This was a fun rabbit hole to dive down. FUN FACT- John Phillip Sousa's "Stars and Stripes Forever" was known in the circus world as the "The Disaster March" and was used to signal to event staff that a disaster was unfolding. It could've been a fire or a loose animal, but it was played under no other circumstances than an impending disaster. Kind of a massive difference from how we know it today 😂
@mtaur41133 ай бұрын
Sounds exactly how it's used in Looney Tunes, despite me not knowing that history.
@ObadiahQRex3 ай бұрын
Please cover magiranger.
@raychat28163 ай бұрын
I find it hard to believe that Charles dissected the Simpsons theme without mentioning The Jetson’s theme, where the main melody introducing each character is clearly directly related to the one used to say “The Simosons” in the beginning of the theme, perhaps Maestro Elfman was a huge fan of the Jetsons in the 60’s 😊, the idea is that even people who aren’t musically endowed are able to make the connection … Would you please do the Jetsons theme next, at least to me they’re more intimately related 😊. As a non western person, perhaps the legacy of circus and it’s cultural entourage is less present in my musical heritage, making what you brilliantly described as it’s own thing for me 😊, but thanks for the historical precision 😃😃, much appreciated
@RPG_Guy-fx8ns3 ай бұрын
It would be cool if you showed how to apply this. maybe take a military march that is serious, and add syncopated ragtime base line, and add more teasing chromatic or whole tone sirens. Parts of this remind me of the beginning of a Pokemon battle, or like a flashback jingle sped up, as like a scene transition.
@StevesAssortedStuff3 ай бұрын
As a native of Connecticut, Stars and Stripes Forever always holds a bit of macabre lore to our state- the march was indeed played as an evacuation alert during the fire that unfolded at a Ringling Bros performance in Hartford during 1944. Sadly 167 spectators lost their lives along with hundreds of injuries, to this day it remains the deadliest disaster to have ever happened in CT.
@KyleRDent3 ай бұрын
I miss when Lisa occasionally did a weird little improv on her saxophone. I know it would've been hell to keep up for hundreds of episodes though.
@jasobres3 ай бұрын
Recent episodes have pretty much eschewed the theme altogether except for the vocal chorus at the beginning because they want more time to tell the story or some bullcrap like that.
@FENomadtrooper3 ай бұрын
@@jasobres If you listen to the commentary, they say it's because commercial breaks are cutting more and more episode time. They're running out of space to tell 2 stories, and fit in jokes, AND an opening.
@rimmersbryggeri3 ай бұрын
@@FENomadtrooper What kind of commercials are aired durinf simpsons now? I bet when it started it was super soakers and sugary cereals. Now its going more toward pension plans an incontinense pads.
@igo.spekkyjarvonvreich3 ай бұрын
@@jasobreswell all the recent episodes are trash next to the rlly old ones
@darksparkyshark4303 ай бұрын
@@rimmersbryggeriwas The Simpsons a kids' show? I was not allowed to watch it growing up.
@SamCoulson3 ай бұрын
The key changes clearly represented the different characters, as that is what all the scenes are doing. All the kids are in C, Homer is B, Marge is E, everyone coming home is E flat, and the family all together is D flat.
@jerryking452 ай бұрын
I never realized that. Good to know!
@mathmusicandlooks2 ай бұрын
I picked up on that, too. I was surprised he didn’t point that out more explicitly.
@chrisdaignault98452 ай бұрын
Yep. Big Jetsons vibes here.
@PolDlokay3 ай бұрын
If you pay attention, the music also describes the characters. Fast paced chaotic music portrays bart and homer to be unbalanced, abnormal people. Slow tempo for marge because she is more orderly and calm. Liza is the voice of reason, hence why the song goes back to the original key of C after all the key changes. Her solos also portray creativity. Mix them all together and you have a chaotic family where nothing is normal.
@GingerCh0nk2 ай бұрын
Yeah I was surprised this wasn't brought up. It's the reason there are the many key changes, to set a different place and character.
@Leafsdude2 ай бұрын
"How many kids do we have?" *"Three!"* "A ha! Oh, wait, the baby."
@bryanhryciw3 ай бұрын
Producer James L Brooks described the theme as “lemmings-marching-to-their-death music”
@me-bf1re2 ай бұрын
which they don't actually do
@bryanhryciw2 ай бұрын
@@me-bf1re only when pushed off by Disney producers
@jerryking452 ай бұрын
Very accurate
@zorantaylor31903 ай бұрын
The theme from The Jetsons also takes the same interval and moves it around into different keys with different variations depending on which member of the family is being introduced. Even the underlying concept of "different variation for every part of the family ending its day to go be together again" is an echo of that opening credits sequence. The main difference is that The Jetsons are just STARTING their respective days.
