After enjoying The Flight of the Bumblebee on Wednesday, I realized we can’t let the week go by without one more take on the tune - this time courtesy of Spike Jones!
The Chaos: The Jones Laughing Record (1946)
Spike used it as the basis for The Jones Laughing
Record, recorded for RCA Victor in 1946, and things get wacky fast.
Let’s give it a spin:
The laughter is absolutely contagious. And I love that the
label credits the side to Spike Jones and his City Snickers - one of his
best pun‑based band names.
The Technique: The Sneezin’ Bee (1957)
The yeoman work of ace studio trombonist Tommy Pederson
(brought in as a ringer) can get lost amid the chaos. Fortunately, Spike
revisited the concept in 1957 with “The Sneezin’ Bee,” included on his
Verve album Dinner Music for People Who Aren’t Really Hungry.
Let’s hear that one:
That’s essentially “The Jones Laughing Record” without
the laughing, giving us a chance to really appreciate Pederson’s dazzling
technique.
Here’s a fun clip from Spike’s TV show showing Tommy in action — though this time pianist Frank Leightner is the designated sneezer.
We can trace the whole “laughing record” concept back to 1922,
when Okeh released a German recording in the U.S. as The Okeh Laughing Record. It became a
sensation and spawned countless imitators.
More than 100 years later, it still gets you laughing
along.
That record later inspired (and was included on the soundtrack of) the 1955 Walter Lantz cartoon
“Sh‑h‑h‑h‑h,” directed by the legendary Tex Avery.
That was the final theatrical cartoon of Tex - my
favorite cartoon director.
So tell me: how do you like your Bumblebee - with laughing
or just the sneezing? Are you team giggles or team hay fever?



















