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Musical Tribute : Two musicians from Thousand Oaks are in demand after recording a song in honor of the Operation Desert Storm troops.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Operation Desert Storm has displaced Pam Kirby and John Vanselow this Independence Day, but you’re not likely to hear them complaining.

Kirby and Vanselow, a pair of musicians from Thousand Oaks, expect to spend July 4 smiling and waving on a parade float in Anaheim Hills. Their claim to fame--an original song inspired by images from the Persian Gulf War--will be blaring from nearby speakers.

“It starts off with synthesizer sounds, then an acoustic guitar comes in and the beat picks up,” said Vanselow, who plays guitar and keyboards. “I would say the style is like a Top-40 rock song.”

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The song’s title is “Proud Soldiers.” Kirby has called it an “attempt to offer comfort in these trying times of sacrifice.” For her and Vanselow, it has also been an opportunity to be heard in places they’ve never been heard before.

From 1983 until last year, Vanselow, 30, served as general manager of the Instrumental Music store on Thousand Oaks Boulevard. He left the job in August, he said, so that he and Kirby, 31, could concentrate on careers at the entertainment end of the music business.

In late January, Kirby awoke from a nap in front of her television and saw the battered face of Lt. Jeffrey N. Zaun, then a prisoner of war. Within about half an hour, she had written most of “Proud Soldiers,” marrying new words to music that she, Vanselow and collaborator Joe Caruso had already been working on.

“Shot down from grace in a flame of glory,” the song begins. “On freedom’s wings he rode. God speed our soldiers home.”

In February, Kirby and Vanselow enlisted producer Jimmy Hotz and a few background singers and recorded the song in the home studio that occupies one of their bedrooms. They labeled the group Haven.

Then they went looking for an audience and found Air Force Master Sgt. Brandon Williams, a veteran broadcaster with the Armed Forces Radio and Television Service in Sun Valley. Williams chose “Proud Soldiers” as the first selection on his program, “The Desert Mailbag,” which was made available to some 400 Armed Forces stations worldwide.

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More promotional help came from Kirby’s sister, Lisa Dodge, an Orange County resident who offered KEZY 95.9 FM a tape and a reminder that her sister grew up in Mission Viejo. Her gambit worked, and the 3 1/2-minute tune got an airing. And another. And another.

Since early March, the station has been playing the song daily. In mid-June, assistant program director Andy Stevens said, requests for it were still coming in.

“It’s been an incredible thing,” Stevens said. “I had suspected that it would meet with some popularity because of the timeliness of the theme. But I had no idea it would go this far.”

The song got another boost when KABC-TV in Los Angeles used the music over its closing credits on Memorial Day weekend, then followed up with a feature story a few days later.

“Pretty much everything has happened that we wanted to,” Vanselow said recently, sounding mildly dazed.

On Saturday, he and Kirby are scheduled to perform before an audience of several thousand at a Camp Pendleton homecoming celebration. On July 4, they have the Anaheim Hills parade appearance, where they’re expected to ride in a horse-drawn carriage with other radio station personalities.

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And this summer, their first commercial recording should be out--a self-financed pressing of 4,000 compact discs and 1,000 cassettes, each containing “Proud Soldiers” and three other songs.

So far, Vanselow said, music retailers have been receptive, and a couple of major record labels have been interested, as well.

“But we don’t want people to think, ‘Oh, they’re just trying to make money,’ ” he said. With that in mind, the couple has worked out a plan with military officials at Camp Pendleton. The musicians’ net proceeds from the song, Vanselow said, will be donated to military families around the world.

UP CLOSE PAM KIRBY AND JOHN VANSELOW

Current hometown: Thousand Oaks.

Occupations: Musicians.

Claim to fame: “Proud Soldier,” a Persian Gulf War song.

Words from Kirby, singing: “God speed our soldiers home.”

Words from Vanselow, talking: “Pretty much everything has happened that we wanted to.”

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