@dferrantino3 ай бұрын
I'm surprised he didn't mention The Jetsons at all. Listening to them back to back it definitely seems like it was *heavily* inspired by that theme, if not directly used as a reference. Which makes sense given that the theme song itself hit the Billboard top 10 in 1986, just 3 years before The Simpsons started their run separate from The Tracey Ullman Show.
@joelcorelitzmusic3 ай бұрын
@@dferrantino seriously. The Simpsons intro is about as much of an homage to The Jetsons intro as anything can be
@Swenglish3 ай бұрын
@@dferrantino I remember reading an interview many years ago where someone, probably Elfman, basically told the story that Matt Groening asked for something similar to the Jetsons theme and Elfman used it as direct inspiration. I was surprised it didn't come up in this video.
@TheBlueArcher3 ай бұрын
@@Swenglish I understand why it might be left out due to it's lineage. Looney tunes is warner, and so is The Jetsons. If you stick the jetsons into the mix of that lesson it takes away the emphasis of looney tunes. I can see some people come away with the message that "The simpsons is just a rip of the jetsons" and while in a way, it kinda is, it's really underselling it. I wouldn't want to do that either.
@Swenglish3 ай бұрын
@@TheBlueArcher It's not a ripoff, though. There are notable similarities, obviously, but none that a jazz pianist wouldn't be able to give context to.
@briansnow98653 ай бұрын
Don't forget... D Elfman also wrote the very ICONIC Batman Theme (1989).
@e.c.winner72523 ай бұрын
And Beetlejuice and Pee Wee’s Big Adventure
@realthing21583 ай бұрын
@@e.c.winner7252 And Edward Scissorhands. The melody Ice Dance is musical bliss.
@Mrgarethw3 ай бұрын
Well, he interpolated the main theme from Bernard Hermnann’s score for Journey to the centre of the earth. If people haven’t heard ‘mountain top/sunrise’ and seen how close it is the the Batman theme it’s quite shocking. Even the instrumentation
@scottbernard88243 ай бұрын
I remember thinking "Simpsons music" when I saw that movie years later.
@gyrrakavian3 ай бұрын
And the way Shirley Walker was able to shift into it in _Batman TAS_ was often just as good.
@taitano123 ай бұрын
I was in 6th grade when The Simpsons came out. My music teacher described staccato and syncopation as sounding like laughter. The key changes and instrument hand-off is like passing through the crowd and picking up on different people laughing. Listen to The Simpsons and Looney Tunes themes and circus music, and you can hear a crowd laughing in every one. From a generic moderate laugh of the piano intro to the loud guffaw of the trumpet to the playing-along-with-the-gag hekeling of Lisa's 🎷, you not only get the zany action of the cartoon in music form, but the laughter of the audience. My 6th grade Music Teacher was in the Seattle Symphony and had a Master's Degree in Music Theory. She was AMAZING at explaining this stuff. All my other Music Teachers just taught us how to sound halfway decent on an instrument. She passed on a passion for music.
@jetblackkinks3 ай бұрын
How awesome!! This story just created a desire for a Masters in Music Theory in me...😆
@strongbadman23 ай бұрын
that makes a lot of sense!!
@lauramarschmallow29223 ай бұрын
I think important about the Simpsons theme specifically is, that the instruments are not played "elegant" especially the brass section has some early "funny" sounds as to do "sound effcts" when the car breaks as to not run over homer, or the school orchestra sounds wonky, as it is meant to sound like a group of second graders. Performance can change the sound of a composition!
@kaitlyn__L3 ай бұрын
Oh man, she sounds great! I only ever had the second kind of music teacher, even my favourite one (who was an oboe player herself). It was actually Charles and Adam's videos and their enthusiasm which made me want to learn these elements of composition, instead of just playing to the sheet music someone else had written.
@DoofenSpyroDragon163 ай бұрын
That’s cool!
@MrZimpoppel3 ай бұрын
Danny Elfman is a tritone maniac. I heard Oingo Boingo in the early eighties and it quickly became one of my favourite bands of that time, and it already had this mad circus feel !
@dariusstarrett88373 ай бұрын
JOJO REFERENCE!!!!!
@Perculian3 ай бұрын
@@dariusstarrett8837 other way around man
@octoaori65493 ай бұрын
@@dariusstarrett8837 The band predated your meme anime, bud, pay respect to the actual band that your meme anime took from it-
@Biospark883 ай бұрын
Also Koji Kondo. It’s tritones all the way down.
@ocularpatdown3 ай бұрын
@@dariusstarrett8837kid, where have you been? I’d suggest listening to Oingo Boingo, especially anything pre-“Dead Man’s Party.”
@xliquidflames3 ай бұрын
12:32 I know why. It's changing keys as each character is introduced. Every character has their own key. So as the scenes change to show a new member of the family, a new key accompanies them in the music.
