Twiddly-dum & Twiddly-de
I was messing around with making some noise earlier on this evening - pictured, some of the electronica employed in making various bleeps, drones and rhythms: a strange hobby, I know - and ended up creating what I thought were quite passable Dr. Who incidentals from the late sixties. I got my supper out of the oven and switched on the TV, searching for something vaguely entertaining to watch while I ate. Scrolling away from the usual tedious mainstream of Eastenders, etc., I entered the territory of fringe commercial channels aimed at God knows what audience, and lit upon a channel called U&Eden, which for once doesn't seem to be targeting the old [myself included in that demographic of course]. Bugger me if the programme that had just started was a re-run of "Spearhead From Space", the Doctor Who story first aired in 1970, and the first to feature Jon Pertwee as the reincarnated Doctor.
Two things on the music front issue from this: the person principally responsible for the creation of the original Doctor Who theme tune - Delia Derbyshire - was never credited on the end titles of the show [she was just a technician, and a woman, you know: it was the stone age, after all]; and the first episode featured the song "Oh, Well, Pt.1" by Fleetwood Mac, a 45RPM single that was a gift to me from a couple of schoolmates and which I still possess. As always, out of serendipity and happenstance comes a theme. I enjoyed both the noise making and the Dr. Who reprise, which of course was the name [Reprise] of the record label that Fleetwood Mac were then [Play] on...

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