Eighty years ago today Walt Disney supervised the recording of the soundtrack for the Mickey Mouse short, Steamboat Willie. The recording took place in New York City under the baton of conductor Carl Edouarde.
Today is the anniversary of the successful second recording. The first had occurred two weeks earlier in a late-night session the result of which would ultimately be deemed unusable.
The recording system used was Pat Powers' Cinephone System. Cinephone was a not-so-subtle copy of the Phonofilm system that had been developed by Lee DeForest.
Steamboat Willie would premiere to the world six weeks hence at the Colony Theater in New York. This sound cartoon would go on to solidify Mickey Mouse in the popular culture and boost the fortunes of Walt Disney and his studio.
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3 comments:
WoW!
Just discovered your blog, great!
I have a floor dropping of film from Steamboat Willie. During one of his college summers, my dad worked as a "Cable Monkey" for Disney when they made that movie.
I am keeping this three foot out take in a small bottle with a tight lid. Is that what I should do with it?
Interesting to run into a Steamboat Wille post.
I recently heard the original song to what this film is known for, "Casey Bill".
Looking at all the old Mickey cartoons now, really makes you wonder what DID the music directors do to these films?
Did they simply used all existing popular songs from the day? Was there any original music created for these shorts?
Just curious..
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