#2 2009-11-08 14:53:24
Old cartoons always had the *best* music. I miss that. The only modern cartoon that even approached that was Ren & Stimpy.
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#3 2009-11-09 18:55:39
Wheres the "three lumps or four" cartoon???
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#4 2009-11-09 19:49:46
whosasailorthen wrote:
Old cartoons always had the *best* music. I miss that. The only modern cartoon that even approached that was Ren & Stimpy.
If it weren't for Carl W. Stalling I would have grown up with zero exposure to classical music.
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#5 2009-11-10 09:42:04
George Orr wrote:
If it weren't for Carl W. Stalling I would have grown up with zero exposure to classical music.
I quite agree. The music that was used to represent industrial machinery was my favorite.
A few years ago, NPR played a musical piece that the DJ introduced as containing all of the music used on the Warner Brothers cartoons. I was skeptical, but my heart soared when I heard the piece. Not only was it the same music used but it was produced/performed exactly as it was in the cartoons. Just incredible.
The piece was introduced as the Poet and Peasant Overture but even after 10 years of searching I have been unable to find this particular piece.
Does anybody here have any leads?
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#6 2009-11-10 18:08:58
Thank you Forti, I don't have this one in my old scratchy MPEG collection.
The highlight is the wonderfully rotoscoped Hitler at the end.
I'm sure Fein or Ruddy watched this one.
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#7 2009-11-11 00:11:32
wolfpitlord wrote:
The piece was introduced as the Poet and Peasant Overture but even after 10 years of searching I have been unable to find this particular piece.
Does anybody here have any leads?
Not ALL the music by any means, but:
The cartoonish parts start about 3:33.
"Industrial" cartoon music? Maybe Raymond Scott's "Powerhouse":
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