I'm Professor Ludwig Von Drake (Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color) Lyrics
I'm Professor Ludwig Von Drake (Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color)
Oum diggidy oumpapaOum diggidy oumpapa
Oum diggidy oumpapa
Oum diggidy dou
Hurray for professor Ludwig von drake,
Ludwig van drake, Ludwig von drake
He is a genious, make no mistake,
ludwig van drake that's me
Then people say Ludwing what makes you so smart
you know everything from science to art
I'm forced to admit after study I find it's just my superior mind
'Caus I'm professor Ludwig von drake Ludwig von drake Ludwig von drake
Oh I am a genious make no mistake
ludwig von drake that's me
I look in the mirror and what can I say
Von drake you're okay! hip hip hurray
You're modest and handsome and loveable too
Von drake you're too good to be true. you you
I'm a visit calculist, psychology,
plain geometry and anthropology
and the living and entomology
and at bridge I excel
I know all about atomic energy
hearts as both and cars and bio chemistry
but when it comes to brain surgery then I can only do swell
'caus I'm professor Ludwig Von Drake
when it comes to brains I take the cake
'Caus I'm a genious make no mistake
Ludwig von drake, that's me
thank you very much for being with me over here
oh isn't that wonderful and all of me are beginning to set up
what you even doing that for boys? Look!
Wait I thought they said Drake for presidents
Look at those beautiful canons they're pointing over at me
what do you mean pointing at me? what you're doing pointing at me ?
you're pointing the cannons at me! you're supposed to point the cannons up in the air!
shoot them in the air!
you don't point the cannons on me!
wait a second what are you doing by that
well that's me all over.
Song Overview
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- Where it lives: Best known as track 1 on the 1961 Disneyland Records LP Professor Ludwig Von Drake, built as a character intro.
- Voice performance: Paul Frees, the original voice of the animated professor on NBC's Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color.
- Songwriters: Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman, writing in a comic character-song lane rather than a film-musical spotlight.
- Style: A brisk, oompapa-flavored patter tune with self-narration and rapid credential-dropping as the punchline.
- Why it matters: It is a mission statement for the persona Disney introduced with color television in 1961: an "expert" host who teaches, riffs, and sells the bit.
Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color (1961) - television anthology - non-diegetic persona branding. The character debuted on the first NBC episode in color, but this particular intro number is most closely associated with the companion record project that extended the professor beyond the broadcast hour and into the living-room turntable.
This is the sound of a cartoon lecturer stepping up to the podium, straightening his tie, and deciding the lecture should start with applause. The opening nonsense syllables are not filler, they are instant scene-setting: Vienna-by-way-of-Burbank, a comic "professor" with a grin in his voice. The melody stays simple so the real payload can land: words, velocity, and the rhythm of a confident monologue.
Frees sells the persona with that famous precision-timing voice. He does not sing like a pop star trying to impress you. He sings like a host trying to win you over, one line at a time, while the band keeps a tight bounce underneath. According to Cartoon Research, the album framed him as a TV star on wax, mixing songs with spoken comedy segments about recording itself, which fits the character: he teaches, then immediately explains how the teaching was made.
Creation History
The professor first appeared on NBC on September 24, 1961, as Disney rolled its anthology into a color era with a new animated co-host voiced by Frees. The record-side identity arrived the same year: the Disneyland Records LP Professor Ludwig Von Drake was released in summer 1961, with production supervision credited to Tutti Camarata and executive production credited to Jimmy Johnson in later discographic writeups. That combination tells you what Disney wanted: a character with enough personality to anchor both television segments and a full comedy-music record.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
The lyric is a rapid self-introduction. The professor announces his name, lists fields of knowledge, and praises himself with escalating theatrical confidence. In the background, the arrangement keeps an oompapa trot that nudges everything forward, as if the speaker is walking you down a hallway of trophies and pointing at each one without slowing down.
Song Meaning
The meaning is not subtle, and that is the joke. The number is a comedic portrait of authority as performance: credentials as showbiz, learning as patter, teaching as a form of entertainment. It also explains why the character worked as a 1961 "color-era" host. He can introduce a topic, keep kids listening, and make the lecture feel like a variety act instead of homework.
Annotations
Oum diggidy oumpapa
A quick sonic postcard. One bar and you are in a cartoon Europe of the imagination, where scholarship arrives with a bounce and a wink.
Hurray for Professor Ludwig Von Drake
The line is an applause cue written into the lyric. It tells you the professor expects a room, not just a listener.
When people say, Ludwig, what makes you so smart?
This sets up the entire comic device: the song pretends to be an interview question, then immediately answers itself with breathless self-confidence.
