Snoopy

SNOOPY
 
 
Snoopy  is Charlie Brown’s pet dog in the comic strip Peanuts by Charles M. Schulz.  The original drawings of Snoopy were inspired by Spike, one of Schulz’s childhood dogs.  Snoopy is a perpetually innocent and mindlessly happy dog who either fantasizes or dances around in joy.  Snoopy cannot talk, so his thoughts are shown in thought balloons.   (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
While on tour in Ohio, the Strangeloves discovered a local band led by Rick Zehringer.  They brought him back to New York and pieced together Rick’s vocals with one of their own melodies, creating yet another hit with “Hang on Sloopy” that was released under the name the McCoys.  (That melody was later “sampled” in the cool novelty songSnoopy vs. the Red Baron” by the Royal Guardsmen; the tune was well known enough so that everyone understood the implied lyric “hang on Snoopy” without its having to be uttered).  
 
(May 2012)
 
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The Royal Guardsmen had a million seller in 1966 with “Snoopy vs. the Red Baron”; I guess I have been reminded of it since the local paper has been running some of the “Classic” Peanuts comic strips featuring Snoopy riding his  Sopwith Camel into combat, always with the battle cry:  “Curse You, Red Baron!” 

 

The Red Baron was a real person – Manfred von Richtofen, who is credited with 80 air victories during the First World War – and his name is referenced in the song (though never in the comic strip as far as I know).  The Royal Guardsmen followed that hit with “The Return of the Red Baron” and “Snoopy’s Christmas” and managed to release four albums with Snoopy/aircraft themes in the mid-1960’s, which also featured other novelty songs that had been released earlier by different bands.  They had other original songs as well; their first single, “Baby Let’s Wait” eventually made the Top 40 when it was re-released after the “Snoopy” hits. 

 
(March 2013)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021