

Sometimes used as an ice skating motif after being used for Torville and Deans record breaking Olympic gold medal performance.
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Boléro ( Maurice Ravel): Seduction (partly because of the movie 10 (1979) although its slow building intensity gave it this reputation long before that came out).Often mistitled "Figaro" after the name of the character and the main refrain. The Barber of Seville ( Gioachino Rossini): Largo al Factotum: Opera singers, barbers.Åse's Death from Peer Gynt Suite (Edvard Grieg): Any slow-moving and/or depressing scene or sequence shots of fjords in overcast weather.The Arrival of the Queen of Sheba ( George Frederic Handel): Period architecture, estates and larger dwellings formal or state occasions.A surf guitar rendition was used as the soundtrack for Space Mountain from 1996-2005. Also commonly used in movie trailers, especially for films concerning magic, wizards, fortune-telling and the like. The Aquarium from The Carnival of the Animals (Camille Saint-Saëns): Underwater scenes.note something Tiny Toon Adventures and Animaniacs used this for regularly Used sometimes for invoking Glorious Mother Russia. Anvil Chorus from Il Trovatore ( Giuseppe Verdi): Any kind of rhythmic pounding or hammering, as by blacksmiths, construction workers, or actual anvils being dropped on people's heads.

Anitra's Dance from Peer Gynt Suite (Edvard Grieg): Dance displays involving women (usually Eastern) display can involve live footage, statuary, friezes and 2D art in any combination.Especially associated with silent movies. Alternatively, scenes of melodramatic peril. 11 (Mozart): Busy, flustered activity, Regency England, salon de thé.
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If it's loud, brash, and arranged for horns, you're probably watching Anglia TV in the late 1970s or early 1980s.
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note Stalling would have been foolish not to make the most of the studio's great facilities: the vast Warner music catalogue and a full studio orchestra. He had a well-known tendency toward musical quotation and punning Chuck Jones was known to complain that Stalling would always use certain pieces of music in certain situations and would go out of his way to find preexisting pieces whose titles corresponded to the action he was scoring. Stalling, the musical director for the vast majority of the Warner Bros. Many songs owe their entries on the list below to the work of Carl W.

A few other unreasonable substitutes are very recognizable, though. cartoons, this often happened with movie scores. If there is danger of having to pay money to use a piece of music, the piece can be imitated in style ( Suspiciously Similar Song) or parodied. Less so in modern cartoons, unless they have the budget to score episodes individually. Very common in Golden Age cartoons that employ Mickey Mousing, where they may be used as a leitmotif.

Many of these have become verbal shorthand for particular nationalities or ethnicities, and thus may border on stereotypes.
