9 posts tagged with cartoon and music (View popular tags)

What are the chords to the "Little Einsteins" theme song? I'm trying to play it in the key of C, it sounds like there's a key change after the RRRRRR part - but i cants figure it out. thanks. [more inside]
posted on Nov 2, 2007 - 6 answers

This is one that's been bugging me forEVER. My guess is that it's just needledrop music, but it seems way too prevalent for that. But the song I'm looking for is the "ha ha ha ha ha ha ha/ho ho ho ho ho ho ho/hee hee hee hee hee hee hee/Haaa haaaa haaaa" one that seems to pop up a lot in Cartoons. [more inside]
posted on Sep 15, 2007 - 22 answers

I'm trying to identify two clips shown in the Disney video DTV Pop and Rock (from 1984 I think). The first one is a '50s style cartoon shown during the segment for "At the Hop" by Danny and the Juniors. The clip shows a bunch of kids in a hot rod and at a malt shop. The second clip is a black and white cartoon that has dancing skeletons. This is shown in the first video, "Dancing in the Streets" by Martha and the Vandellas. I couldn't find any information on the movie at IMDB and very little on Wikipedia. Thanks for any help.
posted on Aug 24, 2007 - 8 answers

Trying to identify a short hook from old school cartoon music, originally for attribution, now just out of stubborn curiosity. [more inside]
posted on Feb 1, 2007 - 3 answers

What is the name of the music that accompanied the Pink Panther cartoon series? [more inside]
posted on Oct 27, 2006 - 4 answers

Does anyone know what the artist / song name in the Adult Swim bump that reads "All Times and Music are eastern?" It is cool and I can't find it.
posted on Nov 21, 2005 - 6 answers

The Mighty Hercules cartoon had a theme song that was parodied in my elementary school. Can you help me figure out the lyrics? (More inside Herc! Herc!)
posted on Dec 13, 2004 - 12 answers

Looking for a cartoon: in the introduction to Nicolas Slonimsky's "Lexicon of Musical Invective" he mentions an "anonymous cartoon printed by G. Schirmer in New York in 1869 under the title, 'The Music of the Future,' displays eight cats (labeled A, B, C, D, E, F, G, A), several donkeys, and a group of goats, as participants in a Wagnerian orchestra. The score on the conductor's stand reads: 'Liszt's Symphonic Poem.' Another score, at the conductor's feet, is marked: 'Wagner, not to be played much until 1995." I'd love to get a copy of this in any form or shape, or a lead to it in a printed book.
posted on May 20, 2004 - 5 answers