Unfortunately, the soundtrack album went out of print rather quickly and never was re-issued on CD. To this day, it remains one of the great Holy Grails for Guaraldi fans. In the early 21st century, an ambitious attempt was made to produce a music-only CD of the soundtrack, which would have allowed some of Guaraldi’s best work to shine, notably with extended versions of “Skating” and “Blue Charlie Brown.” But the rights issues had grown labyrinthine with the passage of so many decades. Despite a heroic four-year struggle, the project was abandoned.
That final sentence understates the agonized frustration of those who tried so hard to get that CD released. I speak from experience, having been involved; I was hired to write a lengthy essay and track-by-track liner notes for the large booklet that would have been included. It was a wonderful assignment — at least, at the point we all thought the project would be brought to a successful conclusion — because I got to interview Rod McKuen, Lee Mendelson and several of the musicians who worked at Guaraldi's side. I wrote and submitted the essay and liner notes; then I sat back and waited.
And waited. And waited.
Years passed. I got occasional updates, but the trend began to look grim. Cinema Center Films had ceased to exist as a production entity, and Columbia Records had been swallowed up by Sony. Ultimately, my associates had to surrender; they simply couldn't secure all the rights and permissions needed to make all the disparate musical entities and performers happy (or, to be more accurate, needed to reassure everybody that nobody else might be lurking in the woodpile, waiting to pounce with a lawsuit).
I never got paid for my work, which obviously was a major bummer ... but never unexpected, in the freelance writing business. Besides which, I felt much worse for those who would have written me a check; they had put far more effort into the project than I had.
Happily, a good portion of my research and work didn't go to waste; major chunks of that essay were re-purposed and wound up in my book about Guaraldi. Not quite everything, though, which brings me to the point of this blog entry.
When it became obvious that Vince Guaraldi at the Piano was running long — eventually, a full 50,000 words longer than my original contract with McFarland had specified (and bless my editor for allowing that extra length!) — I went looking for things to trim. Bits and pieces flew by the wayside, although everything got saved; some of the specific LP information wound up in my online Vince Guaraldi discography, while other snippets landed in the Vince Guaraldi timeline. But I didn't really have a home for the deleted stray data from the A Boy Named Charlie Brown CD project.
Not wanting it to be wasted, I've decided to resurrect it here.
What follows, then, are the lingering details that you would have read in the booklet that was designed to accompany the music-only re-issue of Guaraldi's score for A Boy Named Charlie Brown. As it happened, very little was left behind from the original essay, aside from this paragraph, which provided more information about McKuen's unused fourth song:
“Something for
Snoopy” has not disappeared. McKuen released his own version of that track —
along with his other compositions from A
Boy Named Charlie Brown — on a soundtrack LP that also includes selections
of his film music from The Prime of Miss
Jean Brodie, Me Natalie and Joanna. The Stanyan Records album,
released in 1970, includes two different vocal versions of “Champion Charlie
Brown,” a different vocal interpretation of “A Boy Named Charlie Brown,” and
instrumental versions of both “Failure Face” and “Something for Snoopy.” The LP
is still available for sale [or was, when this essay originally was written; it no longer is, alas] at McKuen’s Web site, www.stanyanhouse.com;
McKuen’s Web site also offers the 1971 Pointer Publications music book released
in tandem with the film. It features easy-piano arrangements of 13 selections
from the movie, including all four of McKuen’s songs, Trotter’s “Bus Wheel
Blues,” “I Before E,” Guaraldi’s “Lucifer’s Lady” (not available in any other
Guaraldi music book), and even the Theme from the Third Movement of Beethoven’s
Sonata in C minor, Opus 13, as arranged and adapted by Guaraldi.
The big prize, however, is the track-by-track listing, which I'll reprint here in its entirety. I realize this may be frustrating, since it teases what I fear the world at large never will be able to hear. But the tracks are in film sequence; you can read along the next time you watch the movie, and get a strong sense of What Might Have Been.
And who knows? Maybe the stars will align some day, and we'll eventually get to share in the musical bounty of Guaraldi's most ambitious Peanuts soundtrack.
*******
The soundtrack
to A Boy Named Charlie Brown was
issued on LP at the time of the film’s release by Columbia Records (OS 3500),
then the music arm of CBS. The LP was not a music album, though, but a “story
of...” concept album that featured the film’s dialogue over virtually every
selection of music — some of it even recorded specially for the album, as the
film itself proceeds for long stretches without dialogue. This storybook
concept had some value before home video, when there was no other way to “take
home” a movie; these days, however, such a presentation serves no function.