@xliquidflamesАй бұрын
Each one sounds like their personalities made into music.
@thedemocraticfilipino64173 ай бұрын
Danny Elfman is just the goat for writing this.
@Firguy_the_Foot_Fetishist3 ай бұрын
Danny Elfman would never be the goat without Steve Bartek.
@thedemocraticfilipino64173 ай бұрын
@@Firguy_the_Foot_Fetishist and Bernard Hermann
@ocularpatdown3 ай бұрын
@@Firguy_the_Foot_Fetishistdidn’t Bartek or Ribbs collaborate with Elfman on this theme?
@Firguy_the_Foot_Fetishist3 ай бұрын
@@ocularpatdown it certainly sounds like it. Otherwise, it'd sound too generic.
@bchristian853 ай бұрын
He plagarized it from Brahms. It's Piano Trio No. 2, the 4th movement. Op. 87.
@e.c.winner72523 ай бұрын
In high school, our marching band did a compilation of the songs of Danny Elfman for competitons one year, and as the xylophone player, this one was so fun to play… but also extremely stressful. Good times.
@jasobres3 ай бұрын
Creator Matt Groening gave Danny Elfman a mix tape of what he wanted the theme song to sound like that contained, among other things, the theme from _The Jetsons_ and a "teach your parrot to talk" tape.
@SeraphsWitness3 ай бұрын
Danny Elfman is way underrated. He's a top-5 living composer, in my estimation. Also, he has a phenomenal singing voice. He sang all the parts for Jack Skellington in Nightmare Before Christmas.
@jaredwblack3 ай бұрын
The constant key changes enhance the element of surprise, which is important in humor. Punch lines are usually a surprising, unexpected resolution to the setup, often with an off-kilter, twisted kind of logic. The constant surprises in the Simpson's song are like rapid-fire jokes that keep your mind from settling down; it's like an episode of Seinfeld or I Love Lucy where one ridiculous situation follows another continually through the entire episode without letting you fully recover from any of them in between.
@smarmar4003 ай бұрын
I've always loved the Simpsons' jokes-within-jokes. They'll make a surface joke and then immediately follow up with something more obscure or blink-and-you'll-miss-it kinda thing for the audience who're paying close attention. The show was made for two levels of humor. The example I remember most is the episode starring Lucy Lawless. At the end Bart and Lisa were riding on the back of Xena, who was flying through the air, which is already ridiculous. One of the kids says, "Hey, I didn't know Xena could fly", which is already funny watching two kids riding Xena like an airplane. But then Xena quickly adds, "I keep telling you, I'm not Xena; I'm Lucy Lawless." BAM! Second joke layer! It just got way stupider.
@Justaminhute2 ай бұрын
Your breakdown of this song singlehandedly made me put down my phone, find the sheet music online and start learning it on the piano. I got to say, knowing more of the theory behind the piece made it so much fun to learn
@SeraphsWitness3 ай бұрын
How did you gloss over the fact that every episode has a new version of Lisa's jazz saxophone solo? That's such a cool element. Edit: there are 36 unique solos she's played over 21 seasons.
@Leafsdude2 ай бұрын
I think there were only 3 or 4 different versions. They reused them for a few episodes each, but the one in this was used for most of them before it was cut.
@FutureAbe2 ай бұрын
How did you gloss over the fact that thats not true at all?
@SeraphsWitness2 ай бұрын
@@FutureAbe Well, there isn't just one, let's put it that way anyway.
@SeraphsWitness2 ай бұрын
@@FutureAbe according to the wiki there are 36 unique solos.
@Gasmanic3 ай бұрын
One thing I'd never noticed until now is just how much of the music is diegetic - actions that happen within the animation have a place within the music. Most obviously the school band and Lisa's sax solo, but also the factory whistle, the clanking of the radioactive pellet, the supermarket checkout beep, the car horn... I'd be curious to know how much of that served as a constraint on Danny Elfman's composition process (did they have to tell him "you must incorporate a car horn into bar 43"?) and how much of it was just dropped in after the fact, and just *seems* to fit in seamlessly because we've had 30 years to familiarise ourselves with it...
@weathermansam23 ай бұрын
It’s weird listening to some orchestra renditions of the theme because they don’t include things like the uranium clinking or the checkout beep, but my mind fills them in lol
@KairuHakubi3 ай бұрын
My guess is he first gave them the main scratch track to listen to, like approve this before I fully orchestrate it.. and when it was approved, they came up with ideas "hey at this part, two car horn honks could coincide.." and then the animators did some storyboarding until they arrived at what they wanted, and then it was fully orchestrated and mixed and had the foley added.
@CIDSMusic3 ай бұрын
I noticed this same "goofy" bouncy melody in a new song from twenty one pilots called "At the Risk of Feeling Dumb", it starts with some circus-like funny piano/organ thingy, and it changes throughout the course of the song, but your explanation fits perfectly in this case too!
