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ALOE BLACC The most pleasant part of the HBO series "How to Make It in America" is routinely over before the show even begins: the theme song, "I Need A Dollar" by the singer-rapper Aloe Blacc.
When the show begins, the theme tune from the classic US soap opera Dallas blasts out of the loudspeakers.
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Mr. Sigman's last big hit, "Where Do I Begin?," the theme for the 1970 movie "Love Story," illustrated his conviction that the best songs reflected natural conversational language.
It is during these moments that the solo violin begins the familiar theme.
Here's where I pick up the first theme and restate it and then begin the major theme.
After all, his music pervades American society: the fearful two-note motif from "Jaws," the five-note intergalactic message from "Close Encounters of the Third Kind," the fanfares from the themes for "Star Wars" and "Raiders of the Lost Ark," the slightly off-kilter melody beginning the "Harry Potter" theme.
The disc begins with the theme from Schindler's List, written by John Williams, "probably the most famous violin music ever written for film".
Despondent, Brian then begins singing the theme song to 1972 NBC sitcom Sanford and Son.
As Mr. Entremont began the main theme of the first movement, some fudged passages and blurry pedaling seemed worrisome signs.
Former defense secretary and CIA director Leon Panetta -- Obama and Clinton's partner in taking out Bin Laden -- began the ongoing theme of compare and contrast.
The second touch began with the theme from "Indiana Jones".
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com