For the most
part, the OST LP employed the film’s existing music cues, sometimes in the same
places, sometimes re-tracked behind newly recorded narrative “bridges” that
described primarily visual action. New versions of a few cues were recorded
specifically for the LP, and were not heard in the film; you’ll find them on
this CD as Tracks 30 and 31.
To the delight
of Peanuts and Guaraldi fans everywhere, this premiere CD has been produced
from the original music-only session masters (on 1/2” four-track tape) before
the narration was overlaid (save for a bonus track).
(See the entry
for Track 7 for additional details concerning differences between the original
and truncated versions.)
1. “Champion Charlie Brown”/“Cloud Dreams”
The Cinema
Center Films logo unspools to a brief, up-tempo instrumental quote from Rod
McKuen’s “Champion Charlie Brown.” This segues neatly to John Scott Trotter’s “Cloud
Dreams,” which delivers a thoughtfully cheery background as Charlie Brown, Lucy
and Linus recline on their backs and picture images in the clouds passing
overhead. After hearing Linus recite a litany of impressive sights, Charlie Brown
reluctantly says — one of the poor blockhead’s many iconic statements — “I was
going to say I saw a duckie and a horsie, but I changed my mind.”
2. “Champion Charlie Brown”/“A
Boy Named Charlie Brown” (vocal)
A longer
instrumental version of “Champion Charlie Brown” — the first of the film’s half a
dozen or so instrumental variations on this theme, most of which run slightly
more or less than a minute — plays as the title credits appear on the screen,
identifying both the craftsmen (Charles M. Schulz, Lee Mendelson, Bill Melendez, Guaraldi, McKuen
and so forth) and the animated stars: Charlie Brown, Linus, Lucy and the rest
of the gang. More than any other version on the CD (except the vocal), this
take on “Champion Charlie Brown” sounds very much like an anthem for Charlie Brown’s
upcoming adventures, and reflects the song’s triumphant nature (even though we
haven’t yet heard the lyrics). The credits conclude as Snoopy “plays vulture”
on a sagging branch; the branch gives way and spills the world-famous beagle
into Lee Mendelson’s directing credit, scattering the letters all over the
screen.
As the final
credit fades, McKuen’s vocal version of the title song, “A Boy Named Charlie
Brown,” is heard as Charlie Brown makes and then tries to fly a kite ... twice.
The action is completely silent, aside from McKuen’s song and a few sound
effects, and yet the scene speaks volumes about poor Charlie Brown’s lot in
life.
“I wanted the
music to be somewhat melancholy,” McKuen noted. “I wrote this song as a blues
number — Sparky and Vince absolutely loved it, but at first they were the only
ones — because I wanted to go to the inner Charlie Brown. And I was able to have
‘Champion Charlie Brown’ to balance it, so I wasn’t worried.”
As compared to
McKuen’s second vocal take on this song, at the end of the film [Track 22],
this first reading emphasizes the song’s wistful and melancholy nature.
3. “Kite Music” (aka “Lucifer’s
Lady”)/“Charlie Brown’s All-Stars”
As McKuen’s
song fades, Guaraldi debuts one of his own compositions, to accompany Charlie
Brown’s further efforts to fly his kite. Poor Chuck still gets nowhere, gives
up in frustration and tosses the kite to Lucy, who in turn gives it to Snoopy
... who immediately gets in into the air, where it soars alongside numerous
kites being flown by the other kids.
“Lucifer’s
Lady” actually is this film’s only Guaraldi cue that does not originate with one of Dr. Funk’s earlier Peanuts albums.
Although the title seems to reference Lucy, Guaraldi chose to release a much
longer, more acid-hued version of this track on his RCA album, The Eclectic Vince Guaraldi, where it’s
not generally regarded as one of the composer’s many Peanuts themes.
As the kite
scene fades with this track, the music shifts to a lengthy version of
Guaraldi’s sprightly baseball anthem, “Charlie Brown’s All-Stars,” as Chuck
happily heads down the sidewalk. This cue, perhaps even more than “Linus and
Lucy,” beautifully showcases the lively and yet simple keyboard work that
Guaraldi made such a signature in his Peanuts scores; it’s impossible to hear
“Charlie Brown’s All-Stars” without breaking into a smile. With some subtle
shading from the violins, this cue is all about optimism and that sense of
wonder with which children greet every new day, knowing that something magical
might happen.
(This cue
appears only one more time during the film [Track 21], at which point the mood
will be completely different.)
“My heart is
full on the day I first go out to the ol’ ball field,” Charlie Brown happily
thinks, but this good cheer is derailed when he finds his pitcher’s mound
covered with dandelions ... which the other kids refuse to let him remove.
