records, for uses on live local radio & TV
which named this library the "Capitol 'Q' Series." From this
source many local stations used the THEME to introduce local
western movie shows;
So this piece was one of the most famous (but anonymous) THEMEs
heard on television during the 1950s.
The fictitious names George Lee and Joseph Solon were pseudonyms
for collecting royalties used by David Chudnow's MUTEL Music Service;
One ghost writer might possibly have been Herb Taylor with or
without others; Joseph Mullendore was the name of a real composer.]
Composers: Joseph ("Joe") Mullendore (ASCAP/BMI),
George Lee (BMI), and
Joseph Solon (BMI)
1978 Publishers: Byron Music Company (BMI)
1999 Publishers: Byron Music Company (BMI)
of Beverly Hills, CA
Copyright Date:
Renewal Date:
Recordings:
From the MUTEL music library
[original versions]
78rpm reference disks in the Capitol "Q" Series library
Q-99: cut 1: Theme No. 215 - OPENING (Western-Full)
Q-99: cut 2: Theme No. 215 - CLOSING (Western-Full)
Q-101: cut 1: Theme No. 215 - Long Version (Western)
CD: "TV Classic Themes: 25th Anniversary Edition"
Breakable Records DPMC 105 (1999)
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