@topofmylife67543 ай бұрын
that's rightttt, it's the same kind of syncopated melody
@jimsundstrom13283 ай бұрын
I had a professor in college for a Shakespeare course. He could dissect the Bard’s work and thoroughly explain what made those plays the works of art they are. But he also exuded an all out love and joy of WS’s work. It was infectious. You’d think that would be common, especially in any study and instruction of the arts. But it’s not. Charles Cornell has that in spades! And THIS video in particular struck a chord with me as a BIG Loony Tunes and Simpsons fan. Great stuff, Charles!
@spatz8133 ай бұрын
Awesome all around. As an early stage player, this not only is cool cause it's the Simpsons, but helps highlight different concepts like key changes and themes. All of which you make visual, applicable, and fun. Thanks for helping to glue some musical ideas/theory together in my brain as I go through this process.
@ticecube3 ай бұрын
Forget cartoon theme song, this is the best-written television theme song of all time. I can listen to it over and over again. It just makes me happy.
@BigStrap3 ай бұрын
I've gotta give Thomas the Tank Engine's theme the edge, though that's almost certainly down to differences in nostalgia lol
@rashotcake69453 ай бұрын
Twin Peaks?
@ptorq3 ай бұрын
I'd probably have to go with the Bob Newhart Show theme. Opens with a jaunty little melody, turns bright and brassy, switches to a more relaxed funky jazz, slows down and gets almost melancholic, and then BAM brassy is back for the sting.
@sabin973 ай бұрын
i like the fake bass of seinfeld.
@StarryBakari2 ай бұрын
I’d say Doctor Who lmao
@matthewbartlett34423 ай бұрын
I'd have to add on a fourth component that really adds to the wackiness: the instrumentation. With both the loony tunes theme and simpsons theme, they love giving these complex and rapid runs to ridiculous sounding instruments like marimba and glockenspiel, even plucked strings which make the melodies sound slightly more dissonant and less serious
@FriendlyNeighborhoodNitpicker3 ай бұрын
Yeah I was expecting him to hit on that, and he didn’t really talk about it. Perhaps he figured it was obvious to this particular audience.
@matthewbartlett34423 ай бұрын
@@FriendlyNeighborhoodNitpicker Or maybe he was more focused on strictly the history and theory of the music
@musicevangelist3 ай бұрын
Yeah, I totally thought Timbre would have been mentioned. To me that is one of the key reasons it sounds funny.
@hyattwarris3 ай бұрын
My kids started binging the series recently, so i heard the theme over and over again. It really sunk in just how much is going on in that short amount of time. Controlled chaos.
@henmat30003 ай бұрын
Danny Elfman is a great film composer. Beetlejuice, Scrooged, Batman, Edward Scissorhands, Batman Returns, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Mission: Impossible, The Frighteners, Mars Attacks!, Men in Black, Good Will Hunting, Sleepy Hollow, Spider-Man, Big Fish, Spider-Man 2 and many, many more.
@Daniel-793 ай бұрын
Pee Wee’s Big Adventure was another awesome soundtrack he composed. I love the variations of the same underlying theme he used to paint a contextual feel to atmosphere of the scene
@seanmehaffy849Ай бұрын
Listening to some of the great old humoresques, love how staccato with a few legato phrases is almost mandatory.
@kinglouiethethird3 ай бұрын
insane that danny elfman wrote it in just 2 days
@zorantaylor31903 ай бұрын
It makes more sense when you realize that he already had a stockpile of Oingo Boingo songs years deep to pull and rearrange compositional and arranging ideas from. Particularly "Nasty Habits" and the bits of wholly original composition he worked into their cover of "You Really Got Me", the latter of which is so musically synonymous with the Simpsons theme that it feels like a joke he went back in time to put into the song. It's literally impossible to mentally separate the two things now, and probably will be until the end of time. Especially THAT cascading waterfall guitar line....
@bchristian853 ай бұрын
Johannes Brahms wrote it.
@GaryTongue-zn5di2 ай бұрын
@zorantaylor3190 Wrong, dumbass. The Simpsons theme is a parody of The Jetsons theme. Matt told Danny to come up with a theme like The Jetsons theme.
@clarkeboss3 ай бұрын
I can hear echoes of Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue in the Simpson's theme, particularly when the melody slows down and opens up. The frequent key changes in both pieces contribute to that sense of a bustling, dynamic city.
@ocularpatdown3 ай бұрын
Oh, wow. You’re right. That’s what that passage felt familiar.
@christclinger65403 ай бұрын
Danny Elfman is my favorite composer! Beetlejuice , Batman, Batman Returns, corpse bride, Edward scissorhands, the list goes on!
@Chigger3 ай бұрын
Weird Science.