“Charlie Brown’s All-Stars” continues to play in the background as Snoopy
hustles a phonograph and speakers from his doghouse; once everything is plugged
in, the gang stands at attention as Trotter’s arrangement of “The Star Spangled
Banner” [Track 24] plays against an op-art collection of flag-like stars,
stripes and patriotic images. (Yellow
Submarine, which had been released not long before this film, seems to have
influenced this sequence, along with a few others further along in the film.)
4. “Percussion Swinger”/“Baseball Theme”
As “The Star
Spangled Banner” fades, a bongo arrangement of Guaraldi’s other baseball tune
rises, as Snoopy hastily removes his audio equipment and then takes the field
with the rest of the gang. It’s time for some serious baseball action as
everybody warms up, and Guaraldi’s piano yields the melody line to a muted
trumpet as the track becomes even sassier. The music fades and finally pauses
for a few minutes, as, with the players assembled on the field and ready to
start the game, Schroeder walks to the mound to discuss his signals with
Charlie Brown.
5. “Baseball Theme”
This
wonderfully jazzy and much longer rendition of the same cue picks up as the
baseball game progresses, Charlie Brown getting knocked out of his clothes and
having to re-dress — twice — thanks to particularly vicious line drives.
Guaraldi improvises with some serious keyboard riffs as Lucy approaches the
mound and suggests that Chuck throw a bean-ball; when he indignantly refuses,
the argument erupts into a massive debate on the pitcher’s mound, involving all
the players. This naturally prompts another of Charlie Brown’s signature lines:
“We never win any ball games, but we sure have some interesting discussions!”
The piano
shifts to counterpoint as first a sax and then an electric guitar take over the
energetic melody line; the tempo and volume build as Charlie Brown finally gets
his team back in their assigned places, pitches the next ball ... and gets
clobbered.
6. “Baseball Theme”/“A Boy
Named Charlie Brown”/“Air Music”/“The Red Baron Strikes Again”/“Air Music”
Charlie Brown
regains his senses and continues the game as Guaraldi’s “Baseball Theme” is
heard for the third and final time, now with a full orchestra, as Mendelson
makes inventive use of a split screen to show the team going down in flames.
Listen for Guaraldi’s spirited piano counterpoint about 1 minute into the cue,
as he really goes to town. The music builds to what we expect will be a
fanfare, but then ratchets back as the game finally concludes with a wail of
anguish from the gang, at which point...
...the music
shifts to an instrumental reading of “A Boy Named Charlie Brown,” as poor Chuck
trudges home alone and takes a bath (where his boat sinks, of course). Strings
are highlighted every time this theme in used, even as an instrumental,
suggesting the song’s heavy-hearted lyrics even when we don’t hear them.
McKuen’s song continues in the background as Charlie Brown sits on his porch
step with Linus, who wisely insists that his friend will win at something one of these days (while
beating him at tic-tac-toe).
As Linus
leaves, a hungry Snoopy appears and the music shifts to Guaraldi’s vibrant “Air
Music,” as Charlie Brown hastily dumps some food in Snoopy’s supper dish. The
horn section takes the lead, with Guaraldi’s piano providing counterpoint, and
longtime fans will notice that this familiar cue is played at a somewhat slower
tempo than usual. The beagle devours his meal, falls asleep and then, thanks to
a grumbling stomach-ache, dreams himself into an adventure as the WWI Flying
Ace.
The moment the
Flying Ace takes to the skies in his Sopwith Camel (his doghouse), the music
shifts again to an original Trotter composition called “The Red Baron Strikes
Again.” The WWI Flying Ace roars through the skies, the Red Baron in hot
pursuit, and when things turn grim, Snoopy finally awakens, charges to the
house and kicks Charlie Brown’s back door. (This takes place, it should be
noted, in the middle of the night.) When Charlie Brown answers, Snoopy scurries
past him and snuggles into his master’s bed, as Trotter’s jittery theme yields
smoothly to a final few bars of Guaraldi’s “Air Music” ... leaving Charlie Brown
to wonder aloud, “Why can’t I have an ordinary dog like everybody else?”
7. “Blue Charlie Brown”
Still
despondent over his team’s most recent loss, Charlie Brown twists his own knife
with a visit to Lucy at her psychiatric booth. She begins by adopting one of
her newest treatments: torturing poor Chuck with a slide show of his faults
projected onto a screen. Although the first few are shown — such as his tendency
toward “fatness” — we subsequently get only a reaction shot as Charlie Brown
endures the images of “his most damaging faults.”
