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Music Appreciation
Related: About this forumOn February 8, 1994, Raymond Scott died.
I run a bigger thread about him on his birthday in September.
Raymond Scott

Background information
Birth name: Harry Warnow
Born: September 10, 1908; Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Died: February 8, 1994 (aged 85); North Hills, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Website: raymondscott.net
Raymond Scott (born Harry Warnow; September 10, 1908 February 8, 1994) was an American composer, band leader, pianist, record producer, and inventor of electronic instruments.
Though Scott never scored cartoon soundtracks, his music is familiar to millions because Carl Stalling adapted it in over 120 Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Daffy Duck, and other Warner Bros. Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. His compositions may also be heard in The Ren and Stimpy Show (which uses Scott's recordings in twelve episodes), The Simpsons, Duckman, Animaniacs, The Oblongs, and Batfink. The only time he composed to accompany animation was three 20-second commercial jingles for County Fair Bread in 1962.
{snip}

Background information
Birth name: Harry Warnow
Born: September 10, 1908; Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Died: February 8, 1994 (aged 85); North Hills, Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Website: raymondscott.net
Raymond Scott (born Harry Warnow; September 10, 1908 February 8, 1994) was an American composer, band leader, pianist, record producer, and inventor of electronic instruments.
Though Scott never scored cartoon soundtracks, his music is familiar to millions because Carl Stalling adapted it in over 120 Bugs Bunny, Porky Pig, Daffy Duck, and other Warner Bros. Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies cartoons. His compositions may also be heard in The Ren and Stimpy Show (which uses Scott's recordings in twelve episodes), The Simpsons, Duckman, Animaniacs, The Oblongs, and Batfink. The only time he composed to accompany animation was three 20-second commercial jingles for County Fair Bread in 1962.
{snip}
Baby Bottleneck

Music by: Carl W. Stalling
Release date: March 16, 1946
Baby Bottleneck is a 1946 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Bob Clampett and written by Warren Foster. The cartoon was released on March 16, 1946, and stars Daffy Duck and Porky Pig.
{snip}
Plot
As the post-World War II baby boom explodes, an overworked stork (patterned after comedian Jimmy Durante) gets drunk in the Stork Club, complaining that he does all the work and the fathers get all the credit. Inexperienced animals; among them a dog with a propeller-powered tail carrying bundles of babies, four crows attempting to deliver an elephant, a pelican with simple devices to help haul the babies in its bill, and a mouse dragging a baby rhino; are among those commissioned to handle the increased workload as they take the babies to their parents. Babies are getting sent to the wrong parents; a mother goose is disgusted by her baby skunk, a baby kitten refuses to swim for its mother duck, a baby gorilla rides uncomfortably in the pouch of a Kangaroo, a Scottie Dog tries to rock his hippo to sleep, and two parents receive offspring that try to eat thema kitten to a terrified mouse and an alligator to a pig.
Porky Pig is brought in to manage Storks Inc. and its assembly line, with Daffy Duck as his assistant. While Daffy mans the phones, making quick references to Bing Crosby ( "I'm sorry, Bing, you've used up your quota." ), Eddie Cantor ( "You say you haven't got that boy yet?" ) and the Dionne Quintuplets' father ( "Mr. Dionne, please!" ), Porky runs the control room, contacting references to Roydan Stork, Jimmy Doolittle as Jimmy Doo-quite-a-little, and a B-19. Then a dog worker, apparently research and development, comes into Porky's door and said his skyrocket invention would speed things exponentially, but the rocket exploded before the send-off. It's back to the drawing board for that idea.
Then Daffy yells, "Fffull-speed ahead!" and Porky pulled the switch as the babies (among them Tweety in a brief cameo) are seen going through a conveyor belt ( to the tune of Raymond Scott's famous "Powerhouse" ) as they are diapered, fed milk and mechanically burped before they are sent by various animals, one of which is a baby hippo crying loudly and paused as it cutely said, "I'm only 3½ seconds old," before resuming its wailing. When the milk feeding machine begins spraying milk over a baby dog's diaper, it begins crying as an alarm suddenly sounds. In response, Porky pulls a lever that sends the baby dog to be given a rather quick bath.
{snip}

