Advertise on Toon Zone

TZ Podcast #9

News Front Page
TV & Film
DVDs
Anime/International
Industry
Comics, Etc.
Reviews
Interviews
Opinion
Archives 2001-2005
Archives 1997-2001
Batman: The Animated Newsletter
Contact the Editor
Submit News

08/28/08
Marvel Animation Age
• "Next Avengers" Heroes of Tomorrow" Feature and Blu-ray Release Reviewed (Click Here)
• Exclusive "Next Avengers: Heroes of Tomorrow" Interview Added
08/27/08
The Valentine Chronicles
• Cartoons, Dammit! is pleased to welcome The Valentine Chronicles and
its crew to the line-up! In keeping with our shared vision of bringing
you quality writing and art, we know you'll thoroughly enjoy following
the plight Tatiana and Katrina Valentine through a series of stories
and illustrations!
Log onto uStream on Wednesday, August 27th at 9:30AM to watch and discuss a series of marathon comic inking with the creator of Fantasia Arks: The Phasmatis Crisis as he recreates the first two chapters of the story tirelessly!

To paraphrase Dave Reynolds, artist of ShadowGirls on the amount of work being done: "I do about 110 full color pages a year, but doing 200 black and white, graytoned in a matter of months...is just borderline "You've looked at Cthulhu."

The Fantasia Arks Drawing Board on uStream!
Fantasia Arks: The Phasmatis Crisis
Online Graphic Novel


Three-Page Update: The Phasmatis Crisis begins to spread, and the timely arrival of the Ehrenwerte Conglomerate halts the deadly chaos at the Fides Refugee Camp.

Two new website sections are also added: Dramatis Personae (Characters), and the Frequently Asked Questions.
More Updates

Google

Toon Zone

Thanks for Visiting!

Serving the Toon Community since August of 1998
 

Toon Zone News Archives
March 2001
The Day the Music Died
The Mad Hatter
Mon., Mar. 19, 2001 20:33

Richard Stone, one of the key music composers forevery animated comedy produced at Warner Brotherssince TINY TOONS, passed away March 8th of pancreaticcancer. He was 47.

Stone first made his mark in Hollywood as a musiceditor for the obscure Carol Burnett movie, CHU CHUAND THE PHILLY FLASH, in 1981. Though the 80s, hisediting talents were applied to a number ofincreasingly popular movies, including WITNESS, THEBIG EASY, PRETTY IN PINK and PLATOON. In 1987, Stonebegan his shift to theatrical composition in thedepression-era movie SUMMER HEAT, and composed musicfor a number of independant movies such as SUNDOWN:THE VAMPIRE IN RETREAT and VIETNAM, TEXAS.

But in the 90s Stone would find his niche in animationwhen he was selected to be one of the 26 composers towork on TINY TOONS, the first production from thelong-dormant Warner Brothers Animation department indecades. Stone's work stood out, and he began to betapped for episodes the most often of all theconductors.

Douglas Frank, the executive vice president of musicat Warner Bros., said of Stone in an interview withFilm Score Monthly in August 1999: "I remember havinglunch with him and asking him what he wanted to dowhen he grew up. And he told me that if he was so busydoing animation for television that he had time fornothing else that he would be the happiest composer inthe world... at which point I warned him to be carefulwhat he wished for. And basically that's exactly whathappened."

Since then, nearly all of his musical work has beenfor Warner Brothers Animation, as he composed thethemes for and contributed music to ANIMANIACS, PINKYAND THE BRAIN, FREAKAZOID!, SYLVESTER AND TWEETYMYSTERIES, ROAD ROVERS, PINKY, ELMYRA AND THE BRAINand HISTERIA! At one point, Stone was supervisingmusic for six different shows at once.

Yet after nearly a decade of joyously frantic work,Warner Brothers scaled back its animation production.His final animation projects for Warner Brothers camein 1999, when he composed for WAKKO'S WISH and theunreleased theatrical short LITTLE GO BEEP. FilmScore Monthly captured his reflections on that era."Animaniacs wrapped up its last show, Pinky and theBrain has wrapped - it's the end of an era again," hesighs. "We've been privileged to be a part of theresurrection of this style, and it's been unbelievablethat we've been able to work with a full orchestraevery week for the past eight or nine years, which isunheard of in animation, let alone television ingeneral. There've been maybe two or three prime-timeshows that have had acoustic scores in the last fewyears, and we've been lucky to be able to have workedwith the greatest musicians in the world. I have nocomplaints whatsoever."

This is an unofficial site. All characters and related indicia are © and TM of their respective owners. Original content (c) 2007 Toon Zone.
About Toon Zone | Terms of Service and Privacy Statement | Contact us