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NonsenseIsland's profile
Vincent Alexander
Vincent Alexander
Vincent Alexander
@NonsenseIsland

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Vincent Alexander

@NonsenseIsland

Cartoonist/Animator. Creator of "Musical Man and the Magic Kazoo."

Columbus, OH
vincentcartoons.wordpress.com
Joined April 2009

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    Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

    THREAD: Lots of us learned classical music from watching old cartoons, so I’m going to identify the pieces that frequently popped up. One of the most recognizable is Franz Liszt’s “Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2,” performed by those great piano virtuosos Bugs Bunny and Tom & Jerry.pic.twitter.com/SmyKbMpw3e

    10:06 AM - 1 Mar 2021
    • 45,282 Retweets
    • 129,552 Likes
    • Scott Wing ‎Abgeschiedenheit Maria Theohari MarshallFamous Mark SC Stephen R. Bierce John Tom the Fanboy is Not Blonde
    1,826 replies 45,282 retweets 129,552 likes
      1. New conversation
      2. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        I don’t know who can listen to the famous opera “The Barber of Seville” by Gioachino Rossini without thinking of Bugs Bunny. The way director Chuck Jones synchronizes the slapstick action to the soundtrack is flat-out masterful.pic.twitter.com/t58QbRsmmw

        311 replies 5,064 retweets 30,032 likes
        Show this thread
      3. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        An aria of Rossini’s “Barber of Seville” that shows up constantly in animation is “Largo al Factotum,” which introduces the Figaro character. Even the piece’s Wikipedia article credits the tune’s lasting legacy to its use in cartoons. Here are just a few iconic examples:pic.twitter.com/wtUms0adc3

        65 replies 1,620 retweets 13,302 likes
        Show this thread
      4. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        You may not know Franz Schubert’s “Der Erlkönig” by name, you’ll know it when you hear it, thanks to Looney Tunes cartoons. It was written about a supernatural king of the fairies, but WB composer Carl Stalling would always pull it out to underscore a villain’s entrance.pic.twitter.com/BBLcZG04eE

        32 replies 971 retweets 9,361 likes
        Show this thread
      5. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        “Dance of the Comedians” by Czech composer Bedřich Smetana (from the comic opera THE BARTERED BRIDE) was used as an unofficial musical theme for the Road Runner cartoons. The propulsive energy of the piece matches well with Wile E. Coyote’s various failures.pic.twitter.com/5iHF49P2El

        23 replies 905 retweets 8,488 likes
        Show this thread
      6. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        “The Light Cavalry Overture” by Austrian composer Franz von Suppé was most memorably used in the Mickey Mouse short SYMPHONY HOUR, probably Disney’s funniest cartoon ever, where Goofy breaks all the instruments and the orchestra has to play a wacky Spike Jones-esque rendition.pic.twitter.com/Wr73FMzVYT

        33 replies 784 retweets 7,551 likes
        Show this thread
      7. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Franz von Suppé got quite a workout in classic cartoons. “The Poet and Peasant Overture” shows up in dozens of shorts. My favorite is Popeye conducting the “Spinach Overture” while giving Bluto a rhythmic beatdown perfectly in time with the music.pic.twitter.com/6dAr7cgHrC

        26 replies 736 retweets 6,830 likes
        Show this thread
      8. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Bugs Bunny famously conducted Franz von Suppé’s “Morning, Noon and Night in Vienna” in the classic BATON BUNNY. This cartoon has been screened with live orchestral accompaniment on Broadway, at the Hollywood Bowl, and the Royal Festival Hall for the royal family.pic.twitter.com/8BAe7JgO8b

        29 replies 959 retweets 8,265 likes
        Show this thread
      9. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        The work of Austrian composer Johann Strauss, known as the Waltz King, is in literally hundreds of cartoons. "Frühlingsstimmen, Op. 410 (Voices of Spring)" was frequently used when characters dance or daintily frolic across the screen. You'll know it when you hear it:pic.twitter.com/NYDcyhS1ys

