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(Added the remaining original songs from Bert & Ernie Sing-Along.)
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Image:SS-BestFriends70s.jpg|[[Best Friends (Pottle/Freudberg)|Best Friends]]
 
Image:SS-BestFriends70s.jpg|[[Best Friends (Pottle/Freudberg)|Best Friends]]
 
Image:RideabikeRideabike.jpg|[[Bicycling]]
 
Image:RideabikeRideabike.jpg|[[Bicycling]]
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File:1052b.jpg|[[Big Bird's Totally Amateur Show]]
 
Image:1056a.jpg|[[Big Brass Band]]
 
Image:1056a.jpg|[[Big Brass Band]]
 
Image:Boyfromindiana.JPG|[[Boy from Indiana]]
 
Image:Boyfromindiana.JPG|[[Boy from Indiana]]

Revision as of 23:08, 5 September 2019

SamPottle

Samuel H. Pottle (usually credited as Sam Pottle) (May 8, 1934 - July 4, 1978) co-wrote the theme song for The Muppet Show with Jim Henson, and followed Joe Raposo as the musical director on Sesame Street from seasons 6 through 9. He wrote and co-wrote the music for many Sesame songs, and had a one-off character named after him. His earliest contribution is the opening theme of Super Grover, which debuted in season 5.

A 1955 Yale graduate, Pottle was involved with many theatrical productions. He served as musical supervisor for the short-lived 1970 Broadway play Cry for Us All and composer for Money. He wrote the music for the 1977 musical The Meehans. He was also the conductor, in 1966, for the Broadway play The Mad Show.

He wrote the music for a play called Keep Tightly Closed in a Cool Dry Place at the La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club in 1968, and composed a musical arrangement for Lewis Carroll's poem "Jabberwocky," which has been performed by groups like the Nashoba Valley Chorale.

Following Pottle's death on July 4, 1978, his friend and fellow Sesame writer Charles ("Chuck") Choset dedicated the 1982 plays Letters to Ben and The Messiah to him.

Sesame Street Songs

External links