I'm trying to put together what would go in my iPod if I had one. And could get the music.
When it was still Stardust, the Worthless Classics format still had all these great instrumentals, and I know what most of them are, but there are a few I can't identify since the DJs didn't tend to say what they were. Someone on this site told me "Strawberry Fields Forever" was by The Hollyridge Strings. There are others by Billy Vaughn, Bert Kaempfert and Nelson Riddle that I know. Also "Canadian Sunset" and the song about the Black Forest. And of course Roger Williams, Henry Mancini and Ferrante and Teicher. Since there are no lyrics, I have no clue how to identify those that I don't know. One sounds sort of like "Born to Lose" by Ray Charles and is part of the music sample I heard online when I had the rare opportunity to try the Muzak and DMX formats.
Dial Global may play some of these and I just haven't heard them. The affiliate played one on the morning show so I should have called the station and asked (the DJ didn't play it at a time when it would be identified), I suppose.
When it was still Stardust, the Worthless Classics format still had all these great instrumentals, and I know what most of them are, but there are a few I can't identify since the DJs didn't tend to say what they were. Someone on this site told me "Strawberry Fields Forever" was by The Hollyridge Strings. There are others by Billy Vaughn, Bert Kaempfert and Nelson Riddle that I know. Also "Canadian Sunset" and the song about the Black Forest. And of course Roger Williams, Henry Mancini and Ferrante and Teicher. Since there are no lyrics, I have no clue how to identify those that I don't know. One sounds sort of like "Born to Lose" by Ray Charles and is part of the music sample I heard online when I had the rare opportunity to try the Muzak and DMX formats.
Dial Global may play some of these and I just haven't heard them. The affiliate played one on the morning show so I should have called the station and asked (the DJ didn't play it at a time when it would be identified), I suppose.