In
analyzing the new
area loop for the Esplanade last week, I got to thinking about
what such a music loop is,
and the answer was both obvious and food for further thought: it's a
themed playlist. Users
of Pandora and similar internet radio services will be familiar with
this concept—you choose a set of songs (and/or instrumental pieces)
to enhance a mood, illustrate a concept, or otherwise adhere to,
well, a theme. Think of the mixtapes of “makeout music” people
would put together back in the day when tapes were still a thing. Or
a student's “study playlist,” comprising songs that help them
concentrate on their academic work.
The
theme of the Esplanade music loop is, of course, “The Disneyland
Resort.” The objective is to give arriving guests a foretaste of
the sorts of attractions the two parks offer. I would say it succeeds
(even without any reference to the Haunted Mansion), although
first-time guests may not pay much attention or connect the rides
they go on later with the snippets of music they heard upon arriving.
They will probably at least recognize the tunes, and so the loop sets
an appropriate “wonderful world of Disney” atmosphere.
We
Disneyland fans, of course, like to create our own playlists honoring
the park(s). Of course, ours generally consist of music and even
non-musical audio taken directly from the attractions, live
entertainment, and other experiences within the parks. We scour
released albums and the internet for as much genuine Disneyland music
as we can lay our hands on, and arrange it geographically, land by
land, to create the perfect, comprehensive collection.
My
Disneyland playlist easily occupies a 40-hour work week. Not that I'm
bragging.
But
suppose you didn't have access to all these specialized theme park
albums? Suppose you wanted to create a working Disneyland playlist
from the much more commonly found Disney film soundtracks and general
genre music? Say, one song per significant attraction, maybe another
to bring across the ambiance of each land? It wouldn't be 40 hours
long, obviously, but it might occupy a long drive. (Such as the drive
to Disneyland? Well, that depends on where you live.)
It
needn't be completely devoid of park-specific melodies, as many of
the more successful songs have been released on Disney compilation
albums. Additionally, many of the individual performers and groups
that have been stationed at Disneyland over the years have released
recordings, some of which are still available.
For
the next few weeks, I'll be sharing my version of such a thing. I've
had to break it into segments because this post would be unfathomably
long otherwise. So here's Part 1—Main Street and Adventureland.
Mellomen
– “Meet Me Down on Main Street”
What
better way to introduce Main Street, USA than with a barbershop-style
song that calls it out by name? The Mellomen did a lot of work for
Disney, including the voices of the card painters in Alice
in Wonderland
and including this little ditty.
Firehouse
Five Plus Two – “Firehouse Stomp”
The
Firehouse is an important Main Street landmark as well as a common
place for live musical performances by various groups, including Walt
Disney Studios' own fire department-themed jazz band, the Firehouse
Five Plus Two. “Firehouse Stomp,” from their album Dixieland
Favorites,
is just one of the fire department-themed standards in their
repertoire. That five-alarm opening was too good to pass up as a
musical selection to represent the Firehouse itself.
“Golden
Dream”
This
was a tough one to decide on. There are quite a few potential musical
options for the Main Street Opera House—befitting its name, I
suppose—but most of them are either not widely available, or too
somber for a pleasant exercise like this (looking at you, “Two
Brothers”), or their usage was too short-lived. “Golden Dream,”
though it originated with Epcot's American Adventure, has been adopted as the closeout song for the Opera House's most celebrated
attraction, “Great Moments With Mr. Lincoln.”
Chris
Calabrese – “Main Street Medley”
This
piano medley from a veteran Disney parks performer includes several
tunes that have been part of Main Street area music over the years.
As such, I consider it ideal to represent “walking down Main
Street”—or riding, perhaps, in one of the Main Street Vehicles.
“Steamboat
Willie”
Once
semi-obscure but coming into mainstream prominence since it started
being used in the logo for Walt Disney Animation Studios, this tune
represents the Main Street Cinema, where the debut Mickey Mouse
cartoon of the same name plays on an infinite loop. This particular
arrangement actually comes from the Mickey's Toontown area music loop
but has been widely adopted as the definitive version of the tune outside the context of the short. I like the idea of tying two areas of the park together this way.
“Jolly
Holiday”
Since
Main Street is a little light on memorable attractions, I'm throwing
in a fanciful themed eatery to plump out the playlist. The Jolly
Holiday Bakery has several years of service under its belt at this
point, and it being named after a well-known Disney song makes the
choice here obvious.
Ferde
Grofe – “On the Trail”
Technically,
the Disneyland Railroad is the first bona-fide attraction you
encounter upon entering the park, since you have to walk under it to
get in. Official Disneyland albums tend to put a track referencing
the railroad right at the start of Main Street, but I tend to stick
it on the back end, as if we've arrived at the Hub, been unsure as to
where to go next, and backtracked to the train station in order to
get a quick preview of the other lands.
