
When we began Yowping in 2009, you could not find any of the cues on-line. Though the late Earl Kress arranged for a handful (by EMI’s Phil Green) to be released on Rhino Records about 30 years ago, reels and discs with the cues were in the possession of collectors.
The internet has evolved and, over the years, library music fans who were into Hi-Q have shared their bounty with others. We’ll gloss over an involved and thorny story to remark that, very recently, a generous individual has digitised a number of the library’s D (“Dramatic”) series discs that were not in circulation.
Ruff and Reddy was H-B’s first series for television, debuting December 14, 1957. A decision was made to pay for library music rather than go to the expense of scoring each cartoon individually. Someone, and I’m not certain who, picked cues from the D series and either Greg Watson or Warner Leighton cut them onto the sound track. (Jack Shaindlin’s Langlois Filmusic library was also heard in the studio’s cartoons starting in 1958).
Thanks to the anonymous person mentioned above, some of those cues are now available. We pass them along. The first cue is by Spencer Moore (and is from reel S-4), the other five are by Geordie Hormel in D-32. I believe all of them were heard in the Muni-Mula storyline; certainly the Hormel music was.
L-628 DRAMATIC BRIDGE
ZR-90C WEIRD-EERIE
ZR-91A WEIRD-EERIE
ZR-92B WEIRD-EERIE
ZR-93C WEIRD EERIE
ZR-93K WEIRD EERIE
There is more Ruff and Reddy music in this post.
We’ve written about the two cartoons seen on the first show, so here’s a little bit about the third cartoon in the Muni-Mula adventure, The “Whama Bama Gamma” Gun, which opened the second show on December 21, 1957.
Narrator Don Messick begins the cartoon with an animation-saving recap from the last episode. Ruff and Reddy seal themselves in a space ship control room to get away from two metallic robots, but the flying saucer begins to drop.
The new adventure begins with the space ship seemingly under control, with braggart Reddy at the helm. Though there are no credits, the mouth shape on Ruff below shows the episode was animated by Ken Muse.

Speaking of mouths, there are times the lower lip goes past Reddy's jowl lines, though it likely wasn't noticeable on TV.

As in the earlier episodes, there are silhoutte drawings. I presume Dick Bickenbach was the layout artist; he claimed to have been working on Ruff and Reddy while still at MGM with Hanna and Barbera. Thought went into this scene, as the two characters are framed by the metal arch.

One of the robots burns a hole in the door, but Reddy manages to swat its gun away and holds the two of them.

Outer space weightlessness kicks in and everybody starts slowly rising. Ruff pulls on a lever that opens a hatch at the top of the space ship and the robots float up into space.


Gravity returns. Note the dry brush.

The space ship is pulled into a hole that opens up on the planet Muni-Mula.



Messick urges us not to miss the next episode (which will follow after the live-action host and an exciting Columbia/Screen Gems cartoon).
The music (the final cue is from reel L-4):
0:00 – Title card.
0:06 – ZR-91C WEIRD-EERIE (Hormel) – Recap.
0:22 – ZR-91B WEIRD-EERIE (Hormel) – Saucer starts tipping, “I feel kinda empty.”
2:07 – No music – Ruff floats up.
2:12 – ZR-91C WEIRD-EERIE (Hormel) – Ruff grabs lever.
2:44 – No music. Ruff on top of Reddy.
2:50 – ZR-53 COMEDY MYSTERIOSO (Hormel) – Saucer flies to Muni-Mula, end of cartoon.
Let us add a bonus cue, not heard at Hanna-Barbera. In 1958, Warner Bros. contracted with John Seely to use music from the Capitol Hi-Q library. The reason we've been told over the years is a musicians strike, but I have found nothing about it in any trade publication. Seely got screen credit but he was an executive at Capitol so I doubt he actually clipped together the cues to write a score.
You will hear an edited version of this cue from the D series during the mouse-running part of Hip-Hip-Hurry! It is also by Geordie Hormel.
ZR-57 CHASE