A Tribute to "Powerhouse," A Song You Know Well

In 1937, February 20 to be exact, composer and bandleader Raymond Scott recorded a jazzy tune called “Powerhouse.” You might not recognize the name, but you know the song. Raymond Scott never wrote music for cartoons, and never even watched them, but he sold the publishing rights to his catalog to Warner Bros. Music in 1943. Carl Stalling used “Powerhouse” in 40 classic Warner Bros. cartoons. The first part of the song lent itself to frantic chase scenes, and the second half became known as “assembly line” music due to its industrial, rhythmic beat. Stalling used it any time a factory assembly line was part of a cartoon.

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Even after Stalling, the tune that had become so familiar has been used in cartoons over and over, in The Ren & Stimpy Show, Animaniacs, The Simpsons, and even in the Cartoon Network’s promotional bumpers. For the song’s 86th birthday, Cartoon Brew has assembled a collection of cartoons that use “Powerhouse,” plus the story of the song, and even a video of the Raymond Scott Quintet performing it in 1955. -via Kottke

Source: neatorama

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