Tick Tock Tune

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What you waiting, what you waiting, what you waiting, what you waiting, what you waiting for
Tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock, tick-tock, take your chance you stupid ho.

Gwen Stefani, "What You Waiting For?"

This is when the music has ticking clock sound effects to it, or similar, such as instruments, metronome sounds, clicks, or even onomatopeia. This is sometimes used to make you remember that, yes, time is running and to hasten the pace.

Examples of Tick Tock Tune include:

Film

  • Hans Zimmer's score for Inception prominently features the ticking of a clock on several of its tracks. Not surprisingly, the perception of time is an important subtheme of the film.
  • Zimmer is apparently fond of the style. A Game of Shadows prominently features ticking in several scores, notably when someone is about to die, or when they're trying to stop his plans, with all the subtext that implies.
  • "Never Smile at a Crocodile" from Peter Pan. Appropriate, since the Crocodile swallowed a clock.


Live-Action TV

Music

Professional Wrestling

1, 2, You hear the clock ticking?
Tick tock, you're about to stop living
Tick tock, I want you to remember me
Tick tock, but the day don't have no memory
I'M COMING


Video Games


Web Original


Western Animation

  • Phineas and Ferb has "Watchin' and Waitin'" which is a song about watching to see how the boys' inventions disappear before Mom gets home.
    • There's also one with a clock theme for Candace waiting by the phone for Jeremy to call.


Other

  • The BBC's news theme.
  • There was a 1960s novelty instrumental called "Time Beat" by Ray Cathode, based on an interval theme by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop with added instrumentation by George Martin.
  • The music outside the Small World ride at Disneyland.