        15 replies 741 retweets 7,161 likes
        Show this thread
      10. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        A CORNY CONCERTO, Bob Clampett’s hilarious spoof of Disney’s FANTASIA, brilliantly sets a violent Bugs Bunny chase to Johann Strauss’s peaceful “Tales from the Vienna Woods.” You can make any classical piece better by adding the “b-b-b-b-b” noise.pic.twitter.com/QxHovunpUM

        12 replies 584 retweets 5,820 likes
        Show this thread
      11. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        “The Blue Danube” is one of Strauss’s most famous and beautiful waltzes, thus making it ripe for animated parody. The piece was burned into my brain from infancy due to a VHS tape I had of A CORNY CONCERTO, and now I always hear quacking to go along with it.pic.twitter.com/x8Q5OnxxHh

        50 replies 942 retweets 7,768 likes
        Show this thread
      12. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        “Die Fledermaus” by Johann Strauss served as the entire basis for the 1950 MGM short TOM AND JERRY IN THE HOLLYWOOD BOWL. As with several Bugs Bunny shorts, this film later was actually screened at the Hollywood Bowl, with live orchestrations to go with it.pic.twitter.com/gJYRQznPR4

        23 replies 713 retweets 6,310 likes
        Show this thread
      13. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Strauss must be the #1 composer among cartoonists, because he sure shows up a lot. The Oscar-winning Tom & Jerry short JOHANN MOUSE is even named after him. Here are just a few different Strauss pieces that have made their way into animated shorts:pic.twitter.com/HcyPL9flqP

        8 replies 449 retweets 4,838 likes
        Show this thread
      14. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Some pieces are ONLY famous due to their use in cartoons. I could find almost no information on Arthur A. Penn’s 1907 piece “Carissima,” but cartoon fans will remember its inclusion in this hilarious bit from the Sylvester cartoon BACK ALLEY OPROAR.pic.twitter.com/8RUXwkDNPk

        6 replies 416 retweets 4,705 likes
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      15. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        The extremely brief Wikipedia article on composer Gustav Lange features the dismissive quote that his works are "pretty in character, but they are not marked by any very striking features." I think cartoon fanatics would disagree. "Flower Song" is an oft-used classic:pic.twitter.com/WXfZetuGxZ

        11 replies 441 retweets 4,722 likes
        Show this thread
      16. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        It's strange to be intimately familiar with a piece of music without ever actually knowing what it is. This piece is called "Sextet from Lucia di Lammermoor" by Gaetano Donizetti, but to me it will be "the one where Bugs Bunny ruins that guy's opera."pic.twitter.com/hb7P5IcmqH

        56 replies 661 retweets 5,826 likes
        Show this thread
      17. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        The hypnotic "Fingal's Cave Overture" by Felix Mendelssohn was used as the theme music for the mysterious Minah Bird in several WB cartoons. Director Chuck Jones said of these films, "They were really fourth-dimensional pictures and I don’t understand the fourth dimension.”pic.twitter.com/BsOUeolZYl

        19 replies 399 retweets 4,140 likes
        Show this thread
      18. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        A Mendelssohn piece that you hear constantly in classic cartoons, and even more recent ones like REN & STIMPY and SPONGEBOB, is "Frühlingslied (Spring Song)," which is used to denote peace and tranquility. This is my favorite instance, from the first Ralph Wolf-Sam Sheepdog film.pic.twitter.com/XJjup7nWU7

        15 replies 527 retweets 5,060 likes
        Show this thread
      19. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        "The Minute Waltz" by Polish composer Frédéric Chopin (or as Bugs would say, "Choppin') is featured in the classic short HYDE AND HARE, where the beautiful trill descends into madness.pic.twitter.com/qoSfY0gxch

        42 replies 641 retweets 5,579 likes
        Show this thread
      20. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Another Chopin piece everybody knows from cartoons is "Funeral March," which plays when a character dies or is about to die, as in this memorable bit from the Merrie Melodies short BARS AND STRIPES FOREVER.pic.twitter.com/LjJYPXT3u1

