The studio orchestras of this era seem to have recorded the best versions of just about every popular song - far better than the contemporary dance bands, which were already excellent. Perhaps there was a lot more money in the movies.
0:00 Riff Raffy Daffy 0:17 Bad Ol' Putty Tat 0:35 The Grey Hounded Hare 1:38 Often an Orphan 1:54 It's Hummer Time 2:30 Scent-imental Romeo 2:54 Chow Hound 3:20 Ballot Box Bunny 3:49 A Mouse Divided 4:01 There Auto Be a Law 4:08 The Iceman Ducketh
@@matthewmoran5297I think that's the point: to make Pepe Le Pew as repellent as possible. Also, this is the only time there's a direct reference to Pepe Le Pew being like Maurice Chevalier. The character is definitely Charles Boyer's voice with the personality of the characters Maurice Chevalier played in his movies, especially the ones made before the Hays Code was more strictly enforced like "One Hour with You" and "The Smiling Lieutenant", but the Charles Boyer side gets more attention.
Yeah, in those days, kissing babies was how politicians showed they cared for their constituents. It would not fly today, and it looks so bad out of context.
The studio orchestras of this era seem to have recorded the best versions of just about every popular song - far better than the contemporary dance bands, which were already excellent. Perhaps there was a lot more money in the movies.
0:00 Riff Raffy Daffy
0:17 Bad Ol' Putty Tat
0:35 The Grey Hounded Hare
1:38 Often an Orphan
1:54 It's Hummer Time
2:30 Scent-imental Romeo
2:54 Chow Hound
3:20 Ballot Box Bunny
3:49 A Mouse Divided
4:01 There Auto Be a Law
4:08 The Iceman Ducketh
Didn’t Baby Face play during one of the Grey Hound scenes, and that it ended abruptly from a dynamite stick blowing up on that dog’s face?
Thank you for doing my request. This is one of my favorite jazz standards. Could swear it was used more times tho
Thank you very much for doing my request, LTS! Edit: Looks like someone already beat me to the punch.
Missing an instance in Grey Hounded Hare where Bugs throws the "stick" for the dog
at 2:30 reference to Maurice Chevalier.
No offense to Mel, but it seems like he couldn't hit those high notes 🤨
@@matthewmoran5297I think that's the point: to make Pepe Le Pew as repellent as possible.
Also, this is the only time there's a direct reference to Pepe Le Pew being like Maurice Chevalier. The character is definitely Charles Boyer's voice with the personality of the characters Maurice Chevalier played in his movies, especially the ones made before the Hays Code was more strictly enforced like "One Hour with You" and "The Smiling Lieutenant", but the Charles Boyer side gets more attention.
I know it's a channel just for Looney Tunes but can you do Every "Darktown Strubers Ball " was used in Tom and Jerry
So good !👍💕 love these , 👍🐰🥕📺🦨🐾😻
Can you do camptown races?
can you do Henry hawks theme that plays in most foghorn shorts
I'm more familiar to the version played in Tom & Jerry
Which shorts used the song?
Baby Puss
@@MaminakaMrpaperbagBaby Puss (1943)
Sam what the fuck
Yeah, in those days, kissing babies was how politicians showed they cared for their constituents. It would not fly today, and it looks so bad out of context.
The intro music to Doodle Toons