A familiar tune is shared among the brass band, with the euphonium and tubas leading the march. The little melody grows in stature with each repetition, stirring cracking memories. When Julian Nott wrote the theme for Wallace & Gromit in 1989 he could not have expected that it would become, alongside the inventor and dog that it introduces, an icon in its own right – a blossoming sound so cheerful it was used to wake up astronauts aboard a space shuttle mission in 2010.
Today it is played by the Fairey Band, an ensemble founded in 1937 by a group of employees at the Fairey Aviation Works in Stockport. Conductor Phil Chalk is seated so as not to block the screen behind the musicians.
The band segues into lounge music as Gromit peruses a picnic guide and Wallace makes the ominous pronouncement that “there is no cheese in the house”. The solution: a trip to that famously cheesy orb, the moon.
Get the latest news and insight into how the Big Issue magazine is made by signing up for the Inside Big Issue newsletter
A Grand Day Out unfurls with the soundtrack performed in real time. Chalk perches, alert to the required snippets; the Faireys provide the rocket’s blastoff, the light cabaret as Wallace attempts to identify the mysterious cheese. There are no signs of any seams; if it wasn’t for the fact we can see the brass instruments glinting under the stage lights – and that the music is crisper than usual thanks to Snape Maltings’ clean acoustics – it would be difficult to know this wasn’t a standard cinematic showing.
But, as the robot happily skis down the moon slopes and Nott’s theme is reprised once more, the music takes centre stage. Here, and in the following The Wrong Trousers (1993), that motif is essential: as both the animation and soundtracks become more complex (Top Gun: Maverick composer Lorne Balfe joined forces with Nott for the latest Wallace & Gromit instalment, Vengeance Most Fowl, in 2024) it is the root that reminds us where it all began.