The following text field will produce suggestions that follow it as you type.

Barnes and Noble

Loading Inventory...
The Carl Stalling Project: Music from Warner Bros. Cartoons 1936-1958

The Carl Stalling Project: Music from Warner Bros. Cartoons 1936-1958 in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $17.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
The Carl Stalling Project: Music from Warner Bros. Cartoons 1936-1958

The Carl Stalling Project: Music from Warner Bros. Cartoons 1936-1958 in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $17.99
Loading Inventory...

Size: OS

Get it at Barnes and Noble
The first volume in
The Carl Stalling Project
series is a revelation; more than just an essential part of a
Warner Bros.
staff that generated some of the finest and most inspired productions in the history of animation,
Stalling
was a visionary whose work deserves consideration among the finest American avant-garde music ever recorded. As these 15 selections from
WB
cartoons dating between 1936 and 1958 attest, his cut and paste style -- a singular collision between jazz, classical, pop, and virtually everything else in between -- was unprecedented in its utter disregard for notions of time, rhythm, and compositional development;
didn't just break the rules, he made them irrelevant. That in the process he created music beloved by succeeding generations of children is more impressive still -- perhaps even unwittingly,
introduced the avant-garde into the mainstream, and as popular music continues to diversify and hybridize, his stature as a pioneer rightfully continues to grow. ~ Jason Ankeny
The first volume in
The Carl Stalling Project
series is a revelation; more than just an essential part of a
Warner Bros.
staff that generated some of the finest and most inspired productions in the history of animation,
Stalling
was a visionary whose work deserves consideration among the finest American avant-garde music ever recorded. As these 15 selections from
WB
cartoons dating between 1936 and 1958 attest, his cut and paste style -- a singular collision between jazz, classical, pop, and virtually everything else in between -- was unprecedented in its utter disregard for notions of time, rhythm, and compositional development;
didn't just break the rules, he made them irrelevant. That in the process he created music beloved by succeeding generations of children is more impressive still -- perhaps even unwittingly,
introduced the avant-garde into the mainstream, and as popular music continues to diversify and hybridize, his stature as a pioneer rightfully continues to grow. ~ Jason Ankeny
Powered by Adeptmind