@Mollymauking3 ай бұрын
my mind was blown when i heard his work in fable
@christclinger65403 ай бұрын
I forgot about those as well!!
@mrbuttons12433 ай бұрын
Did he only sing in the Nightmare Before Christmas or did he compose as well?
@michaelbennett75612 ай бұрын
He composed the music for Nightmare Before Christmas.
@ericthefree3 ай бұрын
Great video! I also feel like there's a lot of DNA of George Gerswin's "Rhapsody in Blue" in here, where there's a theme that's being taken through a journey of all kinds of rhythm and keychanges, and the whole thing just sounds playful and fun!
@thescowlingschnauzer3 ай бұрын
It's children and grownups. The strings dancing around the whole tone scale is the sound of children. When the brass booms the theme an octave down in half-time, it's like a grownup, like a teacher correcting students' form. Then the strings/children run amok again. Then the whole orchestra, adults and children, play the theme together. The contrasts of high/low, double time/half-time, meandering/walking all map to whimsical/serious, and that contrast makes funny!
@kingblizz30583 ай бұрын
The fact that Elfman had come out with Batman '89 as I was a kid also watching the early Simpsons created a bridge mentally for me between the two. The cascading flute motif used in The Simpsons theme is also used in Batman for the Batarang being thrown and its wire looping around a foot. Elfman really scored so much of my childhood.
@ericleiter61792 ай бұрын
This video and analysis was a lot of fun...it's amazing how much mileage Elfman gets from these 2 basic harmonic ideas (Lydian Dominant/Whole Tone)...and, not unlike Beethoven, these melodic/harmonic/rhythmic ideas are all laid out in the opening bars, and are then developed almost immediately and with breathtaking invention and energy. Even Maggie's baby glockenspiel variant, is outlining a D7 (Dominant element) and varying it in the pattern that has previously been reserved for the whole tone idea (the descending scale motif) and then...while now back in the original key of C, the little trombone moment after the glockenspiel theme is a variant of the opening vocal chord(s) motif!!! Brilliant!!!
@DrLilo3 ай бұрын
Whenever I watch the Simpsons intro with its hypnotic music and whirling camera movements, I like to imagine I'm witnessing the sliding time loop resetting and Springfield going through another space-time reorganisation. Locations will be in slightly different places. Past events may or may not be remembered, retconned or ignored. The kids birthdates have slid forward to keep them the same age, while the show takes place in present day... And it happens again and again.
@TheMister1233 ай бұрын
Me at the beginning: "Please mention Entrance of the Gladiators... please mention Entrance of the Gladiators..." Me at the end: "Awwww... 😞"
@TimothyReeves3 ай бұрын
Oh, Fučik!
@briangruenewald75363 ай бұрын
🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡
@markiangooley3 ай бұрын
It was originally called something like Grand Chromatic March, and it’s no surprise that it became circus music.
@ocularpatdown3 ай бұрын
@@TimothyReeves😂😂😂😂
@JohnDoeHZ3 ай бұрын
In that vain, I have a theory that Hans Zimmer homaged Entrance of the Gladiators by halving the tempo (which changes the octave) tweaking the marching pattern for the literal entrance of the gladiators in Gladiator. Mainly the driving shrills and general march feel. He riffed on Mars, and Sigfried's march, in that movie, so why not the obvious Entrance of the Gladiators?
@fortunefavorsthebold34593 ай бұрын
I really appreciate your vast knowledge and the research that must go into these deep-dives, this is such a fun way to learn about music history!
@kevinking83033 ай бұрын
Many of the historical points you make here also connect to the days of silent movies. The music was directly connected to the action, and supported the physicality happening on screen. Much of the early Loony-Tunes cartoon music was composed by Carl Stalling. By the age of 12, he was the principal piano accompanist in his hometown's silent movie house. For a short period, he was also the theatre organist at the St. Louis Theatre.
@aoay3 ай бұрын
Does that connection also lextend to Offenbach's "comic" operettas?
@DeathInTheSnow3 ай бұрын
I know you'll probably never see this, but I have some suggestions:- The Wombles theme. The 1970s version. It's got such a peculiar and catchy instrumentation to it! Tugs. If you liked the Thomas theme, then this may be a surprise to you. Quite different, despite sharing so much DNA with the show. And then "Final Encounter" by Steve Baker. It's such a dramatic piece of music. It was used in some of the Final Fantasy 7 trailers around 1997. Even if it doesn't get a feature, I hope some passers by listen to it.
@legostuffman5123 ай бұрын
"The tugboat, for its size, is the most powerful craft afloat. And the Star Tugs are the power behind the docks and waterways that make up the Bigg City port. This, is TUGS." Cue some of the best synthesised saxophone I've ever heard in my life
@kevinporter-s5l3 ай бұрын
THANK YOU for mentioning the Carl Stallings Project! Those instrumentations, pace etc are pure madness.
