Saturday, July 14, 2007

"The Jetsons Original TV Soundtrack" (COLPIX Records CP 213)





Side 1 = "Rosie The Robot" from September 23, 1962:

The Jetsons take Rosie the robot maid into their home, just in time to wreak havoc with a visiting Mr. Spacely.
Cast:

George O'Hanlon ... George Jetson (voice)
Penny Singleton ... Jane Jetson (voice)
Janet Waldo ... Judy Jetson (voice)
Daws Butler ... Elroy Jetson/Henry Orbit/W.C. Cogswell (voice)
Mel Blanc ... Cosmo S. Spacely/Additional Voices (voice)
Jean Vander Pyl ... Rosey the Robot (voice) (as Jean Vanderpyl)


Side 2 = "A Date With Jet Screamer" from September 30, 1962:

Despite George's best efforts, Judy wins a date with Ricky Nelson-esque pop idol Jet Screamer who sings Judy's contest entry song, "Eep, Opp, Ork, Ah-ah!" (originally voiced by Howard Morris and later performed by the Violent Femmes) which, despite its meaning in the song as "I love you", actually means "meet me tonight".

Cast:
George O'Hanlon ... George Jetson (voice)
Penny Singleton ... Jane Jetson (voice)
Janet Waldo ... Judy Jetson (voice)
Daws Butler ... Elroy Jetson (voice)
Howard Morris ... Jet Screamer (voice)
Jean Vander Pyl ... Rosie the Robot

"The Jetsons Original TV Soundtrack" Zip File

5 comments:

BenT said...

The DICKIES also covered "Eep Op Ork Ah Ah" on their soundtrack album for the original "Killer Klowns from Outer Space" movie.

VonCheech said...

thanks for uploading this. i missed it before your blog got attacked ! when you get time, please upload this one and top hat...

sorry again, what a pain..!
what doesn't kill our blogs will make it stronger...

Dave said...

I will eventually repost all of my files. Right now my problem is that I can't get all of the music files back onto my PC due to lack of hard drive space. So I'm having to transfer a little, convert a little to disc, on an on and on. It will be a slow process, but one I unfortunately can not avoid at this time;.
Dave

swarlock said...

Rake whatever steps are necessary, Dave. I've started adding in some of these into my podcast shows lately.

Sacred Cowboy said...

Eep-Opp-Ork-Ah-Ah was also covered in the '70's by a group called The Scientific Americans