High Note (1960) Poster

(1960)

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8/10
Elementary school music class proved a problem for many pupils . . .
oscaralbert19 March 2016
Warning: Spoilers
. . . back in the 1900s, when most American public schools still had a music teacher, music classes, and Music Education. (I cannot for the life of me figure out how such a subject could help a kid better sell a batch of McNuggets 10 years down the road.) HIGH NOTE is carefully constructed by Warner Bros. animators to help U.S. school kids feel better about flunking Music. What other subject REQUIRES you to rest--whether you need to or not--for a precise number of instants, this duration derived from some obscure code of hieroglyphics used nowhere in the Real World?! What if you MUST rest for two beats, but the symbol written on your "music" by some dude who died 400 years ago calls for only half a beat's vacation? If bathroom breaks were doled out in such a regimented fashion, no classroom would have a dry floor by the day's final bell. Warner comments on this Resting Scandal by have a quarter note rest turn into a yipping dog toward the end of HIGH NOTE. While the conductor's busy chasing this mutt, most of the notes get high. If J.K. Simmons saw HIGH NOTE, all this mayhem would surely give him WHIPLASH!
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8/10
Noteworthy
Hitchcoc14 October 2021
A quarter note attempts to put together the score of The Blue Danube. It is creative for most of the feature. The various notations come to life, including bending sticks to become a time signature and unfolding sharps like lawn chairs. The music is important but the strength is in the method. Well worth the time.
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10/10
music to anyone's ears
lee_eisenberg26 October 2006
In one of the occasional instances where they took a break from using their normal cast, the crowd behind the Looney Tunes cartoons made "High Note", about music notes assembling themselves for "The Blue Danube", only to have one note get drunk, leading the conductor note to chase him all over the sheet.

It's one of their many shorts introducing children to high culture (at the very least, it seems that they were doing that). It also shows that cartoons don't need words to be great; in fact, it makes them more comprehensible to other cultures if they consist of only images. Whether it's just quick entertainment or something else, this is a cartoon for the ages. I definitely recommend it.
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Surreal but beautiful.
rapt0r_claw-11 July 2003
This is one of those cartoons which are abstract and obscure, feature no famed character and is really a work of art. This is one of the cartoons which Jones might have dreamed of; something he really wanted to put on paper. Though not outright funny and not something that little kids would really understand or like. It could be a cartoon into which a lot of thought and underlying self-expression was channelled; on the other hand it could be an aimless study of the line which was not aimed at success but a simple experiment by the animators. What's with the two background artists anyway? They seemed to have been lazing 'cause there don't seem to be any scenery! Or maybe they were the ones who drew the notes... A very stylized cartoon, and one of the few sensible choices made by the Academy to be nominated for best cartoon. It should have won, but it didn't. A great example of opera. Except for maybe The Dot and the Line (1965), no cartoon based upon no real character and really very artistic and stylized would surpass this. If you narrow it down to that kind of OPERA, then this is unsurpassed. Anyway, without any specifications this is (or should be) classified as one of the best ten cartoons ever; at least top 20. Highly recommended. Should be in print on something besides laserdisc (I have an LD-player but you don't get LDs anymore).
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10/10
Excellent use of classical music and a very amusing concept
llltdesq15 August 2001
This short, nominated for an Oscar, is one of Chuck Jones's best. You'll never hear The Blue Danube in the same way again. Extremely creative joining of animation and music. One slight correction of another comment on this short: I know I saw this short on television prior to 1977, because I saw it for the first time before I turned 18. In any case, Cartoon Network has aired this fairly recently and if I recall correctly, showed it one New Years Eve, as part of a special broadcast. I think it was in 1999 as part of the "Miloony-um" special. Most highly recommended.
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9/10
Excellent 'toon
lakshmi_neruda11 December 2000
I had the pleasure of seeing this as well as other great Chuck Jones' cartoons on the big screen. Linda Jones Clough, Chuck Jones' daughter, introduced each film with a memory that related to the film. Interesting trivia: Linda stated that High Note has never been shown on TV because it involves drunk notes that censors felt where not suitable for children.
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10/10
Hitting All The Right Notes With Me.
Dawalk-127 October 2017
I thought I remembered seeing this on T.V. growing up, but other reviewers claim it stopped airing sometime after the '70s or it rarely ever aired again. Now I'm not as sure as I thought I was. I still thought it seemed familiar to me somehow despite that. Anyway, this WB cartoon definitely accords with me. This would be on my favorites list and what I consider as one of the best of the '60s, especially before the DePatie-Freleng and W-7 Arts eras. I haven't listened to classical music as much as I have some, other genres. The closest I've come to that was through ragtime/novelty ragtime and prog rock, the latter particularly by the British band, Renaissance. One of the best music-themed shorts in the series and being a big music person, I'm into several of them involving music.

High Note is a highly innovative and entertaining short that features various things made out of musical notes, like them being turned into live stick figures, and anything else that's written on staff paper. The note/stick figure that's the conductor is trying to get the playing of the piece, The Blue Danube, going, is unable to do so due to a missing musical note who's drunk, which is the reason this cartoon got banned, depictions of alcoholism. Much of the rest of the presentation is spent trying to get the drunk musical note to return to its place in the opus so that it can be played completely and without interruption. But in the end, it still doesn't go as planned. A few, other, well-renowned songs are featured as well, such as "Oh, Where Has My Little Dog Gone".

