![]() ![]() I keep reading about Jack Shaindlin and Hi-Q. And Warners would still have to submit a cue sheet to ASCAP so the composers got paid. I'm sure the fee schedule was different for theatrical use than it was for television. It depends on the contract Warners had with Capitol (yes, Capitol had to be paid) and I don't know what that was. Sorry, Toadette, I'm rarely on forums any more so I would have responded sooner if I saw this. The Bugs Bunny Road Runner Movie, after all, has been out on DVD for years, without any problems, but "Hip Hip-Hurry!" itself is not. During this short time, the Capitol stock music can still be heard, before abruptly cutting to the score for "Zoom and Bored".ĭid Jones (or WB) have to pay any royalties to Capitol because of the music? Or did a client have to use a certain amount of stock music before payments were required? Or did Capitol not know or (if they did) not care? The Latin-name introduction for this cartoon was later used to introduce the 19-minute Road Runner segment in the Bugs Bunny Road-Runner Movie. "Hip Hip-Hurry!" was one of two Road Runner cartoons that used Capitol Hi-Q stock music. Just look up "A boy names his body parts" on Youtube. A boy would name his body parts and a dark circle would cover it for a few seconds. No, nothing like that ("Sesame Street" wouldn't approved it). Wait when you say 'body parts' do you mean his guts and stuff? That would've freaked me out as a kid too. I never mention this to anyone but it scared me so much, that it was the reason why I stopped watching the show for a long time (plus, I was nine and it was pretty much time for me to move on). Off-topic, but the animated segment you mention gave me the creeps as a child. The classic "Making Crayons" film uses a KPM music cue, for example, along with a 70s animated segment about a boy showing his body parts. Very interesting! I do know a few Sesame Street films and animated inserts used stock music. It was "The villain in the Pamela hat" bit and that was released in several formats (including a CD-I software title). I just recently realized that an animated segment from "Sesame Street" had some Capitol Hi-Q music. Their opening logo from 1985 originally used a modified KPM stock music cue, "Prestige Logo (a)" by Paddy Kingsland, but I guess to avoid having to pay the royalties each time they released a new VHS under that banner, in mid-1986 they replaced that music with a sound-alike fanfare that was apparently an original composition that was then used for the rest of the logo's usage (until 1996, at least!) This even happened with Golden Book Video in the mid-80s, but not with Capitol's music. I remember the "Television's Greatest Hits" album from 1985 re-recorded the "Donna Reed Show" and "Dennis the Menace" themes due to them originally being Capitol Hi-Q music cues (the "Captain Kangaroo" theme, "Puffin' Billy," also got remade due to it being a stock music cue as well.) Quite a few of the Capitol Hi-Q music cues, particularly ones composed by Jack Shaindlin and Phil Green, are now part of the APM library, so maybe some of those rights have been transferred. Coyote's Crash Course"), and I will say the music seemed to work rather well with "Hook, Line and Stinker," compared to the others (ESPECIALLY that crappy "Pre-Hysterical Hare.") So far we've had three of them released on DVD ("Hip-Hip Hurry" WAS released on VHS in the 1990s, "Road Runner and Wile E. cartoons from coming to DVD (like the first two seasons of "Quick Draw McGraw," or when Rhino initially planned to release the old Gumby shorts on DVD.) But I believe their theatrical rights are different from the television rights. I initially thought this was preventing the "Seely Six" Warner Bros. ![]()
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