commando2000ad
TS Member
Just wondering why and when in the hall of the mountain king began to used as the main theme
I'd always assumed it was just a case of it being a recognisable, easy to licence piece of music - but part of me does think that maybe someone in the marketing department just had a soft spot for Grieg.
From: https://youtu.be/B2wfv5IX2Cc?si=4CM2QR1rVUAXqxl4
This promo opens with Anitra's Dance, funnily enough the piece of music directly before Mountain King in Peer Gynt - but around the 40s mark it transitions to his Piano Concerto in A Minor. So my money is on Mr. Aaron A Aaronson just really liking Edvard Grieg's music and using them at work - obviously Mountain King hit the spot and became synonymous with Alton Towers.
The advert seems paced around the music, it was a deliberate decision not something done "quick".Interesting observation. My theory is maybe they needed music for one of the ads quick and just stuck in mountain king because it was copyright free and it just stuck.
This tracks with the introduction of the CanCan at LEGOLAND. When they first started using that music I heard that it had come about as a direct request from Nick Varney. An attempt to recapture the association ITHOTMK has with Alton Towers. If Nick Varney was responsible for introducing ITHOTMK it would only be natural to try and repeat its success.Hmm some good theories here.
I did ask an ex employee who would have been involved in this sort of thing back in the early 90's, and they couldn't 100% remember, but they thought that - after Nick Varney was appointed as Marketing Manager - the park contracted an advertising agency to help rebrand the park, and in their first meeting*, a theme tune was on the agenda, and Hall of the Mountain King was chosen in that meeting. It's possible someone has played the previous music used in the John Broom era in that meeting ("this is what they have used before, here's the next piece").
*I believe John Wardley was in the meeting with Nick Varney, the ad agency, and possibly other marketing personnel.
The choice of theme tune is a genius decision, possibly one of the most important decisions in the theme park's history.
Sorry to bump an old thread, but I was surprised to hear that "In The Hall Of The Mountain King" has only been used since 1992, as I had always assumed that it pre-dated the Tussauds era.
The reason I say this is that Tussauds seemed to pride themselves on unique and special attractions (such as Nemesis) rather than generic clones that were available elsewhere (such as Corkscrew, and flat rides in general), and thus I would have expected them to commission bespoke music (as they did for most of their rides) instead of recycling a 'free' piece of music that anybody else could use as well*?
I believe that Merlin ordered custom music for the Thorpe Park entrance walkway, but I may be wrong.
Was it just the case that IMAscore weren't available back in 1992?
(*Thinking about it, I'm surprised that Rita and Stealth used generic pop songs in the same way that ordinary funfairs do, although at least they included a fake DJ overlay, and many of them were old and thus unfamiliar, and using multiple songs instead of just one isn't a bad idea, as it at least helps to prevent boredom. I think Oblivion used a generic night club song as well, although I am not sure.)
I would also add it really suits the grand setting of the Towers well, so really does encompass the park well in adverts.It's very hard to write a solid theme for a whole park, hence why hall of the mountain king became the defacto theme, it sums up the crazy adrenaline of a rollercoaster perfectly.
