
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
On today’s date in 1989, NBC transmitted the pilot episode of a sitcom that 180 episodes later would be recognized as a TV classic.
In composing, as in comedy, timing is everything, so when comedian Jerry Seinfeld approached composer Jonathan Wolff about writing the intro music for Seinfeld, Wolff knew it was time for something a little different than a generic sitcom theme.
“When he called me, Jerry described to me the problem he was having: the opening and closing credits for this new show were to be Jerry doing stand-up material in front of an audience. He tells jokes, people laugh. And he wanted unique, signature theme music to go with it, [so I said] how about this? … We treat your human voice telling jokes as the melody of the Seinfeld theme! My job will be to accompany you in a way that’s fun and quirky but does not interfere with the audio of your standup routine,” Wolff recalled.
That meant the Seinfeld intro would change each week, with Wolff performing on slap bass themes and variations that danced before, after, and around the cadence of Jerry’s punchlines like, as Wolff put it, “a vaudeville rim shot.”
Jonathan Wolff (b. 1958): Theme, from Seinfeld; Water Tower Music digital download
4.7
173173 ratings
On today’s date in 1989, NBC transmitted the pilot episode of a sitcom that 180 episodes later would be recognized as a TV classic.
In composing, as in comedy, timing is everything, so when comedian Jerry Seinfeld approached composer Jonathan Wolff about writing the intro music for Seinfeld, Wolff knew it was time for something a little different than a generic sitcom theme.
“When he called me, Jerry described to me the problem he was having: the opening and closing credits for this new show were to be Jerry doing stand-up material in front of an audience. He tells jokes, people laugh. And he wanted unique, signature theme music to go with it, [so I said] how about this? … We treat your human voice telling jokes as the melody of the Seinfeld theme! My job will be to accompany you in a way that’s fun and quirky but does not interfere with the audio of your standup routine,” Wolff recalled.
That meant the Seinfeld intro would change each week, with Wolff performing on slap bass themes and variations that danced before, after, and around the cadence of Jerry’s punchlines like, as Wolff put it, “a vaudeville rim shot.”
Jonathan Wolff (b. 1958): Theme, from Seinfeld; Water Tower Music digital download
6,217 Listeners
2,610 Listeners
1,187 Listeners
3,042 Listeners
362 Listeners
3,887 Listeners
179 Listeners
519 Listeners
38,532 Listeners
903 Listeners
43,871 Listeners
8,634 Listeners
1,370 Listeners
13,410 Listeners
240 Listeners
13,264 Listeners
27,634 Listeners
3,931 Listeners
5,494 Listeners
2,106 Listeners
13,631 Listeners
6,060 Listeners
198 Listeners
6,219 Listeners
616 Listeners