Two of the 1979 album's re-recorded tracks, "I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire" and "It's a Sin to Tell a Lie", were prominently featured in a 1982 Chanel No.
The 1982 Era Records reissue features a nude, reclining woman wearing high heels on a reflective floor and silhouetted by night stars.
Shortly after concluding the science fiction film Alien in 1979, director Ridley Scott created a series of critically acclaimed commercials for Chanel No.
[1] The first was the 1979 "Blue Sky" commercial, officially called "La Piscine" with the tagline "Share the Fantasy", and scored by future Blade Runner composer, Vangelis.
[2][3][4] The 1982 followup "L'Invitation au Rêve – Le Jardin" featured the same tagline and a similar situation of a man and a woman meeting under mysterious circumstances.
[5][6][7] An oversized piano starts playing the intro to Bill Kenny singing "I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire".
While the film shares similar noir motifs with the commercial, early trailers and the original workprint of Blade Runner also featured another Ink Spots song on its soundtrack, "If I Didn't Care".
[8][9] However, while several of the Globe's responses incorrectly cite the 1941 Decca Records version as the one used in the commercial, a 23 January 1985 portion of the "Ask the Globe" column correctly mentions various bits of minutiae including the models' names Carol Gramm and Craig Littler, the singer as Bill Kenny, and the albums where the recording can be found: "You can hear that song on the CBS record label 51 West Q 16042 entitled 'The Ink Spots: If I Didn't Care' or Era label BU4400 entitled 'Ink Spots' Greatest Hits.
The track order was rearranged to give "I Don't Want to Set the World on Fire" top billing with an additional 45 rpm lead single.