Music by: Carl W. Stalling
Release date: March 16, 1946
Baby Bottleneck is a 1946 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Bob Clampett and written by Warren Foster. The cartoon was released on March 16, 1946, and stars Daffy Duck and Porky Pig.
{snip}
Plot
As the post-World War II baby boom explodes, an overworked stork (patterned after comedian Jimmy Durante) gets drunk in the Stork Club, complaining that he does all the work and the fathers get all the credit. Inexperienced animals; among them a dog with a propeller-powered tail carrying bundles of babies, four crows attempting to deliver an elephant, a pelican with simple devices to help haul the babies in its bill, and a mouse dragging a baby rhino; are among those commissioned to handle the increased workload as they take the babies to their parents. Babies are getting sent to the wrong parents; a mother goose is disgusted by her baby skunk, a baby kitten refuses to swim for its mother duck, a baby gorilla rides uncomfortably in the pouch of a Kangaroo, a Scottie Dog tries to rock his hippo to sleep, and two parents receive offspring that try to eat thema kitten to a terrified mouse and an alligator to a pig.
Porky Pig is brought in to manage Storks Inc. and its assembly line, with Daffy Duck as his assistant. While Daffy mans the phones, making quick references to Bing Crosby ( "I'm sorry, Bing, you've used up your quota." ), Eddie Cantor ( "You say you haven't got that boy yet?" ) and the Dionne Quintuplets' father ( "Mr. Dionne, please!" ), Porky runs the control room, contacting references to Roydan Stork, Jimmy Doolittle as Jimmy Doo-quite-a-little, and a B-19. Then a dog worker, apparently research and development, comes into Porky's door and said his skyrocket invention would speed things exponentially, but the rocket exploded before the send-off. It's back to the drawing board for that idea.
Then Daffy yells, "Fffull-speed ahead!" and Porky pulled the switch as the babies (among them Tweety in a brief cameo) are seen going through a conveyor belt ( to the tune of Raymond Scott's famous "Powerhouse" ) as they are diapered, fed milk and mechanically burped before they are sent by various animals, one of which is a baby hippo crying loudly and paused as it cutely said, "I'm only 3½ seconds old," before resuming its wailing. When the milk feeding machine begins spraying milk over a baby dog's diaper, it begins crying as an alarm suddenly sounds. In response, Porky pulls a lever that sends the baby dog to be given a rather quick bath.
{snip}
Looney TunesClassic/Porky pig and Daffy Duck Baby factory trouble
12,951 views Jun 6, 2019
Rayqwan Edmondson 2
84 subscribers
12,951 views Jun 6, 2019
Rayqwan Edmondson 2
84 subscribers
Raymond Scott POWERHOUSE in LOONEY TUNES
397,764 views Jan 14, 2011
RaymondScottArchives
1.01K subscribers
Warner Bros. made this official montage of Raymond Scott's classic 1937 tune, "Powerhouse," in vintage LOONEY TUNES and MERRIE MELODIES animation More into about Raymond Scott: http://RaymondScott.com
397,764 views Jan 14, 2011
RaymondScottArchives
1.01K subscribers
Warner Bros. made this official montage of Raymond Scott's classic 1937 tune, "Powerhouse," in vintage LOONEY TUNES and MERRIE MELODIES animation More into about Raymond Scott: http://RaymondScott.com
"The Penguin," from 2012:
ODDIO INC.
Published on Jan 28, 2013
THE MUSICAL MAYHEM OF RAYMOND SCOTT: Featuring STEVE BARTEK & EGO PLUM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2012 WALT DISNEY HALL'S REDCAT THEATER, LOS ANGELES CA ONE NIGHT ONLY
Steve Bartek's Ensemble:
Steve Bartek (guitar)
John Hernandez (drums)
Sam Phipps (Tenor Sax)
Brian Swartz (Trumpet)
Chris Bleth (Clarinet)
Freddy Hernandez (Bass)
Brad Dutz (Xylophone/Percussion)
with guest vocalists:
Brendan McCreary (Vocals) Raya Yarbrough (Vocals)
Arrangements based on transcriptions by Les Deutsch, Tim Rodier and Steve Bartek
Video Directed and Edited by Aaron Cohen
Produced by: Jeff Winner/REDCAT/Ego Plum/Steve Bartek/Rogue Artists Ensemble
Published on Jan 28, 2013
THE MUSICAL MAYHEM OF RAYMOND SCOTT: Featuring STEVE BARTEK & EGO PLUM
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 2012 WALT DISNEY HALL'S REDCAT THEATER, LOS ANGELES CA ONE NIGHT ONLY
Steve Bartek's Ensemble:
Steve Bartek (guitar)
John Hernandez (drums)
Sam Phipps (Tenor Sax)
Brian Swartz (Trumpet)
Chris Bleth (Clarinet)
Freddy Hernandez (Bass)
Brad Dutz (Xylophone/Percussion)
with guest vocalists:
Brendan McCreary (Vocals) Raya Yarbrough (Vocals)
Arrangements based on transcriptions by Les Deutsch, Tim Rodier and Steve Bartek
Video Directed and Edited by Aaron Cohen
Produced by: Jeff Winner/REDCAT/Ego Plum/Steve Bartek/Rogue Artists Ensemble
Tue Sep 10, 2024: On this day, September 10, 1908, Raymond Scott was born.
Thu Feb 8, 2024: On this day, February 8, 1994, Raymond Scott died.
Sun Sep 10, 2023: On this day, September 10, 1908, Raymond Scott was born.
Thu Feb 9, 2023: On February 8, 1994, Raymond Scott died.
Sat Sep 10, 2022: On this day, September 10, 1908, Harry Warnow was born. You know him better as Raymond Scott.
Fri Sep 10, 2021: On this day, September 10, 1908, Harry Warnow was born. You know him better as Raymond Scott.
Tue Feb 9, 2021: On February 8, 1994, Raymond Scott died.
Mon Sep 10, 2018: This would have been his 110th birthday: Raymond Scott
I was watching the Saturday morning cartoons last weekend, and of course there was an excerpt of a Raymond Scott piece in one of them. It was "Baby Bottleneck."