Robert J. Walsh: Difference between revisions
--Spengs |
For some reason, I checked. Walsh started getting credit on season 1 episode 6. |
||
| Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
'''Robert J. Walsh''' was one of the original composers for the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|Generation 1 cartoon]]. Born on [[December 4]], [[1947]], in Chicago, Illinois, he has written music for nearly 50 television shows, including ''The Seventh Portal'', ''Millennium Man'', ''[[G.I. Joe (franchise)|G.I. Joe Extreme]]'' and ''[[My Little Pony|My Little Pony Tales]]''. | '''Robert J. Walsh''' was one of the original composers for the [[The Transformers (cartoon)|Generation 1 cartoon]]. Born on [[December 4]], [[1947]], in Chicago, Illinois, he has written music for nearly 50 television shows, including ''The Seventh Portal'', ''Millennium Man'', ''[[G.I. Joe (franchise)|G.I. Joe Extreme]]'' and ''[[My Little Pony|My Little Pony Tales]]''. | ||
Walsh was not credited for his work on ''The Transformers'' | Walsh was not credited for his work on ''The Transformers'' until [[Divide and Conquer|season 1 episode 6]]. Until that time, only his fellow composer [[Johnny Douglas]]'s name was listed in the show's closing credits. The pair's music for the first season of the show was a mixture of Walsh's previous compositions used on ''G.I. Joe'', and new work that often incorporated the melody of the series [[Theme song|theme music]], despite neither of the pair writing that tune. For the show's third season, Walsh composed many new synthesizer tracks that drew on the score of ''[[The Transformers: The Movie]]''. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
Revision as of 14:01, 15 July 2013
| The name or term "Robert" refers to more than one character or idea. For a list of other meanings, see Robert (disambiguation). |
Robert J. Walsh was one of the original composers for the Generation 1 cartoon. Born on December 4, 1947, in Chicago, Illinois, he has written music for nearly 50 television shows, including The Seventh Portal, Millennium Man, G.I. Joe Extreme and My Little Pony Tales.
Walsh was not credited for his work on The Transformers until season 1 episode 6. Until that time, only his fellow composer Johnny Douglas's name was listed in the show's closing credits. The pair's music for the first season of the show was a mixture of Walsh's previous compositions used on G.I. Joe, and new work that often incorporated the melody of the series theme music, despite neither of the pair writing that tune. For the show's third season, Walsh composed many new synthesizer tracks that drew on the score of The Transformers: The Movie.
External links