        7 replies 377 retweets 4,118 likes
        Show this thread
      21. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Chopin is all over classic cartoons. Woody Woodpecker devoted an entire Oscar-nominated cartoon to his works. And who can forget Tom gliding in the air with makeshift wings to "Grande Valse Brillante?" A small sample:pic.twitter.com/YlxuKjsHOe

        9 replies 404 retweets 4,110 likes
        Show this thread
      22. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        French composer François-Joseph Gossec was influential in his era, but isn't terribly well-known today. But I think you might recognize his "Gavotte," which was used to underscore something pleasant or dainty (usually ironically) in Warner Bros. cartoons.pic.twitter.com/WI601SpKiD

        7 replies 354 retweets 3,916 likes
        Show this thread
      23. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Brahms' Hungarian Dances serve as the soundtrack for the WB classic PIGS IN A POLKA. Director Friz Freleng would time out his cartoons on musical bar sheets in order to get the synchronization precise. This is Freleng at his best:pic.twitter.com/0VDWthXyFA

        14 replies 442 retweets 4,376 likes
        Show this thread
      24. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        The surest way to get a cartoon character to fall asleep is to sing them "Brahms' Lullaby." Also be sure to throw the phrase "close your big bloodshot eyes" in there somewhere.pic.twitter.com/dR8KSnmRav

        9 replies 375 retweets 3,937 likes
        Show this thread
      25. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        And the surest way to make a cartoon character cry is to play them "Träumerei" by Robert Schumann on the violin. Elmer Fudd even cries in time to the music here:pic.twitter.com/ojAg7HVaax

        5 replies 303 retweets 3,441 likes
        Show this thread
      26. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Beethoven's Fifth was used in World War II cartoons for a very specific reason: the Morse Code for "V" is dot-dot-dot-dash, and so the similar motif from the Beethoven piece symbolized "V for Victory" to wartime audiences.pic.twitter.com/lzigsdTCsf

        15 replies 626 retweets 4,545 likes
        Show this thread
      27. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        The works of Ludwig van Beethoven are all over classic Looney Tunes and Disney shorts. Beethoven is even the hero of a famous cartoon character: Schroeder from PEANUTS.pic.twitter.com/UZZ6CAobMT

        6 replies 381 retweets 3,765 likes
        Show this thread
      28. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        (I should add as a bit of shameless self-promotion that I used Beethoven's "Adagio Cantabile" from "Sonata Pathétique No. 8, op. 13" in my cartoon MUSICAL MAN AND THE MAGIC KAZOO.)pic.twitter.com/yfT0kV9Twd

        10 replies 218 retweets 2,895 likes
        Show this thread
      29. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Mozart's "Piano Sonata No. 16 in C Major, K. 545," re-popularized by Raymond Scott's jazzy 1939 rendition "In an 18th Century Drawing Room," was often used in cartoons set in stuffy mansions and became something of a theme for Granny of the Tweety & Sylvester cartoons.pic.twitter.com/EwRJEt9fQX

        6 replies 283 retweets 3,217 likes
        Show this thread
      30. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Tchaikovsky’s strongest ties to animation are probably the Disney features FANTASIA and SLEEPING BEAUTY, but his music popped up in dozens of Looney Tunes and MGM cartoons, providing the soundtrack for shoemaking elves, ice skating mice, and suicidal birds.pic.twitter.com/1hdIROGDgS

        10 replies 378 retweets 3,588 likes
        Show this thread
      31. Vincent Alexander‏ @NonsenseIsland Mar 1

        Disney is associated with wholesome family entertainment nowadays, but the studio’s earliest Silly Symphonies focused on dancing skeletons and demons cavorting in the fiery pit of Hell, backed up by macabre melodies from Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg.pic.twitter.com/ega0CkHyJU

        53 replies 535 retweets 4,537 likes
        Show this thread
      32. Show replies

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