This entire
sequence unfolds against a swinging rendition of Guaraldi’s “Blue Charlie
Brown,” a bluesy, finger-snapping track that some observant listeners will
realize runs far longer than this action in the film. (Six whole minutes ... WOW!) The reason? This scene suffered a
heavy edit after the film’s initial release. In the full-length print, after
the horrific slide show, Lucy takes Charlie Brown outside for some “football
therapy,” but (naturally) pulls the ball away before he can kick it; she then
employs an instant-replay camera to show Chuck missing the football, thereby
demonstrating his “failure face.”
When Charlie
Brown stumbles into his house and mutters, “I’ve never gone through anything
like that in my life,” it seems — in the film’s edited version — that he’s
referring to the slide show ... but, in fact, he’s commenting on the
embarrassment of watching that slo-mo football failure.
The full-length
film, at 86 minutes, was released in 1969, but after its initial theatrical
run, every subsequent TV airing — whether on network television, cable’s HBO or
the Disney Channel — was of the edited 79-minute version. The same was true of
all early VHS releases of the film; you couldn’t watch or purchase the original
full-length version for love or money for nearly four decades! Small wonder,
then, that most people — even avid fans — will find this arrangement of “Blue
Charlie Brown” so unusually long; they’ve never heard this music accompany
anything but a heavily edited version of this portion of the movie.
Fortunately,
Paramount finally released the
original 86-minute version on DVD in March 2006. Newer viewers, only catching
up with the film as of this DVD release, therefore will find a better
music-to-action match between the movie and this recording of “Blue Charlie
Brown.”
8. “Champion Charlie Brown”/“Linus and
Lucy”/“Champion Charlie Brown”
Having only
barely survived his ordeal with Lucy, Charlie Brown stumbles home and into his
bedroom, as a short, dirge-like reading of “Champion Charlie Brown” plays
primarily on guitar and flute. It’s the perfect counterpoint to ol’ Chuck’s
lament that “These psychiatric treatments are going to bankrupt me!”
The next day,
it’s time for school, as bossy big sister Lucy hustles Linus out of bed.
(“Again?” he wails. “I went yesterday!”)
This scene marks the film’s debut of Guaraldi’s signature Peanuts theme, “Linus
and Lucy,” although this leisurely, fairly short version — with its chirping
flute — seems a slight echo of its usually happier self.
The track
segues smoothly into another instrumental reading of “Champion Charlie Brown,”
as Linus catches up with Charlie Brown, and the two walk toward school
together. This cue is somewhat downcast, as a guitar and flute take the melody
line, reflecting Charlie Brown’s wish for some sort of victorious achievement.
The track builds to a melancholy crescendo as Linus encourages Charlie Brown to
“try to win at something,” which
prompts the nearby gaggle of girls to guffaw and insultingly suggest that Chuck
enter their classroom spelling bee. When Charlie Brown does show interest, the
instrumental track abruptly cuts to...
9. “Failure Face” (vocal)/“Catatonic Blues”
...the girls taunting Charlie Brown
while dancing in a circle around him and singing McKuen’s “Failure Face,” as
wincingly cruel a song as one could imagine. (“And in the race to be stupid ... you set a whole new kind of
pace!”)
McKuen stands
by these lyrics. “Kids are mean!” he said. “That’s exactly the way kids treat
other kids. The scene needs it!”
As the song’s
lyrics finally fade, leaving viewers to wonder if any child ever could survive such a verbal
pasting, the scene shifts to Charlie Brown seated at his classroom desk. An
original Trotter instrumental titled “Catatonic Blues” plays somberly in the
background, as Charlie Brown argues with himself over whether to enter the
spelling bee (“My hand won’t go up! My hand is smarter than I am!”), but he
finally finds the courage and takes a place alongside the entrants.
And, for the
first time, the film eschews its musical accompaniment for several minutes, as
Charlie Brown participates in — and wins! — his classroom spelling bee.
Oddly, this
triumphant moment takes place amid absolute silence from the score, which
leaves the scene feeling rather anti-climactic. The original soundtrack LP
inserted an instrumental reprise of “Champion Charlie Brown” behind this scene,
which is much more fitting.
10. “I Before E” (vocal)/“I
Before E” (mouth harp echo)
But the ordeal
ain’t over. Following this victory, Charlie Brown discovers that he’s now
automatically entered in the All-School Spelling Bee. This means more studying,
so Linus helps his friend navigate the arcane mysteries of English spelling by
turning the experience into the extremely clever patter song, “I Before E.”
Snoopy joins the musical action by dancing and playing his twanging mouth harp,
and the scene eventually blossoms into a Warhol-esque sequence of gigantic
words and op-art swatches of color.
