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Robert Farnon: Jumping Bean Robert Farnons miniature Jumping Bean is a perennial favourite.

I guess that it is known by all enthusiasts of light music and is remembered by most music lovers. However, there can be confusion. On a (unnamed) webpage someone has suggested that it was used as the theme tune to Top of the Form. It wasnt. That particular favourite was Marching Strings by Marshall Ross. However, Jumping Bean was used by the producers of the radio programmes Journey into Melody and Melody Hour. Like so many pieces of light music it is hard to pin down an exact date of composition. Tim MacDonald writing in the liner notes or the Marco Polo edition of Robert Farnons music suggests that it was written in 1947 perhaps even earlier. He notes that this piece has been used as a signature tune for more programmes than any similar work. This reputedly included the weather reports in a certain US state! As a child I always wanted a jumping bean needless to say I never got one! However, as I understand it, the jumping bean comes from Mexico, most especially the state of Sonora. According to Wikipedia, these beans were used in various cartoons and comedy sketches which played on the fact that if one ate these beans, one would jump around too! The technical reason the frijoles saltarines beans jump is caused by the larva of a small moth which has climbed inside the seed pod: when the larva gets warm, it snaps its body whilst trying to get cool! Hence the bean jumps. Nevertheless, the musical depiction in this short piece has little to do with flora and fauna. I guess that the cartoon imagery is nearer the mark. However, I recall when I was young my father would accuse me of being like a jumping bean when I was not prepared to sit still. So maybe it is a musical picture of someone who is full of beans and is jumping from one thing to another? Jumping Bean is based on a tritone figure. For the record, as it were, this means the melodic interval of the augmented fourth, for example, from C to F# on the piano. This interval dominates the music. In spite of the title suggesting otherwise, this is not a fast piece: it is more bouncy or perhaps even galumphing. The piece is underpinned with a memorable main theme, it is well scored with excellent muted brass and percussion excursions including wooden blocks in the middle eight. The composer is witty in his subtle use of shifting harmonies and craftily-positioned offbeats. Perhaps the final word can go to Andrew Lamb writing for the Hyperion conspectus of Light Music Volume 1. He suggests that Jumping Bean exemplifies as well as anything the characteristic of so many light-music classics that the title and the composer may mean little but the piece itself is instantly and gratifyingly familiar. Perhaps the revival of light music in recent years has done much to bring composers such as Robert Farnon back into the popular imagination. However, for most folk Jumping Bean will be a tune they know and enjoy but cannot quite place.

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