Album Review: Bambi

bambi

So, I am becoming more informed on the Walt Disney Records, thanks to some suggestions by some fantastic LP members. By this, I mean I have a book on the history of Walt Disney Records being shipped to me, which I am incredibly excited about. Before that came, however, I received a copy of Bambi in the mail. With a copyright from 1963, this record features 8 songs, a mixture of orchestral and songs with lyrics, all directly coming from the film. This is a 33 1/3 rpm and a long play record. So here we go, my song-by-song reviews!

  • Main Title– I haven’t viewed Bambi in a few years, so I forgot how wonderful the opening overture was. Gorgeous score that makes me: #1. Want to watch the film immediately #2. Want a Bambi ride as a part of New Fantasyland. My favorite Disney film overture. A+
  • Little April Shower– Such a quaint and interesting song that I think deserves more credit. In My Top 10 Favorite Disney Songs. Side note, this began playing just as it started storm my house. Coincidence? Yeah, probably. A
  • Gallop of the Stags– Now, this is too intense for me. It is just has that “Go Big or Go Home” quality that I don’t care for. Does it fit the film? Absolutely. Does it work as a track on an album? Not in my humble opinion. B-
  • Love is a Song– Okay, I had no idea this song was so darn short! My goodness, by the time I went “I love this song!”, it was over. Nice song, just wish it had more meat to it. B
  • Wintry Winds– Now THIS is an orchestral piece that works on an album. My record player has the ability to transfer music to your iPod, and I will definitely be doing that for this track. Gorgeous. A
  • Let’s Sing a Gay Little Spring Song– Totally forgot about this song until I played it, but I am officially calling this THE song of Easter. If Disney World every decides to do an Easter parade again (my dream), this needs to be the main track. I love it oh so much. A-
  • I Bring You a Song– Good song? Yes. Yet, the arrangement from the Walt Disney’s Happiest Songs record is 1000x better. (Check out that review here) B-
  • Finale– Almost as good as the Main Title, but not AS good. The Main Title gets you excited for what you are about to hear, but I feel as if ending the album with I Bring You a Song would have made me a happier listener. Ending with this doesn’t feel like a good end cap to me. C+

Let me know your thoughts on the album review by either posting in the discussion boards, or posting a comment directly on the article using the cool new Facebook comment section we have now on LP. Look for an Official Album of EPCOT Center review coming soon!

(photo courtesy of vinyl45s.com)

Marshal Knight
Marshal Knight is a pop culture writer based in Orlando, FL. For some inexplicable reason, his most recent birthday party was themed to daytime television. He’d like to thank Sandra Oh.