Trophy Music
Co. released one of this film’s few promotional tie-ins: the “Snoopy’s Harp,”
which came packaged in a small white box that promised purchasers they could
“Make new sounds on one of [the] (sic) world’s oldest instruments ... it’s fun
... it’s easy.” The box included “complete instructions” on a tiny, single-fold
piece of paper that was conspicuous for its lack of Peanuts artwork. (Let it be
noted, as well, that playing the darn thing isn’t nearly as easy as Snoopy
makes it seem!)
By the time
this song concludes, everybody knows
it’s “I before E ... except after C!”
Melendez, whose
professional career began when he became part of the animation team working on
Disney films such as Pinocchio, Fantasia, Bambi and Dumbo, soon
became much better known as the animator behind Charlie Brown’s leap from the
newspaper comic pages to television and, later, the big screen. In the early
’60s, Melendez and Schulz had collaborated on a series of black-and-white
animated spots for Ford’s new Falcon automobile: truly adorable TV commercials
that marked the small-screen debut of Charlie Brown, Snoopy and the rest.
These, in turn, led to a season’s worth of “steady employment” on television’s Tennessee Ernie Ford Snow, where the
Peanuts gang introduced their star each week. Melendez also performed the voice
of Snoopy (and later Woodstock) for the Peanuts specials.
Al Shean was
one of the graphics designers on Melendez’s team. It’s a shame the two never
collaborated on any other songs, because they certainly had Tom Lehrer’s gift
for clever and complicated rhymes.
The film’s
music track then recedes again, as Charlie Brown enters and survives several
rounds of the All-School Spelling Bee...
...but then
gets stuck on a word! Snoopy, overhearing the action while listening outside a
window, whips out his mouth harp and, by setting a beat that Charlie Brown
overhears, reminds him of a relevant portion of the “I Before E” song. This
brief mouth harp sequence is augmented by a glockenspiel, and, wouldn’t you
know it...
11. “Champion Charlie Brown”
(vocal)
…Charlie Brown
wins again! This victory is too much for his friends, even naysayers Lucy,
Patty and Violet: They all hoist Chuck onto their shoulders while singing
McKuen’s “Champion Charlie Brown,” as triumphant a song as “Failure Face” was
vicious. (McKuen deliberately intended this massive emotional swing.) No
hometown hero ever was feted better, and the scene — and song — conclude as Linus
fans Charlie Brown with his blanket.
McKuen
confessed that this song had earlier roots; it originally was written for Goodbye, Mr. Chips, and it was called
“Mr. and Mrs. Chips”:
Mr. and Mrs. Chips,
That has a lovely sound
Spoken by porters, when they go travelin’
Often to London town.
Arthur P.
Jacobs, the producer of the 1969 musical version of Goodbye, Mr. Chips (in which Peter O’Toole starred), hired all
sorts of folks to write songs; McKuen was one of many. Since McKuen’s work
wasn’t used, he retrieved the rights; somebody involved with A Boy Named Charlie Brown heard “Mr. and
Mrs. Chips,” and thought it was a great melody.
“Actually,” McKuen
laughed, “it was a better song for
Charlie Brown.”
And, once
again, the film continues through the next several scenes without any music, as
Charlie Brown discovers — to his horror — that now he’ll have to study and sweat
out a competitive heat a third time,
as a participant in the second grade round of the National Eliminations
Spelling Bee.
12. “Oh, Good Grief!”/“Champion
Charlie Brown”/“Champion Charlie Brown”/“A Boy Named Charlie Brown”
So, it’s back
to the books. Charlie Brown studies hard, but can’t help noticing when younger
sister Sally enters the room and flirts with Linus, as Guaraldi’s bouncy ode to
unrequited love — “Oh, Good Grief!” — accompanies her actions. This brief musical
cue segues smoothly to another instrumental reading of “Champion Charlie
Brown,” this one using strings to give an air of what Jackie Gleason used to
dub “traveling music,” as the kids give Chuck a great send-off the next day,
when he boards a bus and heads for the big city. Linus, overcome with emotion,
even gives his blanket to Chuck as a good-luck token.
“Champion
Charlie Brown” repeats as the bus takes off, and this segues smoothly to an
almost cheerful instrumental take on “A Boy Named Charlie Brown,” as Chuck
takes a taxi to his hotel and checks into his room.
(At this point,
the story detours into an extended sequence involving Lucy and Schroeder, which
takes place as he plays the third movement of Beethoven’s Pathétique Sonata in
C minor, Op. 13, on his toy piano [track 26, among this CD’s bonus tracks, with
Ingolf Dahl handling the complex keyboard work]. Finally able to rid himself of
this unwanted female admirer, Schroeder launches into the second movement,
which unfolds against a visual Beethoven fantasy of images that wouldn’t have
been out of place in Disney’s Fantasia.)
