![]() Grieg’s Hall of the Mountain King in "Featherwand" They dance around each other in circles to the sounds of Tchaikovsky's Waltz of the Flowers, not realising their ice creams are melting in the Australian heat. Tchaikovsky's Waltz of the Flowers in "Ice Cream"īluey and Bingo quarrel about sharing an ice cream treat, making sure no one takes the bigger bite. "From that episode, I got a message from someone saying, ‘My three year old just asked Alexa to play some Mozart!" 2. According to the show's lead composer, Joff Bush: "That might be one of the first times when we realised that using these classical tunes in the show really works, that you can have a lot of fun with it." In an interview with ABC Classic's Russell Torrance, Bush also revealed that Bluey was building a new generation of classical music lovers. In this episode, the two children, Bluey and Bingo, use a magic xylophone to freeze their dad in space and time, putting him in comical poses, to the joyful soundtrack of Mozart's Rondo à la turca. Mozart's Rondo à la turca in "The Magic Xylophone" ![]() Here are five exceptional uses of classical music in the show. ![]() The music of composers like Bach, Beethoven, and Mozart play an important role in the Australian animated series, Bluey. ![]()
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