Bob McFadden & Dor

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Mummy 00:00 Tools
The Beat Generation 00:00 Tools
I Dig You Baby 00:00 Tools
Noisy Village 00:00 Tools
Bingo 00:00 Tools
Son of the Mummy 00:00 Tools
Frankie And Igor At A Rock And Roll Party 00:00 Tools
The Beverly Hills Telephone Directory Cha Cha Cha 00:00 Tools
The Shreik Of Agony (Shreik Of Agony-Cha Cha Cha) 00:00 Tools
Shake, Rattle And Roll 00:00 Tools
Beat Generation 00:00 Tools
More Sing Along With The Mummy 00:00 Tools
The Children Cross The Bridge/ Inter: Colonel Bogey March 00:00 Tools
Hound Dog 00:00 Tools
The Sheik Of Araby (Shreik Of Agony Cha Cha Cha) 00:00 Tools
Frankie & Igor at a Rock and Roll Party 00:00 Tools
Son Of The Mummy (More Sing Along With The Mummy) 00:00 Tools
Sing Along With Mummy (Shake Rattle & Roll) 00:00 Tools
Shake Rattle And Roll 00:00 Tools
The Children Cross The Bridge - Colonel Bogey March 00:00 Tools
The Shriek Of Agony Cha Cha Cha 00:00 Tools
I'm A Mummy 00:00 Tools
The Mummy [1959] 00:00 Tools
The Children Cross the Bridge 00:00 Tools
The Shriek of Agony (Shriek of Agony-Cha Cha Cha) 00:00 Tools
Frankie and Igor 00:00 Tools
Children Cross The Bridge - Colonel Bogey March 00:00 Tools
The Shreik Of Agony Cha Cha Cha 00:00 Tools
Songs Our Mummy Taught Us - Hound Dog 00:00 Tools
Mummy 00:00 Tools
The Beat Generation (Brunswick 55140) 00:00 Tools
The Beverly Hills Telephone Directory 00:00 Tools
The Mummy (1959) 00:00 Tools
Sing Along With The Mummy (Shake, Rattle And Roll) 00:00 Tools
Son Of The Mummy - 1960 00:00 Tools
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Robert "Bob" McFadden (January 19, 1923 — January 7, 2000) was a singer and voiceover actor best known for his many contributions to animated cartoons. His best known characters were Milton the Monster, Cool McCool, and the ThunderCats' Snarf. In cereal commercials, he played Franken Berry and others. McFadden was born in East Liverpool, Ohio and was in the United States Navy in World War II when he got his start as a singer and impressionist. He went on to do an opening act for the likes of Harry Belafonte in Pittsburgh where he worked at a steel mill. McFadden continued in this vein for years until a move to New York in the mid 1960s, which resulted in a great deal of voice-over work in commercials and animation. In the late 1950s he collaborated with Rod McKuen on a single entitled "The Mummy", the "B" side "The Beat Generation" parodied the then-emerging literary community of the name; on this record, McKuen used the pseudonym "Dor" and later claimed that Bill Haley & His Comets were the band used for the recording session, though this has not been confirmed. McFadden and McKuen also released a full-length album in 1959 called "Songs Our Mummy Taught Us" (Brunswick 54056). In 1963, McFadden released the parody album "Fast, Fast Relief From TV Commercials" (Audio Fidelity AFSD 6112). He lived in Leonia, New Jersey. McFadden continued to work until the late 1980s, when poor health put him into retirement. He died in Delray Beach, Florida in 2000, twelve days before he would have turned 77. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.