ANIMATION SPIN
July 12, 2016 posted by Greg Ehrbar

Bugs Bunny and His Friends on Capitol Records

A bonanza of Bugs, a plethora of Porky, a feast of Fudd and a little dab o’ Daffy to celebrate Warner’s wascally wabbit’s “official” birthday later this month.

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BUGS BUNNY AND HIS FRIENDS
Capitol Records Children’s Series J-3257 (12” LP Mono / 37 minutes / 1961)
BUGS BUNNY AND HIS FRIENDS
Capitol Records Records Children’s Series L-6987 (Side One Only / 12” LP Mono / ca. 1977 / 30 minutes)
Reissued by Ziv International and A.A. Wonderland Records
Side Two: Bozo at the Circus
BUGS BUNNY, DAFFY DUCK, PORKY PIG, ELMER FUDD
in Warner Bros. Looney Tunes & Merrie Melodies

Capitol Records CC-64 (10” 78 RPM / 3 Discs / 1947)

Producer: Alan W. Livingston. Writers: Warren Foster, Tedd Pierce, Dave Cavanaugh. Music: Billy May, Dave Cavanaugh, Van Alexander.

Bugs Bunny 78The character who was to become Bugs Bunny first appeared in Porky’s Hare Hunt on April 30th, 1938. And though his official studio debut would be in A Wild Hare in July (27th) of 1940, any month is perfect to give Bugs a cheer, Bronx or otherwise.

As we’ve noted several times in Spin columns, the Capitol Children’s Series of records is among of the best of its kind. For consistency of quality and enduring appeal, the only other comparable line might be Hanna-Barbera’s Cartoon Series. Both offered only a small number of titles (compared to Disney, Golden or Peter Pan’s enormous catalogs) and both series bear the stamp of a singular vision: Charles Shows for HBR and Alan Livingston for Capitol.

Bugs-HiawathaAlso like HBR, nearly every Capitol children’s record, with the exception of those based on a specific source, like Disney films, has a similar “interview” format. The lead character sets up the location or event (a party, a tour, etc.) and meets various characters who tell jokes of sing little ditties.

That’s the case with the three stories that made up the 1947 Bugs Bunny 78 RPM set, the six stories that adorned the Bugs Bunny and His Friends LP in 1960 and the three on 1977’s half-LP reissue in the late ’70s.

The three releases mixed and matched the stories, so for our purposes, they’re listed here one-by-one. All have embeds below so you can enjoy their wonders. You’ll note lots of similarities between the audio stories and various WB cartoons—which makes sense since all of them were penned by Warren Foster and Tedd Pierce.

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GIVE A LOTTA LISTEN

Bugs Bunny Meets Elmer Fudd (CC-64, J-3257 & L-6987)

Voices: Mel Blanc (Bugs Bunny, Narrator, Owl, Turtle, Mocking Bird, Baby Bird).

Elmer doesn’t realize Bugs is a bunny, so Bugs “helps” him find a rabbit by interviewing animals. Note that the Mocking Bird describes Bugs in case the listener is very young or from outer space.


Daffy Duck Flies South (CC-64 & L-6987)

Voices: Mel Blanc (Daffy Duck, Air Traffic Controller).
Song: “My Name is Daffy Duck”

The little song Daffy sings sounds like the faux “Merrily We Roll Along” that is heard on all the Capitol Looney Tunes records. Here, Daffy goes for a flight, has a few mishaps and then he lands. There’s not much more to it, really, but who cares? It’s Daffy.

[PLEASE NOTE: Actually, there is more to “Daffy Duck Flies South,” but Capitol did not include it on the album. On side two, he visits “Backward Land” before returning north. The inside front cover of the 78 album illustrates this. Thanks, David!]

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Porky Pig in Africa (CC-64, J-3257 & L-6987)

Voices: Mel Blanc (Porky Pig, Elephant, Crane, Leopard, Baby Parrot, Ape, Rhinoceros, Baby Bird).
Song: “We Are Working on the Railroad”

This is a particular favorite because it’s an audio version of Warner’s funny travelogue cartoons, right down to the “well, I’ve been sick” line – also heard in such films as 1940‘s Wacky Wildlife, 1941’s Aviation Vacation and MGM’s 1947’s King Size Canary.


