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The Rembrandts are friends again

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Hartford Courant

The Rembrandts bear the burden of any one-hit wonder: A smash song brings mainstream fame, massive airplay and a nice payday, then overshadows an entire career. Unlike most musical sensations, however, the Rembrandts’ hit happened on television -- and it still gets heard by millions almost every night.

“I’ll Be There for You” lasts only 42 seconds. But for the Southern California band that recorded the near-minute of jangly guitars, cooing harmonies and handclaps that introduces the sitcom “Friends,” the song has been an inescapable soundtrack to the last decade.

The good news is, they’re getting paid.

“Let me put it this way: I can’t retire on it, but it’s putting my kids through college,” says Danny Wilde, 47, father of two and musical partner to Phil Solem, the other half of the Rembrandts.

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Every time that Monkees-esque ditty introduces “Friends,” including the show’s finale at 9 tonight, the Rembrandts earn a performer’s fee. Not bad for a tune that had been largely written when the duo was brought in to polish it.

After “Friends” became a hit show in 1994, and fans started requesting the theme song from radio stations, the money and airplay that the Rembrandts earned came at a cost to their reputation. Especially when their record label awkwardly stitched a full-length version onto the end of the band’s 1995 album, “LP.”

“We were a little embarrassed,” says Wilde, who lives in Thousand Oaks. “We had a solid reputation as darlings of alternative radio. So it was hard to always hear, ‘Hey, do you hang out with Courteney Cox? Are you and Ross buddies?’ ” (For the record, the answers are no.)

Eventually, “I’ll Be There for You” came between them. Wilde and Solem steered clear of each other after 2000. “We felt a bit like we sold out. We had no control over the direction where the Rembrandts were going,” Wilde says.

But by now they have come to terms with their place in pop music history. They have also gotten back together to record (a new collection, “Choice Picks,” is available on their website, therembrandts.com) and, of course, to play their signature song at performances during the week of the sitcom’s final episode. They were scheduled to appear on NBC’s “Today” show this morning.

Wilde says he knows what to expect from audiences whose dedication to “Friends” outweighs their dedication to the band. “If so, you play [the song] up front and in the middle and then at the end. Then you play it again, backward.”

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