Still not found and not mentioned in the description like so many other songs that took months and in some cases years to locate before the copywritten material was documented on TH-cam.
Looks like the "POUR SAVOIR QUOI FAIRE" tagline MétéoMédia used was used as early as the winter 2000-01 season when it began on December 4th, 2000. Prior to that the tagline was "PARCE QUE LE TEMPS change" going back to 1996. Every now and then though during 2000-2001, they would use an ID that used the previous tagline as I recall Halloween 2001 at some point used a "PARCE QUE LE TEMPS change" station ID that was used frequently during most of 2000, especially in the spring/summer.
I got ExpressVu in late Sept. 01 so I don't know what they used in the summer since MM wasn't carried on cable here. I do remember going to Montreal though in Feb. 01 and seeing a similar background on the LFs but with different music on MM. Then TWN used the similar background for a while when it launched its spring programming in late March 01 and then again in Winter 01/02 as you said. It's like that background style was first used in Montreal with MM before TWN in Mississauga used it.
Well, I can tell this type of background was used going back to at least April 2001 when they launched their spring programming on April 2 that year and used this theme music when it came to the weekday local forecast until at least the wee early morning of December 1, with a different theme music for winter used on December 3 with the same background. Based on the leaf indicating the season change this was the first week of the new fall programming.
If you went to Montreal in February 2001 and saw a similar background on the local forecasts it would have likely been late in the month as at least December 2000-February 2001 they used a different winter local forecast background that may have been used in the 1999-2000 winter season as well as shown below. And this was how it looked like on the satellite feed, which was similar to TWN's satellite feed before they changed it. th-cam.com/video/qonX5avQXjI/w-d-xo.html
No, unfortunately not, but maybe you should write an e-mail to Meteo Media asking them what music library the song comes from! Let me know if they respond!
@@andrewmorrison85 They started using it in April 2001, when the satellite was still like TWN's satellite before switching it to a more regional based LF style. Even the weekend LF we still haven't found as to what library it comes from either.
Still not found and not mentioned in the description like so many other songs that took months and in some cases years to locate before the copywritten material was documented on TH-cam.
I'm so excited to find out the name of this music! :)
Looks like the "POUR SAVOIR QUOI FAIRE" tagline MétéoMédia used was used as early as the winter 2000-01 season when it began on December 4th, 2000. Prior to that the tagline was "PARCE QUE LE TEMPS change" going back to 1996. Every now and then though during 2000-2001, they would use an ID that used the previous tagline as I recall Halloween 2001 at some point used a "PARCE QUE LE TEMPS change" station ID that was used frequently during most of 2000, especially in the spring/summer.
ça rapelle tu des souvenirs un peu. j'l'avait dans tête cte toune là
Yes. I got ExpressVu in 2001 which meant I could receive MeteoMedia.
@andrewmorrison85 This is a catchy tune. did you find it out yet?
I got ExpressVu in late Sept. 01 so I don't know what they used in the summer since MM wasn't carried on cable here. I do remember going to Montreal though in Feb. 01 and seeing a similar background on the LFs but with different music on MM. Then TWN used the similar background for a while when it launched its spring programming in late March 01 and then again in Winter 01/02 as you said. It's like that background style was first used in Montreal with MM before TWN in Mississauga used it.
Well, I can tell this type of background was used going back to at least April 2001 when they launched their spring programming on April 2 that year and used this theme music when it came to the weekday local forecast until at least the wee early morning of December 1, with a different theme music for winter used on December 3 with the same background. Based on the leaf indicating the season change this was the first week of the new fall programming.
If you went to Montreal in February 2001 and saw a similar background on the local forecasts it would have likely been late in the month as at least December 2000-February 2001 they used a different winter local forecast background that may have been used in the 1999-2000 winter season as well as shown below. And this was how it looked like on the satellite feed, which was similar to TWN's satellite feed before they changed it. th-cam.com/video/qonX5avQXjI/w-d-xo.html
No, unfortunately not, but maybe you should write an e-mail to Meteo Media asking them what music library the song comes from!
Let me know if they respond!
what's the music used for the bumper?
Old TWN vids the bumper music is called Remembering Milo from the Sound Ideas library. Still no luck finding the LF Music. Too bad.
@@andrewmorrison85 They started using it in April 2001, when the satellite was still like TWN's satellite before switching it to a more regional based LF style. Even the weekend LF we still haven't found as to what library it comes from either.
@wxGuy9 Not yet, but I'm hot on the trail & i should have it pin pointed sometime in the next couple of months!
je me rappelle de ça