13. “Linus and Lucy”
Meanwhile...
Linus,
suffering without his blanket, clearly in terrible
shape, stumbles about to a slow reading of “Linus and Lucy,” this one in a
minor key and with a positively mournful horn and flute counterpoint. Lucy is completely
unsympathetic, so Linus persuades Snoopy to help him find Charlie Brown and get
his blanket back.
14. “Buswheel Blues”
Still dazed and
wall-eyed, Linus boards a bus with Snoopy in tow, and the two settle back into
their seats as a new Trotter instrumental, “Buswheel Blues,” speeds them on
their way. Midway through this song, Snoopy becomes part of the musical action
by once again pulling out his mouth harp. He’s one rhythmic beagle!
15. “A Boy Named Charlie
Brown”/“Champion Charlie Brown”
Cut to Charlie
Brown, holed up in his hotel room and studying as hard as he can, as the
soundtrack serves up another melancholy strings reading of the film’s title
theme. Poor Chuck is starting to spell the words in his thoughts, but when he
flirts with the notion of turning around from his books, his dedication is
re-fueled by a mental image of bossy ol’ Lucy, and her expectation that he’ll
continue to do well.
Suddenly,
there’s a knock on the door, and…
…cue the happy
reunion, as Linus and Snoopy meet up with Charlie Brown. The three dance
joyously to an abbreviated, march-style fanfare from “Champion Charlie Brown.”
But then the
mood turns serious, as Linus discovers — to his horror — that Charlie Brown has
no idea where his friend’s blanket might be. He eventually suggests that Linus
and Snoopy check the hotel lobby and then the nearby city library, since those
are the only two places Chuck has been, aside from his room. This entire
lengthy scene unfolds with no musical accompaniment, which frankly seems a dramatic
miscalculation; the action and dialogue seem a bit flat without some thematic
counterpoint. (The original soundtrack LP doesn’t make this mistake, and scores
part of this scene with a reprise of Track 8’s version of “Linus and Lucy.”)
16. “Linus and Lucy”
The score once
more turns melancholy, with an even slower reading of “Linus and Lucy,” again
in a minor key, as Linus searches trash cans and everything else along the way,
while trudging toward the library on the darkened city streets. Suddenly,
Snoopy spots the outdoor Rockefeller Center ice-skating rink, and...
17. “Skating”/“Blue Puck”/“Skating”
…the
world-famous Olympic skater takes to the ice against a truly gorgeous, full
orchestral reading of Guaraldi’s “Skating,” timed to Snoopy’s many jumps and
twirls. After a little more than a minute of this, the music abruptly cuts to a
Trotter original titled “Blue Puck,” a fast-paced jazzy number that serves as a
counterpoint to Snoopy’s shift to the World-Famous Hockey Player, who loses
quite a few teeth during the course of some furious play. This section runs
about two-and-a-half minutes, and then the music shifts abruptly back to
“Skating,” as the action settles down again, and it’s just Snoopy doing his
figure-skating tricks. The scene concludes with a final orchestral “pop” that
occurs about two seconds after “Skating” fades away at the end, punctuating
Snoopy’s face-first fall onto the ice.
A note about
this track: Guaraldi and the orchestra provided a longer version, running 6:22,
which wound up unused as the animated action was edited and tightened; the
extended track has been included as a bonus on this CD [track 29]. This
alternate version fades out instead of including the final orchestral pop.
18. “Linus and Lucy”/“Linus and
Lucy”/“Champion Charlie Brown”
Snoopy’s sports
digression safely out of his system, the world-famous beagle resumes helping
Linus search for his blanket, as the slow, minor-key rendition of “Linus and
Lucy” reprises. The hunt is fruitless, and Linus and Snoopy return to Charlie
Brown’s hotel room, with Linus trash-talking his absent-minded friend the
entire way. Then, suddenly ... success! Charlie Brown has been using the
blanket to polish his shoes! Linus grabs his beloved flannel friend, and the
two perform a lively dance to (finally!)
the classic, more traditionally upbeat version of “Linus and Lucy.” It’s the
last time this song is heard in the film, and a sparkling final appearance.
(The original
soundtrack LP employed a shorter “Linus and Lucy” cue here, which is included as
one of this CD’s bonus tracks, No. 30.)