@plebcrabslayer3 ай бұрын
@CharlesCornellStudios 7:36 I have a physical copy of Danny's handwritten score of the Main Theme (62 bars, 16 pages). If you'd like, I could scan and PDF it for you for analysis as a kind of addendum to this video! :D
@Nicksonian3 ай бұрын
THE JETSONS! I love the Simpsons theme, but Elfman seems to have borrowed a lot from The JETSONS theme. In fact, now that I’ve gone back and listened to The Jetsons theme, you’ve got to say that Elfman was at least paying homage to The Jetsons if not blatantly ripping it off.
@fromchomleystreet3 ай бұрын
Absolutely. Basically the same Lydian melody, even on the opening line “The Simpsons” / “meet George Jetson” except the Jetsons adds one more note to the motif.
@ghouliejams3 ай бұрын
homage definitely. i dont think we can call this a rip off though!
@matt.loupe.3 ай бұрын
When you put it like that, maybe the Simpson as a whole was a satire of the jetsons
@GingerCh0nk2 ай бұрын
Exactly
@GaryTongue-zn5di2 ай бұрын
@Nicksonian He wasn't ripping it off, dumbass. Matt Groeniing literally told him to write a theme that sounded like The Jetsons theme.
@timhiker55123 ай бұрын
And the band Oingo Boingo
@TTFMjock3 ай бұрын
And the Band Played Oingo-Boingo
@think_like_a_fish3 ай бұрын
The underlying elements of this song often have the cadence of a chuckle, which I'm sure was intentional. You know you're supposed to laugh, plus the surprise changes in instrumentation always keeps you on your toes.
@ShaiLysk2 ай бұрын
The most beautiful part of that song is how the violins play out and end when Lisa’s Sax solo realy gets going.
@PatGunn3 ай бұрын
Danny Elfman composed a lot of popular music themes (many of which you'll have heard of), and he and his brother Richard Elfman both (depending on how you define things) have a good claim to have founded the amazing band Oingo Boingo. Elfman's "Music for a Darkened Theatre" (both volumes) collect his film themes, and Oingo Boingo released a lot of great albums - anyone unfamiliar should check both out. (The Beetlejuice theme is another of his compositions that sounds a bit like the Simpsons theme)
@MrRezRising3 ай бұрын
Big fan of Tales from a Darkened Theater. 🤘
@haribo_423 ай бұрын
Well ill be darn diddly-arned
@SteveNeubauer3 ай бұрын
Watch yo profamity
@smarmar4003 ай бұрын
Well, how diddly-owdy, neighbor!
@ocularpatdown3 ай бұрын
Stupid musical Flanders
@wong77133 ай бұрын
This is the musical theory piece my 10 year old self would have loved to see on aol downloads. Thank you so much for your analysis on one of the most recognizable pieces of our generation.
@Diablo-D33 ай бұрын
You used the first season intro. The part where the background characters chase after the bus, Lisa on her bike on the front, and that particular shot of Marge driving home is gone; cuts directly to Homer trying to park instead, now. Reason I mention this is the meandering part you pick up on is gone entirely, and goes from the sax solo to Bart on the skateboard to the parking/couch gag sequence repeating the main melody.
@toddbernstein34073 ай бұрын
A good companion video to this would be to discuss the music of Carl Stalling. He wrote the majority of Loony Tunes music for 20 years. Absolutely brilliant work. Great video, by the way!
@Robo311Star3 ай бұрын
You see music the same way Neo sees the matrix and I see my own suffering.
@VirgoTruck3 ай бұрын
Great video, no surprise there as you're one of the best KZbinrs out there imo. I was just mentioning to my mates the other day that we kind of have Tim Burton to thank for the Simpsons theme due to his insistence on hiring Danny to score Pee Wees Big Adventure and Beetlejuice haha.
@InventorZahran2 ай бұрын
You can't talk about circus music's military origins without mentioning Julius Fucik's composition 'Entry of the Gladiators'. It was originally written as a march, but has since become the archetypal (and stereotypal) theme music for circuses and clowns. Many people nowadays only know it as "the clown theme".
@adamdesanti67132 ай бұрын
Another superb 20 minute expert analysis video from Charles Cornell. It covers so many bases. I love the music theory. Charles, who edits your videos? They're very well done, lots of things spliced in, facial expressions, overlapping music, pics and clips as visual aids. Music is cool.
@aaronanderson84523 ай бұрын
Man you work is amazing. As a teacher and student you keep everyone engaged without using general lessons. Buying to support, appreciate your work!
@josterha3 ай бұрын
Hi Charles! Great video per usual! I loved the connection of military band music to circus music to early animation to classic age of cinematic shorts. I think there is another link with the Jetson's theme that encapsulates the chaotic feeling that the Simpson's theme does. They both even end in "son's"! I wonder if Danny Elfman took direct inspiration from it.
