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The first season of the show had a dark and ominous theme written by Lalo Schifrin that seemed to fit the hard action and violence of the season; the main title version was edited down from the chase climax cue of his score for the pilot episode (the climax contains the shot of Hutch leaping off a fire escape and landing on his car which ...
Note: Originally banned by the BBC, the episode "The Fix" was first shown on British television on 31 May 1999 on Channel 4 as part of a Starsky & Hutch theme night. Edward Andrews has an uncredited role as the crook in the police station who was just arrested by Starsky, and Robert Loggia has a role as the crime boss Benjamin Forest.
Starsky & Hutch – first season by Lalo Schifrin, revised theme: ("Gotcha") – second and fourth seasons by Tom Scott and third season by Mark Snow; Star Wars: Forces of Destiny – Ryan Shore; Station Zero – ("We're On Station Zero") – Randall Lawrence; performed by Tekomin "Tek" Williams, Carlito Rodriguez, Riggs Morales, Quanzilla
Riding high on the success of his role in the hit TV show Starsky and Hutch, Soul returned to singing, which had been one of his early career choices.His debut, the Tony Macaulay-written-and-produced song was a worldwide smash, spending four weeks at No. 1 on the UK Singles Chart in January and February 1977, [4] and a single week at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 in April 1977.
Mark Snow (born Martin Fulterman; August 26, 1946) is an American composer for film and television. [1] [2] Among his most famous compositions is the theme music for science fiction television series The X-Files.
David Solberg (Soul) was born in Chicago, Illinois, on August 28 1943, then spent the next 12 years between South Dakota and post-Second World War Berlin.
[1] [3] After that, he worked as a session musician. In 1970, Quincy Jones said of him: "Tom Scott, the saxophonist; he's 21, and out of sight! Plays any idiom you can name, and blows like crazy on half a dozen horns." [4] Scott wrote the theme tunes for the television shows Starsky and Hutch and The Streets of San Francisco. [5]
Starsky and Hutch on Playboy Island is a 1977 television crime film directed by George McCowan and starring David Soul and Paul Michael Glaser. It was split into 2 parts as the first two episodes of season 3 of the Starsky and Hutch TV series.
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