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The Music Scene (TV series)

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TV

Theme music composer
  
Patrick Williams

First episode date
  
22 September 1969

Number of seasons
  
1

8.2/10
IMDb

Directed by
  
Stan Harris

Composer(s)
  
Patrick Williams

Final episode date
  
12 January 1970

Number of episodes
  
17

The Music Scene (TV series) httpsimagesnasslimagesamazoncomimagesMM

Genre
  
Music chart Variety show

Written by
  
Carl Gottlieb Tony Hendra David Steinberg Richard Schaal Stan Jacobson

Starring
  
David Steinberg Chris Bokeno Larry Hankin Paul Reid Roman Christopher Ross Lily Tomlin

Network
  
American Broadcasting Company

Cast
  
David Steinberg, Lily Tomlin, Larry Hankin, Roman Wilhelmi

Similar
  
The David Steinberg Show, The New People, Variety show, Inside Comedy, Sit Down Comedy with Davi

The rolling stones music scene 1969


The Music Scene is a television series aired by ABC as part of its Fall 1969 lineup, in the Monday, 7:30 to 8:15 timeslot, primarily featuring rock and pop music.

Contents

Overview

The show had many hosts, with comedian David Steinberg the most frequently-appearing one (Lily Tomlin as well.) Many huge names of the era, including James Brown, Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young, Three Dog Night, Tom Jones on the initial program and Janis Joplin, Bobby Sherman, The Miracles, Sly & the Family Stone, Isaac Hayes, Stevie Wonder, Bo Diddley and Mama Cass Elliot, (who co-hosted as well as performed) among many others, appearing on subsequent shows.

Existing promos initially used to sell this show to ABC affiliates featured the improvisational group The Committee, which featured actor Howard Hesseman (then using the name Don Sturdy), as well as the Rolling Stones. The promos implied that the Stones would be appearing with some regularity on the program. However by the time The Music Scene went on the air, the Committee was nowhere to be seen and the Stones never appeared on the show.

Surprisingly, despite the level of talent presented, this show did not fare well in Nielsen ratings. Advertisers of the era were more interested in shows achieving a mass audience rather than one of primarily younger people who were deemed as having less disposable income than the then-coveted middle aged, middle income viewers that most network programming then targeted. The program was cancelled mid-season. Two DVDs of highlights from the show have been released.

This program and the show that followed it, The New People, are extremely rare examples of U.S. network television programming designed to run for 45 minutes. Indeed, the peculiar length of these programs may have been a key reason for their failure, not just in the ratings, but with advertisers as well; to many an advertiser, there was no such thing as a 45-minute show.

References

The Music Scene (TV series) Wikipedia