As
to the melody here, it is perhaps the most famous movement of Grofe's
Grand
Canyon Suite,
snippets of which play as the train passes by the Grand Canyon
diorama. It's a lot more accessible than the music that accompanies
the Primeval World diorama, and more fitting as a wrap-up to the
friendly atmosphere of Main Street.
The
Jungle Book - “Overture”
The
main title instrumental of The
Jungle Book
is about the most perfect imaginable musical illustration of the
Adventureland gateway. It was composed precisely to convey the
impression of entering a tropical jungle far from civilization, and
it's done in that great mid-century Disney style courtesy of George
Bruns.
“In
the Tiki, Tiki, Tiki Room”
It's
great when an attraction has its own instantly recognizable signature
song, isn't it? This will come up again as the playlist continues.
“Arabian
Nights”*
Just the intro to The
Jungle Book makes a great intro
for Adventureland in general, this song from Aladdin really
dives into the mystique of Golden Age Arabia and the opulence
suggested by Aladdin's Oasis.
I was tempted to use a song from
Moana here, since it's
currently being used as a meet-and-greet for the title character, but
I decided this playlist ought to be more evergreen.
“Weird
Al” Yankovic – “Skipper Dan”
Given that the Jungle Cruise is one
of the signature
Disney attractions, going all the way back to Opening Day, I'm a
little surprised it has never garnered a Disney-produced theme song
of its own. Instead, I've gone outside the Disney portfolio entirely,
to the always delightful “Weird Al” Yankovic, who wrote and
performed an amazingly on-point song about the trials and tribulations
of being a Jungle Cruise skipper.
“Raiders
March”
Another easy one. I guess there are
some advantages to the
fact that movie-based attractions are all the rage now and for the
foreseeable future.
“Strangers
Like Me”
Tarzan's
Treehouse has its own unique arrangement of songs from the film
Tarzan
playing
non-stop in the immediate area, but it's not the sort of thing that
winds up in wide circulation. Our hypothetical amateur Disneyland
playlist-builder would probably resort to the soundtrack version of
“Strangers Like Me,” which is the most prominent melody in the
arrangement.
Tune
in next week for Part 2, covering New Orleans Square, Critter
Country, and Frontierland!
* Content notice: This video uses the original lyrics for the song.
Huh... a Disneyland playlist that doesn't use every scrap of audio scrounged up off the Interwebs... Only readily available soundtracks and other ancillary music...
ReplyDelete*checks his iTunes*
*only 1.7 days worth of music*
*humm*
Okay, this will be a little less strict than yours, re: song-to-ride ratio...
The Aural Esplanade:
"Disney Medley: Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah / Hi-Diddle-Dee-Dee / Whistle While You Work / Heigh-Ho" by the Disneyland Band from the album "Disneyland Band Concert", getting us excited to march on in to the Magic Kingdom.
Main Street USA:
"Meet Me Down on Main Street" by The Mellomen from "Meet Me Down on Main Street", as you say, the Main Street theme song.
"Fortuosity (Quickstep)" by Sydney Thompson (45 RPM) and "Clarinet Polka / Gay Nineties Medley" by the Disneyland Band from "Disneyland Band Concert", to set the mood of Main Street itself.
"Alexander's Rag Time Band" by Rod Miller from the 2005 "Official Album of the Disneyland Resort", as we stop in at Coke Corner to hear some ragtime.
"Let's Dance at Disneyland" by the Elliot Brothers Orchestra from "Date Nite at Disneyland", a double-dose of nostalgia, enjoying the peppier side of dancing at the Carnation Plaza (when that was still a thing).
"Second Star to the Right" by Dee Fisher from "Echoes of Disneyland", a Wurlitzer Organ piece that captures the serenity of an evening on Main Street, bathed in golden light from a million bulbs, as guests slowly filter out of the park at the end of the day.
Adventureland:
"Overture / Jungle Beat" by George Bruns from the "Jungle Book" OST, as you say, the most perfect piece(s) for carrying one into the jungle.
"Moonlight Time in Old Hawaii" by George Bruns from the eponymous album, sailing us off to the islands.
"The Tiki, Tiki, Tiki Room" by the Sherman Bros., for the same reasons you've got it down.
"Hawaiian War Chant" by Tommy Dorsey (45 RPM), the Big Band standard that tops the Enchanted Tiki Room show, and of a vintage that also fits with the Indiana Jones queue (while not being directly from it).
"Adventureland Boat Ride" by Camarata from "Walt Disney Takes You to Disneyland", the soundscape of the Jungle Cruise.
"Quiet Village" by Martin Denny from the eponymous album, this Tiki lounge standard drops us off at an Edenic retreat deep within exotic Adventureland, Mai Tai in hand.