This scene
fades and shifts to Charlie Brown, Linus and Snoopy leaving the hotel and
heading toward the auditorium where the spelling bee will take place; the music
switches as well, to a lively, full orchestral version of “Champion Charlie
Brown.” The mood is upbeat, as the cut concludes with a few bars of Woody
Herman-style, big band swing while Charlie Brown stalks confidently into the
auditorium as Linus and Snoopy take seats toward the front, thrilled to bits to
be present for this great occasion.
(This trace of
post-WWII-style swing probably isn’t accidental, since Guaraldi toured with
Herman’s third Thundering Herd in the spring of 1956, replacing Nat Pierce on
piano.)
At this point,
the film includes a brief reprise of “Blue Charlie Brown,” as Charlie Brown
climbs onto the stage while his friends, back at home, watch the action on
television. As the music used is a brief quote from Track 7, it has not been
repeated here.
The film then
proceeds through its longest stretch without music, as Charlie Brown and eight
other children wince, grimace, stutter and sweat their way through several
rounds of the National Eliminations Spelling Bee.
19. “A Boy Named Charlie Brown”/“Buswheel
Blues”
Having blown
his chance at victory, a desolate Charlie Brown is followed by Linus and
Snoopy, as all three return to the hotel and pack, to the slowest and
saddest-yet instrumental version — entirely strings and flutes — of “A Boy Named
Charlie Brown.” (Honestly, you could just cry!) Nobody pays them any attention
as they board the bus for the trip home; the music shifts to a reprise of
Trotter’s “Buswheel Blues,” with Snoopy once again lending support on his mouth
harp ... while poor Charlie Brown sinks lower and lower and lower into his
seat.
20. “A Boy Named Charlie Brown”
Another
dirge-like instrumental version of “A Boy Named Charlie Brown” picks up as
Chuck and his friends arrive at their hometown bus stop in the middle of the
night ... and, of course, nobody has stayed up to greet them. The three walk
home along the silent, darkened streets; Linus bids good-night and enters his
home first, and then Snoopy crawls on top of his doghouse. Charlie Brown is
left to enter his house all alone; he unpacks, undresses, gets into bed and
stares miserably into the camera, as the song slowly fades.
21. “Charlie Brown’s All-Stars”
The next day,
a subdued reprise of “Charlie Brown’s All-Stars” — not as upbeat as the version
in Track 3, and this time with an electric guitar, vibes, strings and sax carrying
the melody line, rather than a piano — accompanies Linus as he knocks on Charlie
Brown’s door and is greeted by Sally. This baseball anthem continues as Linus,
carrying a bat and mitt, enters Charlie Brown’s darkened room, where his friend
has hidden all day ... skipping school and refusing to leave his bed. Linus,
although clearly sympathetic, listens to his friend’s lament, but then speaks
the film’s wisest words: “But did you notice something, Charlie Brown? The
world didn’t come to an end” [excerpted in Track 32].
22. “A Boy Named Charlie Brown”/“A Boy
Named Charlie Brown” (vocal)
And, indeed, it
didn’t. As a happier instrumental cover of “A Boy Named Charlie Brown” propels
him, Charlie Brown gets up, gets dressed, and heads outside. His friends are occupied
with their usual after-school fun and games, and everything seems right with
the world; nothing has changed. Despite his recent disappointment, Charlie
Brown cannot help smiling. And then ...
... he spots
Lucy, playing with the football, as the music shifts to McKuen’s vocal reprise
of his title song. As compared to McKuen’s first vocal take on this song, at
the beginning of the film [Track 2], this reading sounds unexpectedly joyous,
and one can imagine McKuen smiling as he croons the words. Charlie Brown sneaks
up, naively believing that Lucy is unaware of his presence, and then charges
for the football.
And misses when
she yanks it away.
“Welcome home,
Charlie Brown,” she says, with mock sweetness, and Charlie Brown knows it’s
true: Nothing has changed!
McKuen’s vocal
hits a crescendo, and the film cuts to its closing credits. The song concludes
neatly as the final credits and the Cinema Center Films logo fade to black.
23. “Champion Charlie Brown” [alternate]
This slightly
longer and instrumentally different version of the cue heard in Track 1, this
one in marching-band style, could be a remnant of an earlier edit, with a
longer pause on the Cinema Center Films logo at the top of the film. This
version of “Champion Charlie Brown” also concludes with the same two-chord
question mark that then would segue to “Cloud Dreams.”
24. “The Star-Spangled Banner”
This
particularly stirring source music comes courtesy of Snoopy, who hauls out a
massive stereo system — and turntable — and plays this anthem before Charlie
Brown and the gang begin the baseball game toward the beginning of the film.
For those wanting to sequence this cue properly, it comes immediately after
Track 3 and just before Track 4.
