Tuesday, December 13, 2016

10 - In the Army / Man's Best Friend





In the Army:

- Cha Cha Cha – Ib Glindemann [OGM] (title card)
- You’re in the Army Now – Bob Camp, Charlie Brissette [Original Composition] (opening)
- Drama Link (i) – Hubert Clifford (Ren and Stimpy cowering in fear)
- Holiday Playtime – Cedric King-Palmer (“This… will… hurt… you.”)
- Hollywood Romance – Peter Yorke (Ren after his shot)
- The Toy Trumpet – Raymond Scott (Ren and Stimpy getting their hair cut)
- Blood in the Gutter – Laurie Johnson (Ren thrown down)
- The Swinging Parade – Alan Moorhouse (Stimpy doing push-ups)
- Anger – Alan Braden (sarge getting pissed at Ren’s bribe)
- Backporch Blues (d) – Richard Myhill (Ren and Stimpy peeling potatoes)
- The March of the Ants – Sidney Crooke (tear gas training)
- Bits and Pieces – Ronald Hanmer (Stimpy reacting to the tear gas)
- Holiday Playtime – Cedric King-Palmer (Ren and Stimpy outside the tear gas chamber)
- Funeral March from Piano Sonata No.2 in Bb minor, Op.35 – Frederic Chopin and Fiachra Trench (both go back into the tear gas room)
- Backporch Blues (d) – Richard Myhill (more potato peeling)
- Drama – Van Phillips (Ren and Stimpy marching in the mud)
- Roman March – Robert Sharples (Stimpy carrying Ren)
- Maniac Pursuit – Trevor Duncan (sarge rises from the mud)
- Terror By Night – Hubert Clifford (Ren screaming)
- Just a Closer Walk with Thee – William Gilbert Carter, Henry Stinson, Don Rouse, Richard Wilcox Sackett, David Frank Robinson Jr, Wesley F. Butts (Ren and Stimpy retiring that night)
- Catfish Row – Benny Carter (Ren and Stimpy take off their boots)
- Brahm’s Lullaby – Johannes Brahms (“Good night, Ren.” “Good night, Stimpy.”)
- Reveille – Charlie Brissette, Bob Camp [Original Composition] (Morning trumpet call wakes up Ren)
- Aboriginal Chants A – Garry Hardman (Ren in crazy mode)
- Bits and Pieces – Ronald Hanmer (Ren chops up his bed)
- Battle Hymn of the Republic (sarge yells at Ren)
- Backporch Blues (d) – Richard Myhill (peeling an H-bomb)
- Smouldering Fury (a) – Trevor Duncan (Ren’s crazy talk)
- Hit and Run – Ralph Dollimore (Ren and Stimpy try to escape)
- Drama Link (b) – Hubert Clifford (sarge again)
- Knight Errant – Sam Fonteyn (“You’re full-fledged tank paratroopers.”)
- America the Beautiful – Bob Camp, John Kricfalusi, Henry Porch [Original Composition] (Ren and Stimpy sing it while going to war)
- Cha Cha Cha – Ib Glindemann [OGM] (fade out)



Man's Best Friend:

- In a 18th Century Drawing Room – Raymond Scott (title card)
- Dramatic Sting #9 – Dan Kirsten [OGM] (Starring George Liquor)
- After the Ball – Erik Markman, Charles K. Harris [OGM] (George Liquor looking at Ren and Stimpy through the pet shop window)
- Nostalgic – Alan Braden (“Gosh, look at the cute little rascals.”)
- The Whistler Overture – Charlie Brissette [Original composition] (George Liquor skipping home)
- Sunshine Patrol – Tom Elliot [OGM] (“Welcome home, boys.”)
- Teenage Party – Erik Markman [OGM] (fish drives away)
- Holidays – Dan Kirsten [OGM] (Ren and Stimpy in a fish bowl)
- Drama Link (n) – Hubert Clifford (morning)
- Reveille – Richard Myhill (“Roll call!”)
- The Red, White and Blue – Mayhew Lake (George Liquor’s rigorous training program)
- The Anvil Chorus – Giuseppe Verdi, Lee Ashley [OGM] (Ren pushing his butt against the newspaper)
- Eerie Emotional – Philip Green (Stimpy holding the newspaper)
- In a 18th Century Drawing Room – Raymond Scott (Stimpy dancing)
- Funeral March of a Marionette – Charles Gounod (“Today’s lesson in discipline.”)
- Declamatory Chords – Alan Braden (George Liquor tempts Ren and Stimpy to get on the couch)
- Mechanical Industrial Underscore – William Loose (“Get up on that couch!”)
- Fire (JB-28) – William Loose, Jack Cookerly [Capitol Records] (George Liquor screams at Stimpy)
- Terror – Alan Braden (Stimpy jumps on the couch)
- Tension Tag #1 – Dan Kirsten [OGM] (George Liquor looks like he’s gonna kill Stimpy but hugs him instead)
- Delicate Gay – Alan Braden (“It’s discipline that begets love!”)
- In a 18th Century Drawing Room – Raymond Scott (Stimpy gets a treat)
- Hollywood Holiday – Frank Samuels (“Are you afraid of a little discipline?”)
- Moment Musical – Raymond Scott (attack lesson)
- Twilight in Turkey – Raymond Scott (Ren hits George Liquor with a boating oar numerous times)
- New Year’s Eve in a Haunted House – Raymond Scott (end of lesson)
- In a 18th Century Drawing Room – Raymond Scott (Lawn Cigar doggie treats)


Any mistakes? Comment below and let me know!

4 comments:

  1. How did you get the title "Mechanical Industrial Underscore"? The reason I'm asking is because I can't find that name anywhere except for here on this blog

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  2. I'm glad there's a blog that includes the music used on the show. I even forgive the white font on black bg (which drives eyeballs CRAZY after a minute ... so many bloggers seem to have this combo as their choice-- unless it's default, and in that case it's Blogger that's the eediot).

    Seems like "Just a Closer Walk with Thee", from In the Army, has a touch of reverb in the actual episode soundtrack when I watch it. That effect gives it a nice quality. It's not in the album cut of the gospel hymn.

    PS-- Anyone know if "Cha Cha Cha" is a ful length tune by Mr. Glindemann? Can't find that on Youtube. Thanks.

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    Replies
    1. Hery, thanks much for your response and for the links. Appreciate it!

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