Even when I was little/younger, I believe I would've appreciated this break out of the norm. That's why this, along with The Dot And The Line, are so special. An example of high class fine art at its highest and finest. Another Chuck Jones-directed favorite. I wasn't always so big on classical or classical-influenced music, but maybe that's because I haven't found those songs that truly grabbed me. The compositions are nice, as is everything else about this. I've been a little more appreciative of it since. I can't wait till this finally makes its way onto DVD release. Recommended. Edit: I found out that this short has been available on DVD for over a couple years now, since I found out on the Looney Tunes Wiki that it's been released as part of Looney Tunes: Musical Masterpieces, in case anyone else besides me is interested.
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10/10
Chuck Jones' High Note is quite an entertainingly unusual cartoon
tavm18 March 2021
Some reviews have noted on this site that this particular Warner Bros. Looney Tunes cartoon was not shown on TV. I certainly don't remember seeing it then so I'm guessing this was truly my first time of wacthing this which I just did on the DVD of Cash McCall. It depicts the musical sheet of "The Blue Danube" and the various musical notes moving about trying to assemble on the scales to have the note conductor conduct. But when that note conductor does, he finds out that one of the notes is missing, in fact, he's in the "Little Brown Jug" sheet getting drunk (which you can tell because the head is colored red...) What I just described is enough to tell you that this was a more unusual cartoon, even from Chuck Jones, than what one is used to from Warner Bros., that's for sure! But it's quite funny and creative and it deserved its Oscar nomination. So that's a high recommendation for High Note.
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5/10
Doesn't quite make it over the median
nnwahler9 July 2023
Warning: Spoilers
If I were grading someone's school essay, I'd consider this to be a "line paper". Jones's musical cartoons were always praised by critics for their exactness; but this isn't one of his better ones, like "The Rabbit of Seville". This and other Jones musicals have consistently been remembered, while Friz Freleng's more accurate efforts therein usually aren't. Here the drunken musical note's been hanging out at the old "Tavern in the Town" instead of performing with his colleagues, and the understandably enraged maestro's immediate pursual of him and the drunk's ensuing jacking around result in missing the musical point.

I recall reading once of Jones's approach to directing a musical cartoon, deriving from his being "conscious" of music, like a musician or music lover can't be. I can't identify with this viewpoint. Jones and his desire not to adhere rigidly to the musical source at hand leave me feeling that he'd really rather be singing "How Dry We Am" with all the other notes at the "Little Brown Jug".

Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm going to put on Bob Clampett's more complete take of the "Blue Danube Waltz ", with Daffy as the ugly duckling.
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More Info.
erslade114 September 2008
I did see this as a child on TV in the early 1970s it was probably on a local station before the PC police got started censoring everything good. It is available on a laser disc called "Looney Tunes Curtain Calls" yes it is currently on ebay & usually goes from $5.00 to $15.00 & it is even listed as a buy it now right now. The quality is the same as a DVD how do i know because i own it on laser disc & watched it last night it may have been the late 1960s or early 1970s when i first saw it on TV also the CBS station back then showed these on a Saturday afternoon where the characters came on with the song on with the show. It is a great cartoon & with cable today its hard to believe that it is too risqué to be shown.
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4/10
Different yes, but not really a success for me
Horst_In_Translation19 February 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"High Note" is an American cartoon from 1960, so this one has its 60th anniversary soon and it was nominated for an Oscar. This would have been the actually first nomination for animation legend Chuck Jones, but no name is credited with the nomination, so he had to wait a little longer till it inevitably happened. Jones by the way not even 50 when this was made, even if it is a work from way after the glory days of the Golden Age of Animation in America. So you could call it a bit of an epilogue. No ducks, rabbits, no shooting or anything else that you know so well from these many many Warner Bros and Looney Toons short films, but this one here is entirely different. Not in a good way though I would say. The first half, a bit of an introduction felt incredibly forgettable. When the drunk note appears in the second half, it gets slightly better. The egg-hatching moment was fun, the dog wasn't bad either. In general it seemed as if they tried to get many animals in here, later on also a horse, but that did not feel too right. Same goes for the drunk note jumping around and the plot twist with all the other notes getting drunk too at the end is mildly amusing at best. I would not say this was a really funny or entertaining watch. Felt mostly disappointing to me. You cannot deny the creativity, but some of the connections made here feel a bit too far-fetched or just for the sake of it to me. It is always tough to breathe life into non-living characters, also that aren't animals in WB's particular case, but here the outcome is desppite the high rating and the Oscar nom (lost to Munro) not a positive one. Also why was the conductor a note as well. Shouldn't he stand out and not be part of the piece? Oh well, by the way Blue Danube is of course as always a thing of beauty, but as it wasn't written for this movie here, I cannot add stars for that. Some great names united here with Jones, Maltese and Blanc, so the sub-par outcomes surprises me a bit. Not recommended. Watch something else instead.
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