0:00 Smile, Darn Ya, Smile! 0:31 I Like Mountain Music 0:40 Rhythm in the Bow 0:59 Boulevardier from the Bronx 1:05 Injun Trouble 2:37 Hobo Gadget Band 3:13 The Bug Parade 3:23 Saddle Silly 3:45 Buckaroo Bugs 3:54 The Unruly Hare 3:59 Hare Trigger 4:05 Wagon Heels 5:23 Nothing But the Tooth 5:54 Mississippi Hare 6:09 Who's Kitten Who? 6:24 Freudy Cat
Hobo Gadget Band is my favorite. Perfectly showcases how pleasing the orchestrations in the WB cartoons were. Close second is the Nothing But the Tooth title card, for its up tempo. Who's Kitten Who?/Freudy Cat is a fun use too. (though about Freudy Cat: Notice the dissonant Bill Lava music can be heard butting in right before the video ends)
They are! One of them is from the beginning of “Whose Kitten Who?” From 1952 while the other is a cheater cartoon (basically a clip show in which a short consists of a bunch of clips from previous shorts) called “Freudy Cat” from 1964. This cartoon uses that clip from the former short.
@glowworm2 "Looney Tunes on Nickelodeon" will forever sound bizarre to me, because here in Ireland and the UK, the shorts were always shown on Cartoon Network and later Boomerang. 🤣
@@DoctorInk20 Ah, when I was a kid, my first exposure to Looney Tunes was on Nickelodeon, channels TNT and TBS and ABC and the Kids WB. Cartoon Network, BTW, first showed up for me around second grade. United States gal here.
Damn, can't stop bringing in mind Avery's southern wolf whistling.
Also, over at MGM, nonchalantly whistled by Avery's Southern wolf.
Man I love that wolf
@@yoshi6468 Break it up, son. Joke's over.
And also heard extensively in Billy Boy.
0:00 Smile, Darn Ya, Smile!
0:31 I Like Mountain Music
0:40 Rhythm in the Bow
0:59 Boulevardier from the Bronx
1:05 Injun Trouble
2:37 Hobo Gadget Band
3:13 The Bug Parade
3:23 Saddle Silly
3:45 Buckaroo Bugs
3:54 The Unruly Hare
3:59 Hare Trigger
4:05 Wagon Heels
5:23 Nothing But the Tooth
5:54 Mississippi Hare
6:09 Who's Kitten Who?
6:24 Freudy Cat
Hobo Gadget Band is my favorite. Perfectly showcases how pleasing the orchestrations in the WB cartoons were. Close second is the Nothing But the Tooth title card, for its up tempo. Who's Kitten Who?/Freudy Cat is a fun use too. (though about Freudy Cat: Notice the dissonant Bill Lava music can be heard butting in right before the video ends)
6:17 Out to lunch, huh? Well, I'll just leave it right here. Hehe! Don't reckon it'll hop away.
Say, boy...where's that there whistlin' wolf?
Wrong studio. That's MGM.
@@ryanhoward3383 Thank you
*walks off while whistling Year of Jubilo*
They used this motif in Ken Burns "The Civil War" as a theme tune for Ulysses' S. Grant.
I feel really bad for foreign fans who had to grow up listening to these cartoons in crappy PAL speed.
Those last two... don't tell me those are two separate cartoons? 😂
They are! One of them is from the beginning of “Whose Kitten Who?” From 1952 while the other is a cheater cartoon (basically a clip show in which a short consists of a bunch of clips from previous shorts) called “Freudy Cat” from 1964. This cartoon uses that clip from the former short.
@@glowworm2 Yes! I've seen _Freudy Cat_ before, I believe. Doesn't Sylvester go to a psychiatrist in it?
@@DoctorInk20 Yes. Nickelodeon used to air this short a lot when I was a kid, so I'm very familiar with it.
@glowworm2 "Looney Tunes on Nickelodeon" will forever sound bizarre to me, because here in Ireland and the UK, the shorts were always shown on Cartoon Network and later Boomerang. 🤣
@@DoctorInk20 Ah, when I was a kid, my first exposure to Looney Tunes was on Nickelodeon, channels TNT and TBS and ABC and the Kids WB. Cartoon Network, BTW, first showed up for me around second grade. United States gal here.
That song is from Mickey Mouse cartoon Gallopin Gaucho from 1928.
I thought the song was called "Old Master's Runaway"
It is.
Why are some of the cartoons high pitched?
It must be an error!
@@nicholasmalone5943 I doubt it.
probably something about copyright
é legal usado nos finais dos episódios do Pernalonga