Pluggers by Rick McKee for May 24, 2022

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    Templo S.U.D.  almost 2 years ago

    What’s opera, Doc?

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    allen@home  almost 2 years ago

    One of those cartoons that you follow the bouncing ball. Is how i learned to spell Mississippi.

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    Johnny Q Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    I learned Mendelssohn’s “Spring Song” from the cartoon where Wile E. Coyote tried to lull the sheepdog to sleep by playing Pan pipes…

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    dph28  almost 2 years ago

    thanks for the earworm

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    pauljmsn  almost 2 years ago

    I learned to appreciate the Second and Third Movements of the “William Tell Overture” from the old Warner Brothers cartoons; background music for a thunderstorm and for a pleasant sunrise, respectively. And as for the Fourth Movement – well, Hi-yo, Silver and all that.

    I’m proud o say that I learned to appreciate classical musicand opera from cartoons.

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    kelloggs2066  almost 2 years ago

    Thank you, Termite Terrace!

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    juicebruce  almost 2 years ago

    And all those cartoons were done by hand ! No computer generation ;-)

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    zerotvus  almost 2 years ago

    what a shame that today’s kids can’t see the real buggs……

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    TheWildSow  almost 2 years ago

    Ozzy Fudd, the Wabbit Swayew! https://youtu.be/jLeOtRf6_1g

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    Doug K  almost 2 years ago

    Bugs Bunny conducting:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BX1ljYx3g3k

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    GoComicsGo!  almost 2 years ago

    Elmer Fudd was one of the most unappreciated of opera stars ever and you can’t change my mind.

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    ctolson  almost 2 years ago

    Good old Elmer Fudd, a man of many talents. However, successful hunting of rabbits wasn’t one of them.

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    walstib Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    Beethoven’s 9th second movement on NBC News.

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    goboboyd  almost 2 years ago

    There are many references to classical music in Warner Brothers cartoons. Bugs Bunny in particular. Hard to go to a concert and not recognize something… and smirk a little.

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    david_42  almost 2 years ago

    I attended a concert in Philly where the orchestra would do the original score, then they would play along with a cartoon, repeat. It was great.

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    Stephen Mitchell Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    Me too! I must be a plugger.

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    sloaches  almost 2 years ago

    Opera and classical music aside, it was watching Warner Brothers cartoons where I first learned about The Great Gildersleeve.

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    MIHorn Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    When playing “The Rabbit . . I mean . . . Barber of Seville”, I always have the words going through my head.

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    JohnRitz  almost 2 years ago

    Also discovered opera through the cartoons, and I discovered Beethoven through The Huntley-Brinkley Report

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    mistercatworks  almost 2 years ago

    “HERE I COME TO SAVE THE DAY!” – Mighty Mouse

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    Gent  almost 2 years ago

    Be vevvy vevvy qviet. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha.

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    Bex Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    https://music.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_lDeR9YUCKOxpTydNGlvpZiRTmsdv7FsSQ&feature=share

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    Display  almost 2 years ago

    And because most folks don’t know where this comes from, a mystery solved…

    https://youtu.be/qaC0vNLdLvY

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    the lost wizard  almost 2 years ago

    I still say that it’s duck season. :)

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    KEA  almost 2 years ago

    absolutely

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    bull_moose_1912  almost 2 years ago

    Nothing beats Andy Panda’s version of “The Poet and Peasant Overture”.

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    bruno640320  almost 2 years ago

    “Hillbilly Promenade”, after Bugs pulled the plug. Sound effects were great, as they’d “Whomp your partner!,” “Poke-’im in the eye!” “Yank his beard!”, etc., and end up “Wallow-around in the mud, like a an-ol’ fat-sow!”

    And somewhere in that episode, the two-‘billys in the dynamite shed, needed some “illumination”. One of ’em-whupped out a lighter. Sounds of “scritch-scritch”, followed by, "Durned-thang won’t light!!". Forget now, but, what’d Bugs give ’em? A box of matches maybe? Whatever it was, ONE-time was all it took…!☺

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    anomalous4  almost 2 years ago

    I’ve always liked classical music, but just about the only way I can stand opera is in the Warner Bros. or Little Rascals versions.

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    martinman8 Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    that was the best way to get somebodes attention

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    Irish53  almost 2 years ago

    Vintage Tom and Jerry sometimes has opera and classical music while they beat the crap out of each other too

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    holdenrex  almost 2 years ago

    “What’s Opera, Doc?” was a passion project for Chuck Jones and it shows. Warner Brothers gave Jones a fixed budget for each short he produced, so he scrimped and cut corners on other shorts until he had amassed enough money, time, and talent to put this together.

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    Chris Sherlock  almost 2 years ago

    Bugs: “Kill da wabbit?!”

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    sergioandrade Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    Learned Wagner’s background music from Buster Crabbe’s Flash Gordon and Buck Rodgers serials.

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    DaBump Premium Member almost 2 years ago

    I was raised on classical music, including opera, so it was just an extra delight for me to hear such things in cartoons, too. When I got older and realized it was strange for an adult to still like cartoons, it just made me feel sorry for the other adults. And what’s a sunrise without the accompanying music from the Peer Gynt Suite?

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    sousamannd  almost 2 years ago

    Did y’all know that Lang Lang was inspired to become the great pianist he is today when he watched a Tom and Jerry cartoon that showed them playing a piano overture with an orchestra. That interview is on YouTube if you want to hear him talk about it.

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    mafastore  almost 2 years ago

    Classical music which was off of copyright was available to use at no cost.

    My parents had a lot of records of classical music including operettas in addition to those of current (then) musicals. And I sort of figured every child back then had a record of “Peter and the Wolf” – classical music for children. (“See now the music changes as Peter is out in the woods and walking along…”)

    Plus all the programs for children to hear and learn about classical music that were inexpensive from school programs.

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