The
William Tell Overture is the
overture to the opera
William Tell by
Gioacchino
Rossini. This is in four parts: Prelude (a slow passage
starting with a passage for five cellos); Storm (a dynamic section
played by full orchestra); Ranz des vaches (call to the dairy cows,
featuring the
Cor
anglais (English horn); and Finale - ultra-dynamic "cavalry
charge" galop heralded by trumpets and played by full orchestra.
The final section is most famous for having been used in
the Lone
Ranger radio and TV series, but there are numerous other uses
in popular culture, including:
The Spike Jones
version
Spike
Jones's version reproduces the original with significant
modification of style and replaces the conclusion with the imitated
horse race calls of the famous announcer
Clem McCarthy.
The
song was on the album
Spike Jones is Murdering The
Classics in
1971, and was
later included in the compilation
Greatest Hits released
in
1999 by
RCA Records.
The recording
begins with the "Storm" portion of the overture, played
frenetically, with the band accompanied by barking dogs and
clanging objects of various kinds. The progression was brought to a
sudden end with the "Bang!" of one of the famous guns in Jones's
unique percussion section.
The "Call to the Cows" begins with
normal instruments and artificial bird chirps. The next part is
played on pots and pans and bicycle horns, each one in perfect
tune, followed by a crash. Finally, the melody is rendered by
gargling.
The "Finale" is played on the normal instruments of a
big band, mostly as an
underscore to the commentary of
Doodles Weaver. Weaver introduces the race
horses, each bearing a similar name to a real horse (Stoogehand for
Stagehand, Dogbiscuit for
Seabiscuit, and Assault for
Assault). He introduces Feitlebaum last with
a distant 20 to 1 odds.
The official name of the horse is
"Feitlebaum", after Weaver's character "Professor Feitlebaum", but
many have heard it as "Beetlebaum" or "Feeblebaum". The horse's
name is always said with a deep monotone.
The announcer goes on
a tangent as the race nears its finish, impersonating broadcaster
Clem
McCarthy, who called the famous Seabiscuit-War Admiral match
race in
1938 and also the
famous Louis-Schmeling boxing rematch of that same year.
The
song concludes with Weaver pronouncing Feitlebaum as the
winner.
Mike Oldfield version
Other uses in popular
culture
Ranz des vaches often rivals Grieg's Morning Mood in usage
for wake-up or morning scenes in films and other media.One of
the greatest interpretations of this overture can be admired in the
first complete Mickey Mouse cartoon made in colour,
The
Band Concert from 1935.All but the prelude has often
been used in commercials and animated cartoons: Storm for
ships at sea and other tumultuous scenes; Ranz des vaches
for any sunrise or waking-up scene, especially on a farm; and the
finale for any scene involving galloping, examples being the
Warner Bros.
cartoons Wabbit Twouble and Yankee Doodle
Daffy.A small repetitive portion of the Ranz des
vaches was once used in Ivory soap ads.The Ranz des vaches
is the theme for the short cartoon Bambi Meets
Godzilla.The TV cartoon series The Flintstones put words to the
finale, resulting in the song Happy
Anniversary.Portions of the prelude and the finale were
used in the Stanley Kubrick film A
Clockwork Orange, the former in a straight and sombre
scene, the latter in a humorous context.Portions of the finale
were used for many years as a TV and radio jingle by Pizza Hut in Sydney and Brisbane, Australia.Knowing at least the rhythm of the
first line of the finale is essential to understanding this
joke::Q: Where does the
Lone Ranger take his garbage?
:A: To the dump,
to the dump, to the dump-dump-dump!
An apocryphal story has
conductor Leopold Stokowski leading the
Philadelphia Orchestra in a number of
popular classics including the Overture. Upon the first notes of
the finale, a number of school children in the gallery supposedly
jumped up and cheered "Hi-yo, Silver!" Stokowski, completely
baffled, stopped the orchestra for a few moments; unfamiliar with
American popular culture, he had no idea about The Lone
Ranger.A portion of the prelude was used as a sample in
rapper Mike Jones' hit single "Still Tippin'". Was
the soundtrack for the 1980s video game Digger. Was used in the
1995 game Return
Fire as the theme music for driving with the flag in your
possession. Is one of the tracks in the European release of
Donkey Konga
2. Was used in the retired pricing game Hurdles
from The Price Is Right in
1976-1983. The Ranz des vaches is heard in the
beginning of the video game Day of the Tentacle. The
post-hardcore band Senses Fail mentions William Tell in their song
"The Priest and the Matador". The finale is featured as a song
in the dance pad game In The Groove, under the name "Tell."
The song was remixed specially for the game by staff composer
Kyle Ward, under the alias Symphonius. The character D-Day,
played by Bruce
McGill, plays the William Tell Overture on his throat in the movie, Animal House. The prelude
is included in the game Toonstruck. A remix of the song is in the Xbox
Live Arcade game, Boom Boom Rocket. It is included in
Taiko no Tatsujin DS. Appears in
Fred Gray's soundtrack for the
Road Runner game on the Commodore 64. An interpretaion of the
Ranz des vaches and finale was played by Mr. Whitekeys,
predominantly on harmonica, during dinner shows at the
Fly By
Night Club.The Finale appears in Thomas the Tank Engine and
Friends, remixed with a theme from the show's incidental music
associated with runaway scenes. This remix was heard in
the episodes Busy Going
Backwards and Thomas the
Jet Engine. External links
Tell&Go.x=19&Go.y=8&Go=Go IMDB
soundtrack results for William Tell