Era · spans 1970s

Network Era (1970s)

The peak years of three-network American broadcast television, when M*A*S*H, Mary Tyler Moore, Happy Days, Sanford and Son, and Charlie's Angels collectively defined what an "American TV theme song" sounded like. Funk, disco, and adult-contemporary pop all leaked into prime time during this decade.

39 theme profiles · 33 distinct composers indexed · earliest entry 1970, latest 1979

Catalogued Cues

Theme Profiles from the Network Era (1970s)

What defines the Network Era (1970s)

The peak years of three-network American broadcast television, when M*A*S*H, Mary Tyler Moore, Happy Days, Sanford and Son, and Charlie's Angels collectively defined what an "American TV theme song" sounded like. Funk, disco, and adult-contemporary pop all leaked into prime time during this decade.

An era is not a calendar bracket — it's a coherent set of compositional habits, production technologies, and audience expectations that happen to overlap in time. The Network Era (1970s) coheres because of what its composers could do (the orchestras, the recording chains, the broadcast standards available to them) and what they were asked to do (the airtime budgets, the dramatic conventions, the title-sequence formats their producers wanted). Reading across the catalogued cues above, the shared fingerprints are easy to hear: similar harmonic vocabularies, similar instrumentation choices, similar ideas about how long a theme should be and what work it should accomplish in the time it has.

The decades inside this era

The Network Era (1970s) spans 1 calendar decades — 1970s. Each one had its own internal weather, but they share enough common ground to read as a single movement when you stand back. To browse decade by decade inside the era:

For deeper reading on the long-form essay literature covering exactly this period, the chronological reading lists at Reel-to-Reel Quarterly are an excellent starting point.

Defining composers of the era

The composers most heavily catalogued in this era — Alan Thicke, Quincy Jones, Bob James, Dave Grusin, Joe Raposo, Sonny Curtis — collectively account for the lion's share of the work above. Each of these writers has a dedicated composer page that collects every catalogued cue we have of theirs:

What the era wrote for

The catalogued cues from this era are weighted toward sitcoms, tv dramas, classic films, sci-fi tv themes. Each medium imposed a different set of writing constraints — feature-film overtures could stretch out and develop themes, while half-hour TV theme songs had to land their identity in twenty seconds and survive being heard hundreds of times in a season. To browse by medium across the whole catalog, see the medium index.

Installing era-appropriate ringtones

Whatever era your favorite themes belong to, the install workflow is the same: get a clean MP3 source under 30 seconds, then convert to M4R for iPhone or copy directly to the Android Ringtones folder. Original master recordings of most cues catalogued here are still under active copyright; for a legally clean ringtone source, look to the public-domain re-recordings and stylistically equivalent archival audio that ToneVault links to from each individual theme page. The step-by-step install guides live at iPhone via GarageBand and Android via Files App.

For a curated index of legally available archival recordings from this exact period, the directory at Cinema Sound Sources is one of the most thorough free indexes online.

Where to go next