Daffy Duck’s Duck Inn (J-3257 only)
Voices: Mel Blanc (Daffy Duck, Dog); Arthur Q. Bryan (Elmer Fudd).
Song: “Quack, Quack, Said the Duck”

Here is one of exceptions to Capitol’s “interview” format, in which Daffy rents a room to Elmer for a low rate then pads the bill. This premise must go back to Vaudeville. Jack Benny played the same trick on Lucy Carter and family in an episode of Here’s Lucy. The song Daffy sings in this story is longer than most in the series.


Bugs Bunny and the Grow Small Juice (J-3257 only)
Voices: Mel Blanc (Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck); June Foray (Mr. Bee, Queen Bee).

This is another story-driven record—and one of the best. For some reason, Daffy’s an inventor and, as the title says, he and Bugs “get small.” Nice work by June Foray as a couple of bees.


Happy Hippety Hopper (J-3257 only)
Voices: Mel Blanc Hippety Hopper, Mouse, Cat, Bulldog).
Song: “Hippety Hoppin’ Up and Down.”

It’s the oddest of these recordings because Hippety goes solo without Sylvester or Junior. There’s a generic cat and bulldog, and Blanc’s voices of the two probably should have been flipped, as neither really fits.


Bugs Bunny Meets Hiawatha (J-3257 only)
Voices: Mel Blanc (Bugs Bunny); June Foray (Hiawatha), Arthur Q. Bryan (Narrating as Elmer Fudd).

A variation of the Oscar-nominated Haiwatha’s Rabbit Hunt (1941), Bugs does his “help you find the rabbit” bit again, this time with June Foray’s Hiawatha, who is not as oafish as Blanc’s version of the character in the cartoon. This contains the classic gag in which Bugs sits in a stew pot enjoying the aroma of dinner until he realizes that he’s the main course.


SPIN BONUS: “Wanna Buy a Record?”
Our good pal Mark Evanier posted this on his newsfromme.com blog some time ago. Mel plays a record store owner (is his name Wallich?) and he tries to convince Billy May to buy a record. Blanc narrates most of it in first person, but a stentorian “school movie” narrator takes over when we get to the record factory and they cue the “hustle-bustle” music. Look for the prominent “Bozo Approved” logo on the record rack containing all those keen records.

Each of these recordings is a sparkling gem. Mel Blanc never fails to raise the level of even the most perfunctory of material. In most of them, he does multiple voices and bounces off other greats of voice acting, like June Foray and Arthur Q. Bryan. Almost all of these stories was released separately on 78 and/or 45 RPM discs, but not all of the single discs—like Snowbound Tweety, for example—made the transition to long-player. Of course, what would our souls soar with joy would be if every one of these stories made their way on to a CD or even iTunes. Just sayin’.

20 Comments

  • I remembered in Don’t Ax Me, June Foray did the voice of Elmer Fudd’s wife and was hosting The Reverend for a Sunday duck dinner while Elmer along with Barnyard Dawg were persecuting Daffy as the Main Course not realizing that the Reverend was a Vegetarian, and she nailed down by sounding like the female version of Elmer! This was the only time that I remember that Elmer was married.

  • What a trip to hear the baby kangaroo’s voice!

  • Oh man, Greg, this is the best post yet! I never realized that this many LOONEY TUNES related records were done. Yes, I’m only sorry that none of these were available when I was growing up, and it is a shame that these are not reissued on CD in a great set all their own. Are these *ALL* of the LOONEY TUNES platters? Were there more of these around, aside from the SYLVESTER AND TWEETIE tune that we’re now all too familiar with? The appearance of Arthur Q. Bryan, alone, is a treat! I’m hazy as to when Warner Brothers finally formed their own record label. Makes me wonder how these records would have been if done at Warners’ own studio with Carl W. Stalling doing the arranging and composing of various songs throughout these platters. Interesting to note that the DAFFY DUCK INN story/situation would later become “DIME TO RETIRE” with Porky and Daffy, and thanks for the extra Mel, guiding us through a record-producing plant!

    • Here is a quick checklist of all the Warner Bros. cartoon-related recordings made by Capitol Records in the 1940s and ’50s (that I’m aware of.). There are also a few Woody Woodpecker items in here, which were also written by Tedd Pierce and Warren Foster. The number of parts refers to the number of sides of a single record each story or song took up. “Two parts,” for example, means the story took up two sides (each side approximately 3 minutes long) of a 78 or 45 rpm record.

