Its back - the original Sunday Game tune!!!

Started by neilthemac, May 10, 2008, 03:31:15 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

neilthemac

RTÉ Television today announced that the much-loved original Sunday Game theme tune will be re-instated this year to celebrate 30 years of the popular flagship GAA programme.

The James Last composed theme tune, which was replaced in 2004, has been remastered by music composer John Walsh and will be played on tomorrow's Sunday Game Live on RTÉ Two at 2.45pm, the opening programme of the season.

Paul Byrnes, Executive Editor, GAA and Editor of The Sunday Game said: 'When The Sunday Game theme tune was replaced in 2004 it was part of a remodernisation of The Sunday Game. We very much wanted to make the point that we were updating our Gaelic Games coverage and moving with the times.

'We'll of course continue to have a fresh approach to our coverage this year with three new panellists and a new analysis system, but over the last few seasons we've been inundated with requests from the public to bring it back and this year, the 30th year of The Sunday Game, seemed to be the appropriate time to do it.

'Travelling the length and breadth of the country with The Sunday Game over the last few years, the replacement of the theme tune was always much talked about and lamented.

'It's fitting that the 30th year of The Sunday Game will feature the best of both worlds - a link to the past while looking forward to what promises to be a very exciting Championship season'.

***********************

RTE realised what a mistake they'd made. the BBC would never ditch the match of the day theme song

Zapatista

Quote from: neilthemac on May 10, 2008, 03:31:15 PM
RTÉ Television today announced that the much-loved original Sunday Game theme tune will be re-instated this year to celebrate 30 years of the popular flagship GAA programme.

The James Last composed theme tune, which was replaced in 2004, has been remastered by music composer John Walsh and will be played on tomorrow's Sunday Game Live on RTÉ Two at 2.45pm, the opening programme of the season.

Paul Byrnes, Executive Editor, GAA and Editor of The Sunday Game said: 'When The Sunday Game theme tune was replaced in 2004 it was part of a remodernisation of The Sunday Game. We very much wanted to make the point that we were updating our Gaelic Games coverage and moving with the times.

'We'll of course continue to have a fresh approach to our coverage this year with three new panellists and a new analysis system, but over the last few seasons we've been inundated with requests from the public to bring it back and this year, the 30th year of The Sunday Game, seemed to be the appropriate time to do it.

'Travelling the length and breadth of the country with The Sunday Game over the last few years, the replacement of the theme tune was always much talked about and lamented.

'It's fitting that the 30th year of The Sunday Game will feature the best of both worlds - a link to the past while looking forward to what promises to be a very exciting Championship season'.

***********************

RTE realised what a mistake they'd made. the BBC would never ditch the match of the day theme song

What a OTT press release. Bring back the tune fair enough but don't make me puke with 'Travelling the length and breadth of the country with The Sunday Game over the last few years, the replacement of the theme tune was always much talked about and lamented.  ::)





ziggysego

Quote from: Zapatista on May 10, 2008, 03:38:33 PM
What a OTT press release. Bring back the tune fair enough but don't make me puke with 'Travelling the length and breadth of the country with The Sunday Game over the last few years, the replacement of the theme tune was always much talked about and lamented.  ::)

Well it was.

I welcome the return of the original tune!
Testing Accessibility

bridgegael

"2009 Gaaboard Cheltenham fantasy league winner"

J70

Quote from: ziggysego on May 10, 2008, 04:10:03 PM
Quote from: Zapatista on May 10, 2008, 03:38:33 PM
What a OTT press release. Bring back the tune fair enough but don't make me puke with 'Travelling the length and breadth of the country with The Sunday Game over the last few years, the replacement of the theme tune was always much talked about and lamented.  ::)

Well it was.


There certainly was, at least on this board!

