Select Language

English (United States)简体中文(中国)EspañolFrench (Fr)Japanese (JP)Russian (CIS)GermanHinduArabicKorean

Sign up for our email newsletter today!

A+L Search

Latest Events

No events

VirtueMart Product Scroller

VirtueMart Shopping Cart

VirtueMart
Your Cart is currently empty.

Ron Jones & Seth MacFarlane Family Guy FOX

NEXT

Composer, Family Guy

Only a handful of television shows these days use a full orchestra for their music, including the three animated hits from Seth MacFarlane—Family Guy, American Dad! and The Cleveland Show. While the humor on Family Guy may be considered low-brow, the 60-piece orchestra used on every episode of the animated comedy for the bold production numbers as well as the underscore certainly classes it up. “The music is important because it creates a legitimacy that goes against the content and therefore makes it funnier,” says MacFarlane, “Even if people don’t know they’re hearing a real orchestra (as opposed to synthesized music), on a subconscious level it legitimizes the show and makes it just a little more compelling.”

Ron Jones, a former Hanna-Barbera composer, and Walter Murphy, whose A Fifth of Beethoven was a hit record, are the two veteran songsmiths who bring MacFarlane’s musical vision to life on Family Guy and American Dad! “Seth finds these crazy musicals everywhere,” laughs Jones. “I mean, he finds the most obscure musicals and musical references. Each show has about 22 different styles, so one minute it’s a reggae thing, and the next, it’s a Broadway musical or a takeoff on Grease, then back to underscore.”

“This is the most fun I’ve had writing music for television ever, and I’ve been doing it a number of years now,” says Murphy. “I have so many various musical interests that there hasn’t been one particular assignment where I’ve had the chance to utilize all the different kinds of music. I mean, where else on TV could you write all this crazy stuff from orchestral music to opera to big band, jazz, swing, electronic?”

MacFarlane says his parents raised him on a musical diet of the Great American Songbook, Broadway shows, musical films, Cole Porter, Johnny Mercer, Rogers and Hart. “Those are the songs that endure in a way that what is being written now will not,” says MacFarlane. “They are genre free.”

Jones and Murphy are often called on to rearrange the standards or create parody songs or sound-alikes. “We know how to write so that we’re not borrowing someone’s music,” says Murphy. “If it sounds like the real thing, they bought the rights to the music.” Due to the huge success of Family Guy, airing its seventh season and marching past 135 episodes, it has become easier to license famous pieces of music.

MacFarlane loves throwing challenges at the composers. “For our 100th episode, Ron took a Gilbert and Sullivan song from the Mikado and arranged it as an MGM showtune. It was genius,” boasts MacFarlane.

Family Guy writers, including head writer MacFarlane, create the witty lyrics to fit the show. “Lyric writing is a craft,” explains MacFarlane. “You have to respect the mathematics of it. You can’t jam an extra syllable in there. You have to find a way to do it with the exact number of syllables and the right cadences. It’s better to have the lyrics sing smoothly than to be clever but clunky.

“Ron and Walter are such a vital part of the comedy of Family Guy. They both are really locked into the sensibilities,” continues MacFarlane. “At the same time, we do want it to be great music. We do want it to be legitimate music, music that if you were listening to it independently of the show would be a great listen.”

The admiration is mutual, as Jones says MacFarlane knows exactly what he wants from the music for every episode. “It’s rare to find a producer who has the ability to know all the different types of music, to be able to sing, to be able to write. I mean, the guy is so multitalented, it’s off the scale,” he remarks, pointing out that MacFarlane drew and created all of the Family Guy characters and voices many of them as well.

The role of the music on Family Guy is to be the straight man, explains MacFarlane.  “We have the composers play the score straight, as if they were scoring a dramatic show, which adds to the humor,” he says.

All the attention paid to the music on Family Guy has paid off. Ron Jones has twice been nominated for Emmy Awards, while MacFarlane and Murphy won an Emmy for Outstanding Music and Lyrics. Now that’s something to sing about.

A & L Highlights

Erika Brunson 02 November 2009, 16.00 Designers
Erika Brunson
Through three decades of work, Erika Brunson has achieved a celebrated status as an interior designer. She has an astounding client list, which includes royal families, celebrities and Fortune 500 CEOs. Originally from Ge
Read More 468 Hits 0 Ratings
James Cuno 27 November 2009, 16.00 Curators
James Cuno
President and Eloise W. Martin Director, Art Institute of Chicago Career Highlights Dr. James Cuno became the President and Eloise W. Martin Director of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2004, halfway through the museum
Read More 2220 Hits 0 Ratings
Robert Sean Coons 01 November 2009, 16.00 Artists
Robert Sean Coons
  Robert Sean Coons’ oil paintings comment on the paradoxes that lie in the subliminal areas of the human mind: love and war or beauty and obscenity. When approached head-on, the canvases appear to be simply paintings o
Read More 380 Hits 0 Ratings
Ed Moses 27 November 2009, 16.00 Artists
Ed Moses
It’s hard to imagine anyone making art for half a century without resorting to comfortable formulae at some point. But then, Ed Moses is no ordinary painter. He is an enigma driven by passion for the process and by what
Read More 376 Hits 0 Ratings
“All the Fun of the Fair” with Sir Peter Blake at Tate Liverpool
Britain’s famed Pop artist talks about his major retrospective in the home of the Beatles in the English Midlands Seated in his London home, British Pop artist Peter Blake is certain of one thing. “My reasons for pai
Read More 1899 Hits 0 Ratings
Ryman Arts 15 November 2009, 16.00 Philanthropist
Ryman Arts
Southern California Organization Provides Art Education To Underprivileged Kids Oscar Magallanes nurtured his artistic ability while a student at Ryman Arts, a Southern California arts education center for high school st
Read More 2077 Hits 0 Ratings
Maya Lin 27 November 2009, 16.00 Artists
Maya Lin
Recently, Maya Lin had large exhibitions at New York’s PaceWildenstein and at Storm King Art Center and a show of playful, smaller work at Salon 94, also in New York. Lin has used a range of materials and processes to
Read More 489 Hits 0 Ratings
An Artful Reawakening 15 June 2007, 16.00 Hotelier
An Artful Reawakening
Following a recent renovation, Four Seasons The Biltmore Santa Barbara has rediscovered its rich history Stepping back to gain a view of his hotel against a stunning, clear-sky backdrop, developer and hotelier Ty Warner
Read More 463 Hits 0 Ratings
Website Designed and Maintained by: Ben Giroux Design
Get Started at: BenGirouxDesign.com