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The song had two versions, the Disney version, which incorporated words/names like "Go Go Gadget" and "Claw" and the album version, which has no reference to Inspector Gadget with the exception of the line "I can freak you with my gadget." The group had to record another version of the song, the "Disney" version because their album version had ...
The original Inspector Gadget theme song was composed by American composer Shuki Levy (who also wrote the themes for Power Rangers and Digimon), and was based on Edvard Grieg's "In the Hall of the Mountain King". [31] Several early rap records sampling the Inspector Gadget theme song were released in 1985.
The song incorporates portions of the melody from the theme song of the animated series Inspector Gadget. [2] The original issue of the song featured a line where Slick Rick mockingly sings a verse from the Beatles' "Michelle" (1965), but all subsequent reissues have removed this line since the rights to the song were never secured.
Inspector Gadget is a 1999 American superhero comedy film directed by David Kellogg and written by Kerry Ehrin and Zak Penn from a story by Ehrin and Dana Olsen.Loosely based on the 1983-1986 animated television series of the same name, the film stars Matthew Broderick as the title character, Rupert Everett as Dr. Claw, Michelle Trachtenberg as Penny, and Dabney Coleman as Chief Quimby.
The second section of Klaus Schulze's long composition “Ludwig II” from the album X has a theme built on an ascending Hungarian minor scale. The song “Worth It” by Fifth Harmony features a saxophone riff written in this scale. The theme tune from the 1983 animated TV series “Inspector Gadget” [18] uses this scale.
The Inspector (Theme from A Shot in the Dark) – Henry Mancini; Inspector Gadget – Shuki Levy and Haim Saban; Inspector Morse – Barrington Pheloung; Interpol Calling – Clifton Parker; The Invaders – Dominic Frontiere; The Invisible Man (1958) – Sydney John Kay; The Invisible Man (1975) – Henry Mancini; Ironside – Quincy Jones ...
The people from Saban Entertainment wanted him to use the word "Go" since Haim Saban had success using that lyric in the Inspector Gadget theme song, which was the first hit theme he and writing partner Shuki Levy were credited with. [1] After two and a half hours, the song that resulted was the show's theme song, "Go Go Power Rangers". [5]
The theme song is slightly similar to the one in the Gadget Boy series; in fact, Gadget Boy himself made a cameo appearance in one episode. Gadget was the only main character to appear in this series; others such as Penny, Brain, Chief Quimby (although mentioned by Gadget in some episodes), Capeman, Dr. Claw, M.A.D. Cat and the M.A.D. Agents ...