Great theme song!!!!


Does anybody know the name of the group who sang it??

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In case you didn't find out:

TVGuide.com's Televisionary had this response to your question.

Friday, September 5, 2003


Question: Help! I've been trying to figure out the lyrics to the theme from Here Come the Brides. While we're at it, what's the history of this theme song? I know Perry Como sang a version with similar lyrics. He never sang the theme, did he? Also, I'd appreciate any of your brilliant insight into this show. Thanks for any info! ? Barry

Televisionary: Don't thank me yet — I can only get you part of the way there, to be perfectly honest. When the ABC series launched in September 1968, it boasted only an instrumental version of Hugo Montenegro, Ernie Sheldon and Jack Keller's "Seattle." In October, Como did indeed record a version with lyrics and made out quite well with it; the single made it all the way to No. 38 (No. 2 on the adult contemporary chart). And Brides co-star Bobby Sherman, who launched a successful teenybopper-pop run with the show (he was David Cassidy before David Cassidy, essentially), later recorded his own version of it, too.

Neither, however, was used as the theme. A later version of the show's opening featured the New Establishment's version, which, as you say, was different than Como's.

Now, here's the sticky part. I've got most of the series version's lyrics right here:

The bluest sky you've ever seen, in Seattle
And the hills the greenest green, in Seattle
Like a beautiful child
Growing up, free and wild
Full of hopes and full of fears
Full of laughter, full of tears
Full of dreams to last the years
In Seattle

When you find your own true love, you will know it
By his smile, by the look in his eyes
Scent of pine trees in the air
(Line missing)
Look out everyone, here come the brides

See that missing line up there? That's where I admit that I can't for the life of me figure out what the heck those people are singing. It sounds something like "and some stand around and stare" (and some webpages have it that way), but that makes no sense since the show was about lusty lumberjacks and the women looking to love them, not shellshocked vets, murderous zombies or junkies. So if anyone thinks they really know what the line is, or believes I got it right and wants to explain it, by all means let me know.

As fans know, the setup of the show, originally created as a movie musical by Rainmaker playwright N. Richard Nash, was this: Manly logger and Bridal Veil Mountain landowner Jason Bolt (Robert Brown) ran his operation with the help of his two brothers, Jeremy (Sherman) and Joshua (Starsky and Hutch's David Soul). Problem was, his men needed women, and there were precious few of them in 1870s Seattle. So he cut a deal with no-good competitor Aaron Stempel (Star Trek's Mark Lenard). Stempel lent him the money to travel to Massachusetts, round up 100 potential brides and bring them back. But if any of the gals left within a year, the Bolt brothers forfeited their land and business. (Preposterous, you say? The story was loosely based on actual events, only in real life it was the women who paid to make the trip.)

With a cast that also included, among others, Joan Blondell, Bo Svensen, Susan Tolsky and Henry Beckman, ABC execs had a success on their hands. More important, they had a bonafide sensation in Sherman, for whom the series marked a comeback. In 1964 and '65, he'd already been one of the featured singers on Shindig!, a gig that launched a solid year of personal appearances. But soon after, the early bloomer who could play 10 instruments watched his career go cold. So when a guest shot on The Monkees and a few other jobs led up to his Brides role, he knew enough to appreciate what he had. "He wears me out," Bridget Hanley, who played leading bride (and Sherman's love interest) Candy Pruitt on the show, told TV Guide in 1970. "When Bobby is acting, he's totally committed. The minute that scene is over, he's totally committed to something else. One day I said, 'Bobby, you're always so busy. Do you have time for a private life?' He said, 'None.' I thought, 'That's so sad.'"

Sherman's response? "I've got to do it while I'm hot."

And boy, was he. Those of us who are old enough can recall Sherman magazine covers, lunchboxes and a whole host of other merchandise sold to legions of rabid young girls who couldn't get enough of him. (And to his credit, when things cooled once more, he left the business. An EMT, his most recent work has been training members of the L.A.P.D. and San Bernardino Sheriff's Department.)

Funny thing was, the woman working closest to him had the toughest time appreciating all that teen-idol charisma — visually, anyway. "To put it very succinctly, if I get caught driving without my glasses, I go to jail," said the actress, who tested 20/150 with one eye and 20/375 with the other." And she wasn't kidding, either — earlier in her career, while performing in a play, she headed for wardrobe sans eyewear and clothes, went through the wrong door and wound up out in the audience in only her bra and panties.

As for any other insight, I'll say my one big problem with the show was what some call the Twin Peaks effect. Just like that series rested on the unsolved murder of one girl, Brides counted on a deal that from the outset had a one-year limit. When the year was up — and the Bolts got to keep their land, by the way — Brides's main reason for being was gone. And after September 1970, the series was, too.

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Thanks!!!! It was the version by "The New Establishment" I was thinking of :)

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The missing line is...

Scent of pine trees in the air
never knew a day so fair...

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As a side note. Here Come The Brides featured one of the very (and I mean very) few appearances on film or TV or the late great Bruce Lee.

