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Sneaky and the Bullfighter (2015) - David Mallamud

from Venimus, vidimus, audivimus vocem (NOC 6​/​21​/​15) by Anti-Social Music

about

El Sneaquó and ze Matador is based on the Jacques-Dian Picard's French comic strip of the same name, which ran in Le Tribunique des Paris from 1969-1974. It follows El Sneaquo, the mouse, as he continually outwits The Matador. It is generally known to be a roman à clef for French president Jean Sneaque-Lafitte, whose duplicitous behavior while in office almost caused the collapse of the French economy.
The piece is in several sections some lasting a minute or two, others lasting just a few seconds:
- Theme Song
- Looking to get revenge on The Matador for The Great Pantsing of '69, El Sneaquó spies on The Matador Serenading his beloved Dulcinea
- El Sneaquó Hatches a Scheme
- The Bullfight
- El Sneaquó Dresses Up Armando The Bull as Dulcinea
- El Sneaquó Hypnotizes The Bullfighter Into Believing That Armando The Bull is Dulcinea
- El Sneaquó Svengalis The Matador Into Proposing To Dulcinea (Actually Armando The Bull), In The Arena After The Bullfight, In Front of His Adoring Fans
- The Matador Begins The Long-Winded, Self-Indulgent Set Up To The Marriage Proposal
- El Sneaquó, as Armando The Bull, as Dulcinea, Fake Swooning
- Dulcinea Responds
(Actually El Sneaquó as Armando The Bull as Dulcinea), as The Matador Hangs on Every Word
- The Official Proposal
- Stinger! The Ring is Red! Armando Begins to CHARGE!!! The Bull Fighter Snapping out of His Hypnotic Daze, Realizes He's Been Setup and Goes After El Sneaquó
- El Sneaquó disguises himself as an old beggar and fools The Matador
- El Sneaquó Joins a Can Can Line to Hide from The Matador
- Disguised as a Viennese Therapist, El Sneaquó Tells The Matador That He Must Learn to Forgive or His Unresolved Issues Will Fester Inside of Him and Ultimately Harm Him More than El Sneaquó

credits

from Venimus, vidimus, audivimus vocem (NOC 6​/​21​/​15), released June 21, 2015
Played by Barry Seroff (flute), Jeff Hudgins (clarinet), Eli Asher (trumpet), Ty Citerman (guitar), Rima Fand (piano), Patti Kilroy (violin), Jeanann Dara and Karen Kanan Correa (viola), Loren Dempster and Pat Muchmore (cello), Brad Kemp (bass), and sung by Kamala Sankaram and George Wright

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Anti-Social Music New York, New York

You will be fortunate in the opportunities presented to you. In bed.

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