The Real Laoislad

Deadly that the old tune is back..Now we just need to get Glenroe back and all will be well with the world again!
You'll Never Walk Alone.

orangeman

Now we're going places !!!!!!!!!  ;D ;D ;D ;D Dee,dee,dee,dee,dee,deeedeeddddeeeeedeed,deeeeeeeeeddd,eeeeeeeeede,eeeeedeeeeeeeeeeeeede,ddd !!!  ;) :D ;D ;D

Turlough O Carolan

How can any self respecting fiorghael be happy with this. Was James Last not an auld German. Time to ditch this Ayrian shite and use a nice bit of trad. Get a crowd of mucksavages battering at the bodhrans and then we'll know for sure the championship has started.

stew

Quote from: Turlough O Carolan on May 10, 2008, 04:35:42 PM
How can any self respecting fiorghael be happy with this. Was James Last not an auld German. Time to ditch this Ayrian shite and use a nice bit of trad. Get a crowd of mucksavages battering at the bodhrans and then we'll know for sure the championship has started.

:D

I agree.The amount of fawning over the old tune was ridiculous when they were removing it. some boys on here acted like their dog had been shot. I think that tune is complete and utter bollocks and should have been kept where it was, in the bin.
Armagh, the one true love of a mans life.

Tatler Jack

Quote from: Turlough O Carolan on May 10, 2008, 04:35:42 PM
How can any self respecting fiorghael be happy with this. Was James Last not an auld German. Time to ditch this Ayrian shite and use a nice bit of trad. Get a crowd of mucksavages battering at the bodhrans and then we'll know for sure the championship has started.

Maybe Carolan's Cocerto or Planxy Irwin Turlough!!!

magpie seanie


IolarCoisCuain

#11
The press release is nonsense of course. RTÉ screwed up in dropping the tune in the first place and they're just too chicken to admit it. The Sunday Game tune is the sound of the Irish summer. Even people who have no interest in GAA recognise it as such. I'm delighted beyond words it's back.

Keith Duggan has a marvellous Sideline Cut today about this very topic: http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/sport/2008/0510/1210368614493.html




It's official - summer is about to throw in

Keith Duggan

Sat, May 10, 2008

SIDELINE CUT: THE GAELIC fields are trim and freshly marked in white. The changing-rooms are spanking clean. In New York and Longford the kettle is already on the boil. The football championship is upon us and with it comes the sounds of summer.

As the flagship RTÉ show The Sunday Gamecelebrated its 30 years of broadcasts last week, there was much discussion about the enduring legacy of the original signature tune, which was abandoned when the series went for a flashier and more jazzed-up format in tune with with the digital age.

Judging by the comments of former presenters, people hold a deep affection for the old Sunday Game tune. Whether or not it ought to have been retained was rigorously debated at the time; what has become clear is that the tune lives on for the tens of thousands of people to whom it became a Sunday sound as familiar as the bells ringing for Mass.

I am not sure who composed it but it would be a shame if he/she did not live luxuriously on the royalties for the next 20 years because it was a gem - insanely catchy, full of optimistic brass and uplifting drums - and once heard it was never forgotten. Evocative as a national anthem it awoke the child in everyone.

Back when it was common practice for supporters to stop in pubs to catch the highlights on the way home, you would notice grown men becoming kind of giddy and boyish as they stood there slurping pints and allowing the tune to carry them back to the days when they had dreams of one day featuring in the highlights show themselves.

Some day soon, a manager is going to dispense with the motivational speech and simply play an old vinyl copy of the Sunday Game tune before the game. Imagine that drifting from the tunnel in Clones at 10 past three on Ulster final day! Three minutes of that tune at full volume and any team, even one composed of kids from the Ipod generation, will head out through the dressing-room door feeling like gods.

The highlight show remains part of the charm of championship Sundays, even in today's climate of saturation coverage. But even when live matches were seldom shown on television, the championship still formed a bass-note accompaniment to the sounds of summer. People who did not care for championship and had no interest in listening to the radio reports heard it anyway.

