I wrote a lot of the music underscoring the 20/20 interviews with George Clooney, Sandra Bullock, and Penelope Cruz. (more…)
Archive for the ‘Steve music on TV’ Category
ABC 20/20 Oscar preview show
Sunday, March 7th, 2010“Over My Head” on General Hospital
Tuesday, January 26th, 2010The Holiday People – new Christmas songs
Thursday, December 24th, 2009“We Are All Alone” on General Hospital
Friday, July 31st, 2009Scrubs: I Wanna Be Your Girl
Saturday, March 28th, 2009
“I Wanna Be Your Girl” is a serious-but-sensitive romantic bedroom jam I wrote which has been transformed into a hapless object of mockery and ridicule by the Scrubs crew. Listen closely and you can almost hear the lyrics I worked so hard to compose.
Pepsi, Dancing With The Stars, and me
Sunday, March 22nd, 2009Here is a back-door link to the Pepsi / Dancing With The Stars commercial featuring “Dance With Me” on the ABC server. They are still running this every day during the Oprah show and every night at various times. I hope the link still works….
“Dance With Me” features Lawrence Young on vocals.
Meanspeed analyzes “You’re The Freak” but it still lost the Emmy award…
Monday, March 9th, 2009We Are The Stars – Dancing With the Stars
Sunday, March 8th, 2009Another Song I wrote for ABC that is being used in “Dancing With the Stars” promo commercials is this one “We Are The Stars”, featuring “Corvette’ from the Mary Jane Girls on lead vocals. No, the 1980′s never went away, since you mentioned it.
Try Triangle featuring 12 year old rapper Gabby Gab – Lakers shoutout version
Saturday, June 7th, 2008I wrote this quasi-educational hiphop-nursery rhyme featuring twelve year old Chinese rapper Gabby Gab, as theme music for the Los Angeles Lakers basketball team highlight broadcasts in Asia.
“You’re The Freak – Reprise” – ballad version (original demo recording)
Sunday, May 18th, 2008This is the original ballad version of “Freak – which I happen to like better than the original. It gets just a little bit soft, gentle and tender in there…
One Life To Live only used about 1:50 of the song on air, but since my contract stipulated I deliver an entire full-length song, here is the whole 4:30, in glorious raw, badly-mixed demo format, complete with out-of-tune vocals. Conveniently, the Walt Disney company already owns the publishing rights to the song so they can easily recycle it for that next Shrek sequel.
