Justified because the songs are all remixes of songs from Video Games, which are for the most part instrumental.
GaMetal mainly does instrumental songs, excluding two. Stream songs including Antiques Roadshow Theme, The Great British Bakeoff Theme and more. Todd Rundgren did a lot of instrumental songs, of which the most blatant example is the thirty-five-minute 'A Treatise on Cosmic Fire' from Initiation. Quincy Jones was kickin' it with "The Streetbeater," the theme for Sanford & Son, as were John Sebastian of the Lovin' Spoonful with the Welcome Back Kotter theme, Henry Mancini with the song of note for Charlie's Angels, Mike Post with The Rockford Files, the Brady Bunch with, well, The Brady Bunch theme, and, of course, the Banana Splits with "The Tra-La-La Song." Michael Parks' reading of "Long, Lonesome Highway" was the theme for Then Came Bronson, too! In other words, this is one crazy, kooky, and utterly fine album of TV themes for any collector - or strange person who wants to relive television in the 1970s for any reason. Sure, love songs can be beautiful and rock anthems are awesome, but when the planets align, TV theme tunes can be the absolute best. Not only is Thank You for Being a Friend easily recognized as the sitcom’s theme song, it also tends to get stuck in your head - the true test of a genius opening tune. Listen to 50 Great British TV Hits by TV Theme Tune Factory on Apple Music. The song was from the TV show Miami Vice. Where else could you find a former rockabilly prince (in this case none other than Sonny Curtis) writing and singing the theme song to The Mary Tyler Moore Show? That's right, the guy who wrote "Rockin' Around with Ollie Vee" and "I Fought the Law" wrote "Love Is All Around," the show's theme. Although Miami Vice Theme was the only top 20 hit by Jan Hammer, his later song, Crockett's Theme also received some radio play. No matter how you slice it, the music from the TV themes to the big shows of the 1970s was either creative, corny, fun, or some combo of all three. The all-instrumental theme songs from shows like The Cosby Show, Twin Peaks, and House of Cards are classicseven without the words. Leave it to the folks at Time Life Music to assemble a collection of television themes to bring you back to those places in the 1970s where all was sweetness and light - or at least you thought it was because you were too young to know differently you were blasted out of your gourd and/or you were a teen and your folks were occupied by the tube while you were doing more "meaningful" things.