Los Angeles Times

L.A. Chamber gets silly with Disney help

The orchestra will accompany ‘Silly Symphony’ shorts at the Orpheum.

- By Tim Greiving

Imagine if you will: Arts supporters, dressed to the nines, gathered for a benefit in a grand old movie palace, listening to a chamber orchestra — and watching Disney cartoons.

Last year, the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra broke from a 25-year tradition of playing live accompanim­ent to old silent films for its annual fundraiser and instead dove into the Disney vault. The rechristen­ed “LACO @ the Movies,” which featured eight vintage animated shorts, packed the Theatre at the Ace Hotel and marked the first time the event sold out in more than 10 years.

It was only natural that LACO would return to the well of Walt. This year the ensemble will perform seven of Disney’s “Silly Symphony” shorts, restored by the studio, including the first (“The Skeleton Dance”) and the last (“The Ugly Duckling”). This time the concert will take place at downtown L.A.’s Orpheum Theatre — built in 1926, just a couple of years before Walt Disney loosed Mickey Mouse on the world, and equipped with a Wurlitzer organ that will be dusted off for the occasion.

“I think this is one of the most on-brand things we do, because the roots of LACO are in the L.A. studio scene,” said Scott Harrison, the organizati­on’s new executive director.

Indeed, LACO was founded in 1968 as another avenue of expression for Hollywood’s top studio players. Today, more than 85% of its 40 members are regulars on the scoring stages around town. “So we feel really connected to this project,” Harrison said. “It shows our musicians doing something that they’re excellent at, and putting a spotlight on something that often only happens behind the scenes.”

Disney created “Silly Symphony” movies as a playground for his animators to experiment with new techniques, particular­ly the idea of animating to pieces of music rather than the other way around, an idea he consummate­d with “Fantasia” in 1940. Between 1929 and 1939, the 75 “Silly Symphony” shorts earned seven Academy Awards, advanced the use of Technicolo­r and the multiplane camera and paved the way for Disney’s kingship in animated features.

The shorts represent the dawning era of movie music, when live organists playing pastiches of classical music were replaced with recorded original soundtrack­s (though the recycling of classical works did not entirely disappear). The composers include Carl Stalling — Disney’s first music director and the architect of animation scoring, who would later become a fixture of Warner Bros.’ “Looney Tunes” — as well as Leigh Harline, Frank Churchill and Albert Hay Malotte.

“The composers that worked for Disney in those days were at the top of their game, and I would put them on the same level as any of the great composers who were doing feature films,” said Mark Watters, who will conduct the LACO show. “Unfortunat­ely — and I can relate to this being an animation composer — they did not get the respect that perhaps a Korngold or Max Steiner or Franz Waxman did. But their music is every bit as good.”

Watters has been writing music for Disney since the early ’90s.

“I like to say I’m as close to a staff composer as they have in this modern day,” he said. “I’ve been fortunate to work in virtually every division they have, from video games to theme parks.”

His bread and butter, though, has always been animation. The composer’s CV (with its six Emmy wins) is filled with cartoon series such as “Tiny Toon Adventures” and “Aladdin” and films such as “All Dogs Go to Heaven 2.”

“I used to lament that I’d been hopelessly typecast as an animation composer,” he said. “But now that I’ve been doing it for 25 years, I’m really proud of what I’ve been able to accomplish.”

The benefit night is meant to be a fun outing for families, but Watters said the concert also will show off the quality of the scores and the challenge them.

Originally the shorts’ rhythmical­ly schizophre­nic scores were recorded in pieces, so players could adjust instrument­ation and tempo between takes. Playing them live, synced to picture, is a different animal.

“It’s not unusual to change tempos 10 times in a minute,” Watters said. “And what might be considered a really fast tempo for traditiona­l symphonic music is an average tempo for animation.”

LACO will have only two rehearsals to master these dime-turning workouts — which is where being pros in Hollywood comes in handy. On the scoring stages, these musicians tackle new pieces after only one or two quick read-throughs.

Another tie to Hollywood is the event’s honorary chairman: Dustin Hoffman. If possible (he’s been away shooting a film), he’ll attend. of performing

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