      1. “Bugs Bunny Meets Elmer Fudd.” Two parts. Recorded 1947.

      2. “Daffy Duck Flies South.” Two parts. Rec. 1947.

      3. “Porky Pig in Africa.” Two parts. Rec. 1947.

      4. “Bugs Bunny and the Tortoise.” Four parts. Rec. 1948.

      5. “The Woody Woodpecker Song.” One part. Rec. 1948.

      6. “Bozo and Bugs Bunny Talk Big Business.” Two parts. Rec. 1948. (Promotional use only. Not intended for commercial release.)

      7. “Bugs Bunny in Storyland.” Four parts. Rec. 1949.

      8. “Woody Woodpecker and His Talent Show.” Four parts. Rec. 1949.

      9. “Bugs Bunny Meets Hiawatha.” Two parts. Rec. 1950.

      10. “Daffy Duck Meets Yosemite Sam.” Two parts. Rec. 1950.

      11. “Tweetie Pie.” Two parts. Rec. 1950.

      12. “Daffy Duck’s Rhapsody.” One part. Rec. 1950.

      13. “I’m Glad That I’m Bugs Bunny.” One part. Rec. 1950.

      14. “I Taut I Taw a Puddy Tat.” One part. Rec. 1950.

      15. “Yosemite Sam.” One part. Rec. 1950.

      16. “The Woody Woodpecker Polka.” One part. Rec. 1950.

      17. “Woody Woodpecker’s Picnic.” Four parts. Rec. 1950.

      18. “Henery Hawk.” Two parts. Rec. 1951.

      19. “Tweety’s Puddy Tat Twouble.” Four parts. Rec. 1951.

      20. “Tweet Tweet Tweety.” Two parts. Rec. 1952.

      21. “Bugs Bunny and the Grow-Small Juice.” Two parts. Rec. 1952.

      22. “Henery Hawk’s Chicken Hunt.” Two parts. Rec. 1952.

      23. “Bugs Bunny and Aladdin’s Lamp.” Two parts. Rec. 1952.

      24. “Woody Woodpecker and the Scarecrow.” Two parts. Rec. 1952.

      25. “Daffy Duck’s Feathered Friend.” Two parts. Rec. 1952.

      26. “Woody Woodpecker and the Animal Crackers.” Two parts. Rec. 1952.

      27. “Sylvester and Hippety Hopper.” Two parts. Rec. 1952.

      28. “Snowbound Tweety.” Two parts. Rec. 1953.

      29. “Woody Woodpecker and the Lost Monkey.” Two parts. Rec. 1953.

      30. “Woody Woodpecker and His Space Ship.” Two parts. Rec. 1953.

      31. “Wild West Henery Hawk.” Two parts. Rec. 1953.

      32. “Bugs Bunny and the Rabbit Seasoning.” Two parts. Rec. 1953.

      33. “Happy Hippety Hopper.” Two parts. Rec. 1953.

      34. “Pied Piper Pussy Cat.” Two parts. Rec. 1953.

      35. “Daffy Duck’s Duck Inn.” Two parts. Rec. 1953.

      36. “Bugs Bunny and the Pirate.” Two parts. Rec. 1954.

      37. “Tweety’s Good Deed.” Two parts. Rec. 1954.

      38. “Woody Woodpecker and the Truth Tonic.” Two parts. Rec. 1954.

      39. “Woody Woodpecker’s Fairy Godmother.” Two parts. Rec. 1954.

      40. “Woody Woodpecker in Mixed-Up Land.” Two parts. Rec. 1955.

      41. “Woody Woodpecker Meets Davy Crockett.” Two parts. Rec. 1955.

  • The Wallich who owned the record store (one of LA’s foremost at the time) was in fact one of the founders of Capitol Records, along with Johnny Mercer.

  • Wanna Buy A Record?‘s “Bachtrakovich’s Sinatra for Flugelhorn” @5:00 is interesting in that Capitol would go on to revive Frank Sinatra’s career in two years, while at the time of this film (1951) he would have been considered a has-been.

