Music to My Ears

Ya just gotta love old time cartoon music.
First of all… there was so much of it! During Hollywood’s heyday, an animated short was the one type of theatrical film that always featured a continuous musical score from first frame to last sprocket hole. Then there’s the fact that while most of the characters are viciously trying to hit each other, eat each other, or blow each other up with firecrackers, the background music remains sprightly, energetic, and so damn cheerful!
Carl Stalling, the guy behind those wonderful Warner Brothers soundtracks, has received a lot of deserved attention the last decade or so. But there was a whole gang of great cartoon composers like Scott Bradley, Sammy Timberg, Phil Scheib, and Clarence Wheeler. Each had his own style and approach, each was capable making a major contribution to a great film, and each was equally capable of making a dull short seem lively and fun.
I’ve long admired the work of Winston Sharples. He did a bang-up job on many a forgotten RKO-Van Buren cartoon back in the thirties, then found a long time berth at Paramount Famous. Taken at face value, Paramount’s stuff, like Popeye, Baby Huey, Herman and Katnip could be downright gruesome, full of the sort of cartoon violence that would give Itchy and Scratchy nightmares (keep in mind, this is the studio that thought the continuing humiliations of a dead kid, Casper, would be cute.) No matter. Sharples’ airy, melodic scores to these cartoons made everything seem downright jolly. Carl Stalling would custom tailor his music to the most specific detail of the on-screen action. In contrast, Sharples’ work was much more generic, far less prone to violent mood swings. Mostly what we got was six and a half minutes of cheerful, cheerful, cheerful!
I guess they don’t call them ‘toons for nothing!
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On March 14th, 2006 at 12:00 am
Dave, I know he’s later than the most of the cartoons we’re doing at ReFrederator, but I’ve got a soft spot for the (in my opinion) underrated Hoyt Curtin. He was more modern, more soulful (again, in my opinion), more swinging. He fit his times perfectly, and his cartoons did too.
On March 15th, 2006 at 12:00 am
Love Hoyt Curtin! I’ve got a buddy who’s absolutely nutty about the guy, will go on for hours about the ‘big’ sound of vintage Hanna-Barbera TV toons. Count me among those who prefer Curtin’s alternate “Scooby Doo” theme to the official theme song.
On March 14th, 2006 at 12:00 am
Dave, any rough estimate as to how many of these guys paid some dues at one point or another in silent movie houses?
On March 15th, 2006 at 12:00 am
I don’t really know, Eric. I do know that Sharples’ stuff was recycled endlessly as stock music, pasted onto all kinds of films including some silent movies(!) for TV airing. Makes sense. Like I was rambling about, his scores have a wonderful ‘one size fits all’ quality, where as Stalling’s stuff seemed designed for exactly the one cartoon at hand. When they repackaged a bunch of silent Paul Terry cartoons from the 1920’s, someone grabbed a handful of Sharples’ tracks from his RKO cartoons, slapped em on, and bingo… sound cartoons! His original Noveltoon tracks are smeared all over dozens of TV cartoons from the 60’s and 70’s like Batfink, Milton the Monster and Beetle Baily. I’ve even seen industrial films sporting the very familiar ‘Popeye Music’ background scores.
On March 20th, 2006 at 12:00 am
What to you mean!