The voice of Micheál O'Hehir travelled with people. The Dublin broadcaster has received homage from many quarters but it is no coincidence that his commentaries featured in an early section of Pat McCabe's dark 1995 masterpiece The Dead School, in a passage entitled Sunday Mornings.

Packie and Malachy Dudgeon are "strolling through the bright and colourful streets of the town with the warm breeze blowing and Micheál O'Hehir, the football commentator, sweeping out of every window, getting so excited that you though he was going to lose his mind: 'Yes! He's going through! Thirty yards out! Twenty yards out! Ten yards out! Oh my God! It's high! Yes it's high and it's - over the bar!'"

O'Hehir's voice was so musical and unique that you could not fail to pause and listen but the GAA have been blessed down the years to have so many commentators with the ability to "call" games with a passion and style all their own. Micheál Ó Muircheartaigh is now, of course, the nonpareil, but there are many, particularly from the local radio stations, whose broadcasts are less straightforward communiques than rhapsodic observations of what is happening in the moment.

It often means you can wait 20 minutes just to hear the damn score. But what odds? You can bet that is down to deliberate and delightful ploy rather than oversight.

But on Sundays for the next three months or so, any visitor to a shop or a pub, any customer waiting on tickets at the bus office or anyone sitting on a train beside a man fidgeting with a portable radio and a headset, will hear something of the championship.

We all have friends with absolutely no interest in sport for whom the combination of a GAA broadcast and a car radio brings shivers of the most primitive kind, transported as they are back to those hellishly long afternoons spent on "family" outings when anything from three to eight reluctant youngsters were wedged into the rear of a Cavalier or whatever and driven to both the seaside and the edge of reason by the blaring voice insistently bringing the details of a far-off football game.

When you are a child and have no real concept of time, it is probably true a Gaelic games broadcast can last for the adult equivalent of four days. And worse, it sounds like mathematics being spoken by an excitable teacher. Nothing, not even the "go" on the dodgems and the melting Brunch at the end of it all, could make that journey worthwhile.

The primary object of the All-Ireland football championship is, of course, to find the best team in Ireland. Most years, including this, that team or county tends to be Kerry. But the enduring appeal of the All-Ireland is not really in finding out who will win; it is more about discovering how long the other counties can avoid losing.

As usual, the majority of teams - including the strong teams - have chances varying from slim to none when it comes to winning the Sam Maguire. A glance at the betting confirms the All-Ireland is an absurdly tough competition to win. Only Kerry know how to crack that nut consistently. But even if another Kingdom title is being flagged as little short of an inevitability, it does not stop the beginning of another championship providing a general air of jitter and excitement.

That is because the championship is not so much what happens in the end as what happens along the way. It is about setting out to see if your team can defy your nay-saying and not daring to hope for just one Sunday of unexpected victory over a stronger county (after which anything seems possible).

In the championship, you live for the day. As John McGahern memorably said in a radio interview, "The day is the whole show."

If this week has been proof of anything, it has been that epochs end quickly. The Ahern age is over and with it, we are being told, Ireland's pale version of the Jazz Age. The high-rolling lifestyles are no more and a return to humbler times beckons.

Through the fatness of the last decade, the All-Ireland championship has stayed true to its own rhythms. There is something comforting and familiar about being on the cusp of it all again: 34 teams throwing hats into the ring and brighter evenings on the horizon.

The championship signals the beginning not just of an epic competition but of summertime and all that it entails. It is about optimism and looking on the brighter side - before we all go the way of poor old Malachy Dudgeon.

© 2008 The Irish Times

on the sideline

Is it the original theme tune or a remixed version?  Either way its good to have it back- puts you in the mood for football!

laoisgaa

Quote'Travelling the length and breadth of the country with The Sunday Game over the last few years, the replacement of the theme tune was always much talked about and lamented.

In fairness to Paul Byrnes - I know the man and he does travel the length and breath of the country to games - he'll be in Longford tomorrow. Very dedicated to his job - the Sunday Game team aren't just pretty faces (em) you know!!