Jack Shaindlin was born in born in Karasubazar, Crimea (part of the Russian… Read Full Bio ↴Jack Shaindlin was born in born in Karasubazar, Crimea (part of the Russian Empire at the time) on April 14, 1909, and died on September 22, 1978 in New York City. He began his musical career as a pianist in silent movie halls, after relocating along with his mother and brother to America on a music scholarship to a Chicago school after his father was allegedly shot and killed at his local coal production plant he opperated. His recordings of Nickelodeon piano music are historical and significant. His early years in Vaudeville and at The Brooklyn Navy Yard included stints with Lillian Gish, W.C. Fields and many others. In the late 1940s he was the musical director of the Carnegie Pops Orchestra at Carnegie Hall. He was cited by President Truman for his war contributions for his work on the documentary Tanks. In the 1960s he was solicited by Gypsy Rose Lee to compose a revue for her to be held in Manhattan; it never materialized.
He composed numerous scores for Louis De Rochemont for the Cinerama films of the 1950s. He was also responsible for the score to Arthur Penn's classic film Mickey One, starring Warren Beattey. He contributed to many television scores, including Father Knows Best, Deputy Dog, Rocky & Bullwinkle, The Jetsons and more. Upon formal retirement in the early 1970s he became musical consultant to Madison Square Garden.
He had children by 2 different marriages. He had a son and daughter with his first wife, Ruth (Lamont) Shaindlin (who later married Sigmund Gottlieb and passed away in 1997) and 5 sons with his widow, Natalie Shaindlin who resides in New England.
He composed numerous scores for Louis De Rochemont for the Cinerama films of the 1950s. He was also responsible for the score to Arthur Penn's classic film Mickey One, starring Warren Beattey. He contributed to many television scores, including Father Knows Best, Deputy Dog, Rocky & Bullwinkle, The Jetsons and more. Upon formal retirement in the early 1970s he became musical consultant to Madison Square Garden.
He had children by 2 different marriages. He had a son and daughter with his first wife, Ruth (Lamont) Shaindlin (who later married Sigmund Gottlieb and passed away in 1997) and 5 sons with his widow, Natalie Shaindlin who resides in New England.
Symphony Moderne
Jack Shaindlin Lyrics
We have lyrics for these tracks by Jack Shaindlin:
I'm Tickled Pink I'm tickled pink That things are rosy And skies are blue onc…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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@garfeldi_gaming
I love this guy’s music. I think it was used in a few episodes of Ren and Stimpy
@marcelaalvarenga4333
I love his songs as well and yes you are correct.
@wmbrown6
Another heavy user of production music, in the UK, was "The Benny Hill Show." I have nailed down all but two pieces used in "The Short Happy Life of Maurice Dribble" sketch. IMDb, in "The Best of Benny Hill" which featured that sketch, cited among the pieces used in the film "Foxtrot" by Emil Cadkin and Jack Cookerly (a.k.a. "Pleasant Neutral Foxtrot," OK-450, as from the Sam Fox library, probably OK-452 or OK-455/A or OK-456/A for the short cue at 2:34), and "The Empty Jug" by Robin Cree and Stanley Glasser. I have not, on this site, heard either in their normal speed (apparently Thames played both at 80 RPM to match the 4x speed in which it was filmed), but the cues are at 1:52, 2:34 (another variant), 2:36 and 4:43 for the one piece, and 5:38 for the second, on this clip:
https://youtu.be/EAnJDnwE8I0
@fromthesidelines
2:52- "Thoroughfare" was also featured in Thomas J. Valentino's "Major Records" production music library- and used extensively in Commonwealth Pictures' 1950's reissues of the silent "Farmer Al Falfa" {"Farmer Grey"} cartoons.
@SteveCarras
Joe oriole in Felix used Winston Sharples stuff