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wasnt Bruce Lee on The Green Hornet?

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I think the missing line from the show's version of the song is "boys don't stand around and stare".

It makes sense, don't you think?

Scent of pine trees in the air,
boys don't stand around and stare,
look out everyone, here come the brides!

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HAHA! I was just talking to a friend of mine about the name of the theme song and the show! I watched it when I was a kid growing up in the San Joaquin Valley during the summer evening. It was one of those 70's show that was going through a transition with Love american style and marcus welby. Did not know where to fit in. Thanks and I remember Bobby Sherman and David Soul! Wow what memories!

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Just went to the site and downloaded the mp3. Thanks for assist, since I had remembered all but the same line.

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Took me like forever and cost a fortune but I found the theme song on the CD Television's Greatest Hits Vol 5 (In Living Color). It's out of print so no store can order it (I've tried). I got it on ebay (amazon also had a copy but wanted alot more.) I cant believe I spend $32.00 for a 54 second song...but some of the other theme songs are great on this CD as well. Oh, and the last posters song lyrics are correct. The second to last line of the song is "boys don't stand around and stare."

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Excellent! I thought that was the line -- "Boys, don't stand around and stare."

I recall that the vocal version of the theme song only lasted the first season and then they changed to an all-instrumental version the second season. I like the vocal version better!

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thanks for the info. I have been looking for the song also. i checked on line with my local library and they have it!

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The group that performed the theme song was "The New Establishment". The first six or so episodes had the opening theme in an instrumental-only version.
JPG

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I can confirm that the missing line is:

Never knew a day so fair

from the Bobby Sherman cover of that song (as it's always been one of my favorite songs), but I suspect the original had different lyrics. Not only would it be hard to confuse the above line with:

Boys don't stand around and stare

but the Sherman verse finishes with:

It makes you feel so good that you could cry.

which is different from what is listed for the original:

Look out everyone, here come the brides

Finally, Sherman sang "by her smile, by the look in her eyes", for obvious reasons. (Actually, I'm not clear why the original would use "his", except that it momentarily switches to the bride's point of view.)

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As a kid, "Seattle," along with the themes from the "High Chaparral" and "Hawaii Five-O," were enough by themselves to make me want to watch those shows.

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HIGH CHAPARRAL! wow......that guy with the blue eyes, and LEIF ERICKSON....

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The guy with the blue eyes was Mark Slade. What a cutie!

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This site has an mp3 of the song from the show. It made me smile to hear it again after all these years. :D


http://www.melaman2.com/tvshows/H1.html

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Was also one of my childhood favorits. Hearing the theme song again brought back memories. Is there any place that has episodes of the show? I have only looked briefly but it doesn't appear to be available anywhere. Would love to be able to sit around on a Saturday afternoon and relive some of my childhood.

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The hit version that charted in 1969 was by Perry Como. Here are the lyrics:

SEATTLE
Perry Como

The bluest sky you ever seen in Seattle
And the hills the greenest green in Seattle
Like a beautiful child growing up free and wild
Full of hopes and full of fears
Full of laughter full of tears
Full of dreams to last the years in Seattle, in Seattle

If you ever fall in love with a logger
There is something you will have to understand
For as much as he may care you will always
Have to share his love with his green mountain land

When it's time to leave your home and your loved ones
It's the hardest thing a girl can ever do
And you pray that you will find
Someone strong and good and kind
But you're not sure what's waiting there for you

When you find your own true love
You will know it
By his smile, by the look in his eye
Scent of pine trees in the air
Never knew a day so fair
It makes you feel so good
That you could cry









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I always loved this theme song too and the show was one of my favorites. Wish they would bring it back on tv.

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Here is a sight that has the Here come the brides theme (singing) along with many other themes. To download the song just right click on the picture of the show and then "save target as" to where ever you want to save it.
Classic TV Images & Theme Songs
http://www.melaman2.com/tvshows/H1.html

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Thanks for the link- the only thing I could remember )(I am 47) about the song was that I liked it, and the final line of "Look out everyone here come the brides!"

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I've read all the chat about the HCTB theme song and wonder why no one has talked about the wonderful background music in the main body of the show, as if the music ends with the opening credits!! It really sets the mood for everything that draws us to the show: the time and place, the "hopes and fears", etc. It reminds me of Aaron Copland's (rhymes with "rope") ballets: Billy the Kid, Rodeo, and Appalachian Spring, I suggest listening to them if you're interested, as I am, in the time period.

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This theme song was so good that forty years after watching the show I could still remember the words and even found the song coming back to me once in a while. There aren't many theme songs that have that power. Maybe the theme song was the best part of the show?

"All necessary truth is its own evidence." - Ralph Waldo Emerson

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This theme song was so good that forty years after watching the show I could still remember the words


It was the same for me. I saw the Star Trek episode with Robert Brown in it recently and it made me recall this show. I cannot begin to think how many years had passed since I had heard the theme song. But I could sing almost all of the first stanza perfectly. That song definitely made an impression.

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