@akeithing18413 ай бұрын
Yes! I've always thought of this theme as like Tchaikovsky at the circus. I love it so much
@mwm483 ай бұрын
The key changes every time a new character is shown.
@Russv22 ай бұрын
I simply adore Danny Elfman (and Alf Clausen too who composed a lot of the other background and incidental music in The Simpsons). They both have an amazing talent for parodying music or pulling in just enough of a tune that without a doubt you know where their idea came from and not blatantly obvious plagiarism. Awesome work!
@Salsuero3 ай бұрын
Lydian Dominant. I like using the 13#11 chord in jazz. Very pretty and ethereal sound. The Maj13#11 is also magical... just saying.
@no1else3443 ай бұрын
I love how the end is the same motif but in a different key to make it sound more epic
@charleslaferriere22822 ай бұрын
10:50 litteraly joining me in the head bouncing, this one caught me out of guard 😂
@randomperson64333 ай бұрын
When I was a kid the Baby Elephant Walk made me literally laugh out loud. Maybe it just hits differently for my ASD brain.
@cooldebt3 ай бұрын
Always thought that tune was funny - when a friend learned to play it on piano, my 10-yr old self was fascinated
@ocularpatdown3 ай бұрын
Yes, it is a very funny song. I love it, too.
@charisamartin21523 ай бұрын
Charles have you ever heard of the jazz band Huntertones? I would love to see a video of you breaking down either of these two songs: “Biff”, or “For Roy”. Also “Wonder Boy” “Nassau” “Valdez in the Country” 😍😍😍
@rome81803 ай бұрын
Isn't another big element of its intrinsic humor in the instrumentation? Imagine this theme if it had less brass and percussion and was built around strings and flutes or something.
@Hetnikik3 ай бұрын
This video made me smile from so much nostalgia. Thank you so much for that.
@MrRezRising3 ай бұрын
I used to put The Simpsons on mixtapes. Back in '91 I bought _Tales from a Darkened Theater_ , Elfman's album, and anyone who listened to the Simpson's theme remarked on how much was going on...when you actually listened to it.
@perfectpiano18713 ай бұрын
3:42 Fallout 3 PTSD triggered
@marktyler33813 ай бұрын
Lydian the tatooed lady
@ocularpatdown3 ай бұрын
I see what you did there, Groucho.
@williamdegnan47182 ай бұрын
You can learn a lot from lydian. 🎶
@oogboog60503 ай бұрын
Just started learning the simpsons theme on the piano, and here comes along this video. Perfect timing
@jimslancio3 ай бұрын
It's in the Lydian mode, just like the Jetsons theme.
@geniej23783 ай бұрын
My mind immediately went to older cartoons - but I didn't realize circus music was their inspiration! Fascinating!
@braxtonnelson53753 ай бұрын
I've been a huge Danny Elfman fan for many years-- ever since he started with Oingo Boingo (check out their early television appearance on The Gong Show on KZbin). I still have their album from the early 80s... I love their song "Dead Man's Party" which was featured on the Rodney Dangerfield movie "Back to School". Since then Elfman has been a prolific composer for the movie industry... so many iconic themes and they all have the Elfman stamp of eclectic style. You won't get his music confused with John Williams or Hans Zimmerman compositions!
@sdm1513 ай бұрын
Elfman’s fingerprint from his early work with Oingo Boingo is all over this theme.
@danweckerly42042 ай бұрын
This is the second of these videos I've watched (No. 1 was John Williams and his Olympic March), and I am absolutely transfixed by watching you surgically dissect music. I'm a church organist -- been playing since I was 12 years old -- and have been mostly self-taught in matters of theory. Or relying on mere instinct for things like modulating between keys or improvising melodies (as becomes necessary during church services when things ... er ... don't exactly go as planned). Your discussions at least let me put a formal name to some of the noodling around I do instinctively. And not for nothing, Danny Elfman is a genius If he did nothing other than his "Beetlejuice" theme, he'd be worthy of sainthood. But "The Simpsons" is absolute perfection in less than two minutes. Thanks for this dissection. And the others. I'll be eagerly seeking out your other (and future) videos. The fact that you get as excited over this stuff as you do warms my musical heart.
@harrysmbdgs3 ай бұрын
The percussion elements also add to the chaotic feeling, especially the bongos!
