This tape was like a breath of fresh air at the end of 1983, I caught it on its second outing on New Years Eve that year, bringing to an end the 5 solid year run of Don Fernando. I dont know about all the other tunes on this tape, but Eye of the Tiger hadn't even been composed when Don Fernando started, and was not long out of the charts when we first heard the version on here, so this tape couldn't have been a replacement for Don Fernando much earlier than the date it came in. We'd also finally lost Dixieland Parade after it's five and a half year run a few weeks earlier, and Sugar Loaf, which started at the same time as this tape, saw off that other long running stalwart, Belle Canon. Kung Flute was now the oldest tape, with Barry White, Bread and Sunshine In Paris having already been withdrawn out of sequence .
@@stuartharris2165I think it was intended originally for the test card, but spanned the changeover, and so appeared with Pages from Ceefax, like this one, most of the time from the outset. Autumn In New York also pre-dated this one by about a month, and so also ran with pages. It had a higher production number than House of the Rising Sun though, that's probably why it was shifted down the running order later on.
@@stuartharris2165Also, I did hear that Dixie Omelette could have originally been a replacement for Dixieland Parade, but with the advent of full time Ceefax pages, the Bread Tape needed replacing more urgently, as possible news pages detailing a potential disaster such as a train accident, motorway pile-up or a plane crash accompanied by "Live and Let Die" was deemed undesirable!!
Seems a connect between this tape and Jewel and The Night and Colours. Also seems like the twin tape to Hi Livin that was often played on BBC2 in some regions accompanied by the Philips PM-5544.
Thank you for this of course. Nice to see Pages from Ceefax with music during a break in Daytime on Two on BBC2 of course at the time of old now then really. Well done too!!
I am guessing that this Ceefax showing then was listed in the Radio Times as such so then too, as by then they were doing so. It started in January 1984 when they showed it then as Pages from Ceefax rather than Closedown as they had then before that, when Test Cards F or G were shown instead at times so then too of course. Thank you!
I cant believe I'm even watching this lol but I guess its nice to go back in time to when my kids were running around the house drawing on the walls or up to mischief, and it just felt safer in the 80s to what it is today correct me if I'm wrong, I even remember playing Bamboozle I'm sure that was the game you could play on Ceefax I'm so glad BBC kept telletxt as they were going to stop it but its good for people who are deaf with subtitles as my stepdaughter is
This tape was like a breath of fresh air at the end of 1983, I caught it on its second outing on New Years Eve that year, bringing to an end the 5 solid year run of Don Fernando. I dont know about all the other tunes on this tape, but Eye of the Tiger hadn't even been composed when Don Fernando started, and was not long out of the charts when we first heard the version on here, so this tape couldn't have been a replacement for Don Fernando much earlier than the date it came in. We'd also finally lost Dixieland Parade after it's five and a half year run a few weeks earlier, and Sugar Loaf, which started at the same time as this tape, saw off that other long running stalwart, Belle Canon. Kung Flute was now the oldest tape, with Barry White, Bread and Sunshine In Paris having already been withdrawn out of sequence .
Big thanks Neil - always a pleasure to hear the first official Ceefax tape, House of The Rising Sun:-)
Wasn't Dixie Omelette the first official CEEFAX tape?
@@stuartharris2165I think it was intended originally for the test card, but spanned the changeover, and so appeared with Pages from Ceefax, like this one, most of the time from the outset. Autumn In New York also pre-dated this one by about a month, and so also ran with pages. It had a higher production number than House of the Rising Sun though, that's probably why it was shifted down the running order later on.
@@stuartharris2165Also, I did hear that Dixie Omelette could have originally been a replacement for Dixieland Parade, but with the advent of full time Ceefax pages, the Bread Tape needed replacing more urgently, as possible news pages detailing a potential disaster such as a train accident, motorway pile-up or a plane crash accompanied by "Live and Let Die" was deemed undesirable!!
Love that muzak funky fusion playlist during ceefax ❤🔥
I've Loved The Daytime On 2 With The Day's Of Special Page's From Ceefax On Page 297
Educational themed pages from the BBC Teletext Information Service Ceefax are accompanied by music from the tape House of The Rising Sun.
Seems a connect between this tape and Jewel and The Night and Colours. Also seems like the twin tape to Hi Livin that was often played on BBC2 in some regions accompanied by the Philips PM-5544.
What a magnificent find seeing this again. Thank you so much Neil, this is a great video.
Thank you for this of course. Nice to see Pages from Ceefax with music during a break in Daytime on Two on BBC2 of course at the time of old now then really. Well done too!!
Thank you for that of course!
This is what was "nothing on the telly" the day after my 11th birthday.
"Mind how you go" with Jimmy Savile? Indeed...
just twigged with the date!! great upload.. love her elocution
17:25: I'm gonna call that Eye of the CEEFAX....
That's a blast from the past
I am guessing that this Ceefax showing then was listed in the Radio Times as such so then too, as by then they were doing so. It started in January 1984 when they showed it then as Pages from Ceefax rather than Closedown as they had then before that, when Test Cards F or G were shown instead at times so then too of course. Thank you!
But it and the music with it too really are so 10 out of 10 of course so then too!
Hi Livin's twin tape?
I remember seeing Peter Skellern's Oasis on Pebble Mill, so must have been the very edition plugged here.
The third track sounds a bit like Almost Together.
Superb Album!
Heather Lynn announcing.
died in 2011 i think
@@martyn8999 Well I think that most of the 80's BBC announcers have passed away now.
@@AntonFanify still a fair few around
I cant believe I'm even watching this lol but I guess its nice to go back in time to when my kids were running around the house drawing on the walls or up to mischief, and it just felt safer in the 80s to what it is today correct me if I'm wrong,
I even remember playing Bamboozle I'm sure that was the game you could play on Ceefax I'm so glad BBC kept telletxt as they were going to stop it but its good for people who are deaf with subtitles as my stepdaughter is
Bamboozle was on Teletext UK, which replaced Oracle on ITV and C4 from 1993.
heather lynn i think announcer
PROPAGANDA WITH FACTS
Now it's just propaganda from the BBC!