Snow white and the seven dwarfs a silly song

Snow white and the seven dwarfs a silly song

The Silly Song (The Dwarfs’ Yodel Song) is a song from 1937 Disney musical animated film “Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs“. The song is sung by the seven dwarfs.

Yodel: Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay-ee-la-ee-ay-ee-lee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay-ee-la-lee-ay-lee-o-lee-ay

Yodel: Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay-ee-la-ee-ay-ee-lee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay-ee-la-lee-ay-lee-o-lee-ay

Happy: I’d like to dance and tap my feet
But they won’t keep in rhythm
You see, I washed them both today
And I can’t do nothing with ’em

All: Ho hum, the tune is dumb
The words don’t mean a thing
Isn’t this a silly song
For anyone to sing?

Bashful: I chased a polecat up a tree
Way out upon a limb
And when he got the best of me
I got the worst of him

Yodel: Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay-ee-la-ee-ay-ee-lee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay
Ho-la-la-ee-ay-ee-la-lee-ay-lee-o-lee-ay

[and repeat]

Back To All Snow White And The Seven Dwarfs Songs

Not to be confused with The Muppets song of the same name.

"The Silly Song"
Song by Otis Harlan, Billy Gilbert, Pinto Colvig, Roy Atwell, and Scotty Mattraw
Released1937
Composer(s)Frank E. Churchill
Lyricist(s)Larry Morey

"The Silly Song", also known as "The Dwarfs' Yodel Song", is a song from Walt Disney's 1937 animated film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs sung by Otis Harlan, Billy Gilbert, Pinto Colvig, Roy Atwell, and Scotty Mattraw. This features an instrument septet. The Seven Dwarfs yodel in this song. The melody is taken from the Irish folk song "Peggy Lettermore".

Sleepy: clarinet-like wind instrument, similar to a tarogato or soprano saxophone in sound, shaped like a fishGrumpy: finely carved organDopey: drum kitSneezy: luteBashful: concertinaDoc: double bass-like instrument called a swanette; also Sneezy's lute.Happy: yodeler; also Doc's swannette and Dopey's drum kit at the end.

Synopsis of the number[edit]

After discovering Snow White in their house and having dinner, the dwarfs throw a party for Snow White. In the song, Happy and Bashful each sing about something silly, both of which are followed by a chorus. After which, the dwarfs all take turns dancing with Snow White. A little more than halfway through the song, Dopey climbs onto Sneezy's shoulders while wearing a long cloak so that he could seem like a tall enough dance partner for Snow White. They dance with her for a little while, and then she lets them dance on their own. Dopey's dance is abruptly ended when Sneezy lets out a really big sneeze causing Dopey to pop out, fly upward and out of the coat, and safely into the cottage's rafters.

This song includes a drum solo by Dopey, driven by his pursuit of a pesky housefly, an organ solo by Grumpy, and a lute solo by Doc. This segment is immediately followed by the "Someday My Prince Will Come" segment.

An additional verse for Sneezy is found on the 1938 Snow White Soundtrack 78 record.[1][2] Verses for Doc are not used during the song in the movie.[citation needed]

Disney Sing-Along Edits[edit]

The song is featured on the Disney Sing-Along Songs volumes, "Heigh Ho" and "Topsy Turvy". Since it is a fairly long number with not many lyrics to sing along to, the versions on the Sing-Alongs are edited down. The following edits were made for such videos:

  • After Bashful's verse and the following chorus, the sing-along versions immediately cut to Dopey and Sneezy coming out to the dance floor in the coat.
  • Doc's lute solo is cut from both sing-along versions.
  • After Sneezy sneezes Dopey out of the coat, there is a shot of Dopey showing where he landed in the rafters. This clip was cut from the version on "Heigh Ho" but was restored for "Topsy Turvy".

References[edit]

  1. ^ Frank Churchill - Larry Morey (1938), "Dwarfs' Yodel Song", The Snow White Soundtrack, RCA Victor Records, vol. Side 5{{citation}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  2. ^ "A Lost SNOW WHITE Lyric - found!". 31 October 2011.