@whovian10182 ай бұрын
‘Rhythm normally requires notes to start and stop, especially if you play an instrument where you have to breathe’ I wish composers followed this rule haha I play flute and our orchestra played a piece in 3rd register and between two flutes and a piccolo there was roughly 3 spots to breathe over an entire page (not to mention the insane time changes) - the piece is called English Folk Song Suite if you want to check it out for anyone who wants to see an insane flute part 😂 Also I love watching your videos (especially while working towards my year 12 music exam) and a lot of the stuff you talk about is really useful for my memory. Thanks for making such useful content 😊
@Jorporte3 ай бұрын
That whole theme is my all time favourite cartoon theme, but Ive always felt like the key change at very end was like the theme finally figuring itself out. Almost like the whole thing was just the theme trying out different keys and styles until finally at the very end, it figures out the last line of the song haha yeah perfectly matches the show and the visuals as all the characters are doing their own thing and then all come together right at the end on the couch. Absolutely next level composing 100%
@Kringlord973 ай бұрын
I remember when I was a kid I loved watching the Simpson’s but I HAD to be there for the intro theme. I always felt this weird sense of wonder and excitement I couldn’t place, and I guess that was the point lol
@TTFMjock3 ай бұрын
5:47 surprised you didn’t mention the Mary had a little lamb piano Lina a tritone down.
@intime26883 ай бұрын
You should break down “this Halloween” ! Talk about key changes !!
@deqemnunej193 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/iJTYfpt5g7OIpsksi=m_KolR-1svwOoTH0 you mean this? :)
@jetblackkinks3 ай бұрын
Omg Merry Melodies is my JAM 😍🔥
@bchristian853 ай бұрын
The Simpsons theme comes from Brahms Piano Trio No. 2, the 4th movement.
@chris4mac3 ай бұрын
I got to play The Simpsons Theme in my high school percussion ensemble. That xylophone part is so fun! Thanks for the excellent analysis Charles, I learned a lot!
@dirkhex8241Ай бұрын
I love the Soundtrack to Princess Mononoke and the use of traditional instruments with western orchestra, you're right in it with the first drum on the very first picture you see and it will keeps on the whole movie
@chrislashley3 ай бұрын
It's also interesting to note how Elfman uses the dominant lydian scale to modulate keys. For instance, the first modulation is preceded by F# G and Bb/A#, all of which come from the C dominant lydian but sound so much like a perfect cadence into B.
@TheWaffleState3 ай бұрын
I love the themes from the old Merry Melodies & Looney Tunes so much, they have influenced the music I make because it’s so fun, “Merrily We Roll Along” is one of my favorite pieces of music of all time! Thanks for covering this!
@RobertRoweMusic3 ай бұрын
I've always loved this theme. Knowing Elfman wrote it helped me understand a lot of what was going on. Never heard of Lydian Dominant, though, so there's where the rabbit hole will take me next!
@BryceAndEveeNZ3 ай бұрын
well that was almost expected but bro's presentation is on point ... love it. Thanks Charles
@abricio3 ай бұрын
Most of the ideas on this piece are also present on the "Beetlejuice" theme, also by Elfman.
@jeremyirish15742 ай бұрын
3:58 Loving the flex of "Steamboat Willie" becoming public domain. Well played!
@JayWisco2 ай бұрын
Found this channel today and my god... loving it
@eiskasten3 ай бұрын
this wonderous feel of the lydian scale is also used in the „barbar outro“. however i think it is much easier to recognize there due its much sparser setting
@NIKITKOKIS3 ай бұрын
Dude! Check out the main theme from Nu pogodi! (Ну погоди!) It's an old Russian cartoon. This really reminded me of it
@schnabelborg3 ай бұрын
This wonderous feel of the song when slowed down really reminded me of music for theme parks! Coming to think of it, that also makes a whole lot of sense, since this feeling of wonder is what makes theme parks so compelling
@acoolguy37853 ай бұрын
I'd love to see you cover music from more games, maybe Deltarune, Earthbound or Mega Man X!
@jamesthenabignumber3 ай бұрын
I think another important aspect to Elfman’s choice of genre for The Simpsons is that Monty Python’s Flying Circus used a Sousa tune for the intro to their TV show.
@lostfan50543 ай бұрын
Charles I'm begging you to at least LISTEN to the Mega Man 3 intro music. Its like less than 2 mins long but you'll see what i mean. It has some total piano riffs you can rock to. I'd love to see a quick breakdown of the song.
@booneh3 ай бұрын
One of Danny Elfman’s biggest influences is Nino Rota, especially his work with Fellini. His jazz-tinged Italian folk music is often compared to circus music. A bigger influence is Bernard Herrmann, who liked to modulate keys instead of changing chords.
@presterjohn77893 ай бұрын
One big inspiration for this piece was Nino Rota's Orchestra Rehearsal.
@tomnicbl3673 ай бұрын
You forgot to mention that glissandos and flutter tongue plunger mute trumpets are ALWAYS funny
@AsBi12 ай бұрын
U r right because i don't feel anything when i hear this music because i have never seen a single episode of simpsons. This music is just another silly music for me. If i was a simpson fan it would have been different. So yeah music needs context to be reminding u of something