25. “Air Music”/“The Red Baron Strikes
Again”/“Air Music” [alternate]
This alternate
cue begins with a version of “Air Music” that is much the same as heard in the
film [Track 6], but it then segues abruptly to a shorter and distinctly
different approach to “The Red Baron Strikes Again.” The piano-and-bongo attack
is much more furious, and the mood and building tension are much more ominous.
Apparently, this arrangement went with a shorter dogfight (in every sense of
the term), because Snoopy wakens sooner from his nightmare — after only a
minute, rather than 90 seconds — and “The Red Baron Strikes Again” segues again
into the fading echo of “Air Music,” also as heard in the film.
26. Pathétique Sonata in C minor, Op. 13
(Beethoven)
Having bid
farewell to Charlie Brown, with financial stars dancing in her eyes as the agent
of a budding spelling champ, Lucy turns her attention back to boy-toy
Schroeder, who of course has no time for her; he’s too busy playing some of his
beloved Beethoven (the keyboard duties actually handled by Ingolf Dahl). Lucy’s
flirtatious love banter finally annoys the toy piano keyboardist, at which
point the music cuts abruptly ... as does this cue. (The scene actually
continues for quite some time, and into the second movement of this Beethoven
work, but that portion of the sonata is not included here.) For those wanting
to sequence this cue properly, it comes between Tracks 13 and 14.
27. “Bus Wheel Blues” [alternate]
This much
longer version of John Scott Trotter’s “traveling music” can be regarded as a
“pure” orchestral arrangement of the song, notable both for its ominous horn
undertone and the absence of Snoopy’s mouth-harp accompaniment. The horns —
which turn positively scary as they crescendo during the worst moments of
Linus’ mournful haze, as he suffers blanket withdrawal — give a strong suggestion
that this isn’t a bus trip anybody would rush to take. That may explain why
both film versions of this song sound much more carefree. After all, the wise
and sweet Linus is the last Peanuts character we want to see dumped into what
looks, for all the world, like an LSD trip gone bad.
28. “Champion Charlie Brown” (go-go boots
quote) [alternate]
Nothing
remotely like this track appears in the film, although its lively, Neal
Hefti-esque approach to “Champion Charlie Brown” might have been used to put a
happier spin on the scene where Linus and Snoopy are reunited with Charlie
Brown in the big city.
29. “Skating”/“Blue Puck”/“Skating”
[alternate]
These three
blended tracks, more than a minute longer than the versions heard in the film
[Track 17], can be considered the highlight of an album already filled with
priceless goodies for Guaraldi fans. The primary difference is the opening
arrangement of “Skating,” which runs a minute and a half longer here; Guaraldi
takes his time with the melodic bridge and delivers a fully orchestrated
masterpiece that can be considered the definitive version of this winter-themed
melody. “Blue Puck” is pretty much as heard in the film, and then the reprise
of “Skating” differs slightly from its film reprise, as this alternate take
fades out sooner instead of concluding with the orchestral pop.
30. “Linus and Lucy” [alternate]
This much
shorter version of the triumphant reading of Guaraldi’s signature hit
apparently was recorded specifically for the soundtrack LP, which presents a
quicker edit of the moment when Linus is reunited with his blanket [track 19,
as heard in the film]. This arrangement would fit the scene if the music cut
out just as Linus begins to dance with his blanket … but of course the rest of
the scene screams for the song to continue.
31. “Champion Charlie Brown” [unused]
An entirely
different version of this song, eschewing the film’s many orchestral
arrangements and concentrating on a combo approach: primarily Guaraldi’s
keyboards, with bass, drums, guitar and muted trumpet accompaniment. The result
is a jazzy, mid-tempo swinger; one can imagine this being the version Guaraldi
might have preferred, had he and his band released an album of instrumental
covers of the film’s various themes. In point of fact, this version was
recorded for the original soundtrack LP, where it’s used as underscore when
Charlie Brown, Linus and Snoopy return home after poor Chuck’s dismal failure
on national TV.
32. Words to live by
A parting few
words from Linus, Charles M. Schulz’s resident sage, who reminds us that
tomorrow always is another day.
Thank you for this article. I really wish this would have seen release as the song "A Boy Named Charlie Brown" by Rod McKuen has always been a personal favorite. I would have loved to have heard all the different arrangements as your perfect liner notes describe.
ReplyDeleteShame this didn't happen (technically, the film itself is in CBS' hands as we speak apart from Columbia/Sony having release a previous LP of the soundtrack before, or what there was).
ReplyDeleteAs an update, a pal of mine did this little entry.
http://cartoonresearch.com/index.php/the-first-peanuts-movie-soundtrack-album