Cool. I remember hearing the theme song but never watched the cartoon.
I'm not. Where does it come from?And before all you kids start, I am well aware of where the music from the "The Smurfs" comes from.
Various famous works of classical music.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_smurfs#Use_of_classical_music
I'll agree on Stalling, for the Warner Brothers Looney Tunes/Merrie Melodies cartoons of the period from 1936-1958, and for his Disney work pre-1936. His stuff is simply brilliant.Carl Stallings and Milt Franklyn. Composers of the classic Warner Bros. cartoons. No one can touch their genius.
Jazz, classical, swing, standards. And incredible use of existing music from the WB library as well.
I always enjoyed the action music from GI Joe, Transformers, and The Real Ghostbusters.
The original Jonny Quest theme blows them all out of the water.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xV_-u9sxYZM
Speaking of Shuki Levy & Haim Saban, they made the music score for The Mysterious Cities of Gold and it's been reported to have more or less 50 themes. The whole thing is awesome.Oh yeah, The Real Ghostbusters. That was one of about a million animated shows that Shuki Levy & Haim Saban scored in the '80s (before Saban founded his own production company), but it stood out from the rest of their corpus of work. There was some really great stuff there in an eclectic variety of styles, from straight action music to jazz to rock to Dixieland to whatever. Although the later seasons switched to different composers, as well as being inferior in writing.
I always enjoyed the action music from GI Joe, Transformers, and The Real Ghostbusters.
Oh yeah, The Real Ghostbusters. That was one of about a million animated shows that Shuki Levy & Haim Saban scored in the '80s (before Saban founded his own production company), but it stood out from the rest of their corpus of work. There was some really great stuff there in an eclectic variety of styles, from straight action music to jazz to rock to Dixieland to whatever. Although the later seasons switched to different composers, as well as being inferior in writing.
I prefer Homer Simpson's version:No love for The Flintstones theme tune?![]()
Well, sure -- it's Gershwin, really. Can't go too far wrong, there.No love for The Flintstones theme tune?![]()
If you don't recognize the melody of "I've Got Plenty of Money, and You," you miss out on a lot of jokes.
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