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Swooner Crooner is a 1944 Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon directed by Frank Tashlin. [2] The short was released on May 6, 1944, and stars Porky Pig. [3]The cartoon was nominated for the 1944 Academy Award for Best Short Subject (Cartoons), but lost to the Tom and Jerry cartoon Mouse Trouble.
Christmas Songs by Sinatra is the third studio album by the American singer Frank Sinatra. It was released on October 4, 1948 as a 78 rpm album set of four 78 rpm records in an actual album and as a 10" LP record (CL 6019) featuring a collection of eight holiday songs. It included four songs previously released as singles, one recorded four ...
Laserdisc - The Golden Age of Looney Tunes: Vol. 1, Side 8: 1940s Zanies; VHS - The Golden Age of Looney Tunes: Vol. 8: 1940s Zanies; VHS - Looney Tunes: The Collectors Edition, Vol. 7: Welcome to Wackyland; DVD – Looney Tunes Golden Collection: Volume 2, disc 4: Looney Tunes All-Stars: On Stage and Screen
Sinatra's last two albums with Columbia, Dedicated to You and Sing and Dance with Frank Sinatra, were released in 1950. [137] Sinatra would later feature a number of the Sing and Dance with Frank Sinatra album's songs, including "Lover", "It's Only a Paper Moon," and "It All Depends on You," on his 1961 Capitol release, Sinatra's Swingin ...
Before the Music Ends: 1979: Gordon Jenkins: Begin the Beguine: 1946: Cole Porter: Bein' Green: 1970: Joe Raposo: The Bells of Christmas: 1968: Traditional The Best I Ever Had: 1976: Danny Hice, Ruby Hice The Best is Yet to Come: 1964, 1994: Cy Coleman, Carolyn Leigh: The Best of Everything: 1984: Fred Ebb, John Kander: Between the Devil and ...
The Frank Sinatra Christmas Collection is a 2004 Christmas compilation album from Frank Sinatra.The selection of tracks on the album spans Sinatra's career from 1957 to 1991 and includes four previously unavailable tracks [1] —two previously unissued on CD and two previously unissued in any format—the latter the last Christmas carol Sinatra recorded.
By 1937, the theme music for Looney Tunes was "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down" by Cliff Friend and Dave Franklin, and the theme music for Merrie Melodies was an adaptation of "Merrily We Roll Along" by Charles Tobias, Murray Mencher and Eddie Cantor [10] (the original theme was "Get Happy" by Harold Arlen, played at a faster tempo).
A parody of Frank Sinatra sings the song in the 1946 Looney Tunes cartoon Book Revue; By Ginger Rogers and Cornel Wilde in the 1947 film It Had to Be You; Gene Kelly and Marie McDonald danced to it in the 1947 film Living in a Big Way (while it was being sung by a mixed group)