Most music fans don't know of
Robert Drasnin, but if they're also fans of classic television, they've heard his music:
Drasnin scored the music for Mission: Impossible, The Twilight Zone, and The Man from UNCLE, among others. He got his start in the music business playing saxophone and flute with
Tommy Dorsey,
Les Brown, and
Red Norvo, and later studied composition with film score giant
Miklós Rózsa and classical composer
Lukas Foss. In the '50s, the exotica of
Martin Denny was all the rage, being a hybrid of the tropical/Hawaiian/Southeast Asian music,
Tito Puente-style Latin music, and lounge jazz; subsequently, a tiny record company prevailed upon
Drasnin to come up with a suitable counterpart. He succeeded, and virtually surpassed the man he was supposed to be copying. The band, consisting of
Drasnin on piccolo, two flutists, a pianist, a harpist, a bassist, and six percussionists, with
Salli Terri providing wordless vocals, is delicate and inspired, and
Drasnin's compositions show wit, warmth, and a remarkable sense of spaciousness. This isn't just some corny or kitschy item of nostalgia for the ain't-we-hip set -- it's intelligent mood music, cinematic music without a film, and jazz-tinged easy listening that doesn't condescend to the listener. ~ Rovi Staff