"Tell Me What You See". I have posted that episode (largely because people were asking the same question you asked), but as of now it remains blocked. Last year they apparently decided to allow access to any of the episodes I posted that could help them promote the new issues of the 'Red' and 'Blue' albums, but no others. Still, being blocked is way better than an outright 'copyright strike', so I thank them for that!
John and George, and possibly Merlin, were voiced by American actor Paul Frees (generally talented, but miscast to voice British characters), and as the show was produced for an American audience, even British actor Lance Percival (Paul, Ringo and some others) may have been encouraged to sound "less British".
@@alanr4447a well..the voices sound nothing like the Beatles, there was no quick wit to the dialogue, don’t think they’d be jealous of James Blonde or care one way or another about a robbery. On the other hand the faces were recognizable. Not that big a deal, just distorted for mass consumption by kids.
I hated those voices, especially the George voice, but the cartoons were cool and the music was the real thing, and I wish I had the entire collection on Blu-ray.
It was nice to have this cartoon put together with a very brief snippet of “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” from “Yellow Submarine.”Al Brodax and George Dunning had worked together and did both the animated television series and the film “Yellow Submarine.”…Nothing is Real!!!…Karlido🇬🇧🎼🇬🇧🎼🇬🇧🎼
I saw these cartoons as a kid, but don’t have much memory of them. Kinda weird- the audience was children watching Saturday morning cartoons, but the subject matter of their later songs, especially this one, were definitely not for children. Seems like a total disconnect.
Well, THEY didn't do this episode - I did, by mashing up bits of real episodes and adding a few bits of my own such as the "light bulb". They didn't make any episodes of songs as late as this one (the latest songs they used were "Strawberry Fields Forever" and "Penny Lane"). I'm sure if they had made episodes of later Beatles songs, they would've chosen appropriate ditties. "I've Got a Feeling" is RIGHT OUT! As it is, even one early one they DID do, the cover "Long Tall Sally", is not exactly kid stuff, but they "got around it" by totally ignoring what the song is actually about, and pretending it was about the "Long Lance of Salisbury", nicknamed "Long Tall Sally", and "cursed" suits of armor, and let the song "play in the background" while a story totally unrelated to its lyrics unfolded. As well, the sexual innuendo of "Day Tripper" is ignored. Also, even "Penny Lane" has "mature content" underlying its lyrics, but in the cartoon, a purchase is made at a fish shop, and a fire engine is just a _fire engine._ Ironically, they actually CREATED potential innuendo for "It Won't Be Long", making it possibly a very "personal question"...
They did not make an "I Am the Walrus" segment. I put this episode together myself back in 2008 by mashing up bits from the 1960s series and adding new bits such as the light bulb!
The cartoon itself was originally made without the Beatles' involvement, but with their _permission_ (through Brian Epstein). The main song that is heard during the cartoon is the standard mono mix (fidelity may not be perfect), with lots of sound effects added for the story. The snippet over the end credits I added using the track from _Anthology 2,_ where I further edited OUT "There beneath the blue suburban skies" to shorten it so as to get from "Penny Lane is in my ears..." to the piccolo-trumpet-enhanced ending within the short time frame of the credits.
Lt. Viktor Belenko would badly disagree with you. He pulled a grand champion trick when he flew that MiG 25 and escaped to Japan. Brezhy Baby screamed his tonsils out. Viktor is a real winner. That song is a bit comical
Their music got em a quick welcome. That fiendish lady needs a large cup of coffee laced with 1 MG magnesium citrate. Give her a one day supply of Depends and a box of wipes.