  • Some twenty-odd years ago, when the market for back catalog material was much healthier than it is now, efforts were made by some at Capitol to exploit their library of classic children’s records. One of the proposals that made it to the table was for a disc of the Warner stuff. Ultimately nothing happened with any of it because those who got the ultimate “yea” or “nay” vote couldn’t be convinced that anybody would buy vintage kiddie records.

    • That sucks. I would think a special 3-4 disc vinyl release of this material would be excellent right now.

  • The little song Daffy sings sounds like the faux “Merrily We Roll Along” that is heard on all the Capitol Looney Tunes records. Here, Daffy goes for a flight, has a few mishaps and then he lands. There’s not much more to it, really, but who cares? It’s Daffy.

    Actually, there is more to it. Whoever uploaded this only uploaded the first side of the record. There’s another three minutes that are missing here. IIRC, Daffy ends up in Backwards Land.

    • Thanks for all the info, Randy!
      David Gerstein sent me a message about side two of Daffy Duck Flies South. It’s odd that the album would have only one side, but it has happened on other children’s records. All the accuracy is appreciated!

  • Bugs Bunny Meets Elmer Fudd (CC-64, J-3257 & L-6987)
    Daffy Duck Flies South (CC-64 & L-6987)
    Porky Pig in Africa (CC-64, J-3257 & L-6987)

    Oh, and the album number on these three is L-6957, not L-6987. L-6987 is Walt Disney’s “Little Toot.”

  • Nice work again, Greg. I have all these Capitols, now digitized, along with all of Blanc’s novelty song recordings….although “new” things will always turn up. (I believe the deep Indian voice in BUGS BUNNY MEETS HIAWATHA is Dave Barry, who also did a few WB cartoons.)

    • Hi Keith. Given your comprehensive collection of Blanc / Bugs songs, I wonder if you might be able to tell where I could locate the following one. Search as I might, I just can’t find it. A friend had it on a record many years ago and I remember the lyric exactly: “Oh there is a food I dearly love to eat / That’s not an apple, orange or a beet / When I haven’t got one I can’t bear it / I’m happy when I’m crunchin’ on a carrot” Any ideas? Best wishes, Glenn

  • I speculate the great drawing of Bugs and the gang around the piano was drawn by Abe Levitow. Anyone know for sure?

  • Looking for the audio to a Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd 45 record form the 1960’s. Elmer Fudd was hunting Daffy Duck. Some of the words to the song are something like the following—Oh Daffy Duck, oh Daffy Duck, oh to think i tried to shoot you in the head. Oh I saw you in the sky… …and when you fell I thought that you were dead.
    We had cousins visit us in the 1960’s and we had this record. They thought it was so funny, we player it over and over and over and over again. They talk about it to this day. I would love to hear this again and/or get a recording for them to hear. Can you help me? Or do you know who could help me find this?

  • in the 1960’s we had a 45 record of Daffy Duck and Elmer Fudd. Some of the words were something like this:
    Oh Daffy Duck, oh Daffy Duck, oh to think I tried to shoot you in the head.
    Well I saw you in the sky…
    And when you fell I thought that you were dead.
    The story line was that Elmer Fudd saw him flying in the sky, he shot at Daffy, he thought Daffy was dead when he hit the ground, but somehow they were friends and Elmer felt bad about making the mistake of trying to kill this duck in the sky.
    Is there anywhere I can get an audio recording of this? We played it TO DEATH when I was a kid. We thought it a was hilarious.

  • jerryflinglinda@yahoo.com I have Bugs Bunny Capitol Records just like the one on this page ,with Bugs standing with hand on tree and porky pig next to him . is it worth any thing

  • You guys seem a bit confused on the portions that my grandfather DAVE BARRY voiced.
    Definitely NOT Hiawatha.
    But I can 100% confirm that he plays the Indian chief in the cave who says “Quiet my braves…” when they are in the Cave with Bugs Bunny.
    Let me listen to more of this record to see if there are more. Papa Dave first started working with Mel Blanc in the early 1940’s in radio – doing a Command Performance for troops & later on the Jimmy Durante show

  • So I’m guessing as long as Universal Music (current owners of Capitol) and Warner Bros. don’t want to cooperate we’re never gonna see these records ever again, right? Hate to see those audio masters just collect dust at the UMG vaults while us current generations have to keep looking through eBay for good quality copies that are getting harder to find.

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