Genre and driving rhythm
Think vaudeville-meets-children's record: a singable refrain, a fast-talking verse, and a rhythm that stays buoyant so the words can do the heavy lifting. The oompapa flavor is less about national authenticity and more about shorthand. It reads instantly as "professor" theater, the same way a mortarboard reads as "school" in a cartoon.
Emotional arc
The arc climbs from introduction to self-celebration. Each verse adds more claims, more speed, and more comic certainty. The listener is not meant to debate the bragging. The listener is meant to enjoy how far the character will take it.
Technical Information
- Artist: Paul Frees
- Featured: Studio orchestra (album production format)
- Composer: Richard M. Sherman; Robert B. Sherman
- Producer: Catalog credits vary by release; the 1961 LP documentation cites production supervision by Tutti Camarata and executive production by Jimmy Johnson in discographic notes
- Release Date: July 24, 1961 (LP release date reported in discographic writeups; some streaming services display a placeholder date for catalog consistency)
- Genre: Children's record; character song; comic patter
- Instruments: Lead vocal; brass-leaning light orchestra; march-polka pulse
- Label: Disneyland Records
- Mood: Brisk; playful; self-mocking
- Length: 2:41
- Track #: 1 (on Professor Ludwig Von Drake)
- Language: English
- Album (if any): Professor Ludwig Von Drake (Disneyland Records, DQ-1222)
- Music style: Oompapa-flavored patter song with refrain hooks and rapid verse delivery
- Poetic meter: Stress-timed patter phrasing (built for quick articulation and punchline cadence)
Questions and Answers
- Is this the same track often listed as I'm Ludwig Von Drake?
- Yes. Catalog listings commonly shorten the title to that form on the 1961 LP and streaming track pages, while some compilations expand it to the professor phrasing.
- Who performs the voice and vocals?
- Paul Frees, who originated the character on television and carried the persona onto Disneyland Records.
- Who wrote the song?
- Richard M. Sherman and Robert B. Sherman wrote it for the character's record-side identity.
- Was the song introduced in the character's first TV appearance?
- The professor's first NBC episode included other signature material, while this self-intro is most strongly tied to the 1961 LP built around him.
- Why does the arrangement lean into an oompapa feel?
- It is a fast shorthand for a comic European "professor" persona, and it keeps the rhythm springy enough for patter.
- What is the central joke of the lyric?
- That expertise is staged like show business: the character praises himself, lists fields, and turns scholarship into a musical act.
- How long is the track on the original album program?
- 2:41 in common LP and streaming listings.
- Did Disney keep using Ludwig Von Drake after the early 1960s?
- Yes. The character remained a recurring Disney figure across later decades, with different voice actors after Frees.
- Is there evidence it was marketed as a single?
- Trade-paper and collector references indicate Disneyland issued related formats around 1961, suggesting the material circulated beyond the LP.
How to Sing I'm Professor Ludwig Von Drake
Common music-analytics listings peg the track at about 200 BPM in G major. That speed is the whole game: breath, diction, and comic timing matter more than big notes.
- Tempo first: Start at 160 BPM, speak the verse rhythmically, then climb in 10 BPM steps until you can articulate every consonant at pace.
- Diction: Keep T, D, and K sounds crisp. The patter needs edges, but avoid over-spitting consonants into the mic.
- Breath planning: Mark quick, silent inhales at the ends of clauses. If you wait for a long break, you will run out of air mid-list.
- Flow: Treat the verse like a comedic monologue on pitch. Keep the line moving and let the orchestra bounce under you.
- Accents: Stress the name and the key nouns, then relax into the oompapa swing so it stays playful rather than rigid.
- Character voice: Lean into a lecturer tone, as if addressing a room. Smile slightly while singing: it changes the vowel shape and sells the persona.
- Mic habits: Back off a touch on loud exclamations, then return closer for conversational lines. Patter can spike levels quickly.
- Pitfalls: Rushing the setup lines. The joke lives in clarity, not speed for its own sake.
Additional Info
The clever part of this track is how it extends a television character into a record-world format without losing the premise. The professor is not only a host, he is a format. On the LP, songs sit beside spoken segments about sound recording itself, which turns the album into a backstage tour and a comedy lecture rolled together. According to Cartoon Research, this approach fit a moment when comedy albums were popular, and Disneyland Records could sell "education" with a wink.
There is also a title-history wrinkle worth keeping straight. On the LP track list, it is typically shortened to "I'm Ludwig Von Drake." On later compilations and fan-circulated references, the longer professor phrasing appears, likely because it matches what the lyric keeps signaling: this is an introduction, not a narrative scene. Discogs entries for compilation track lists preserve that longer naming in at least one curated set.
Sources: YouTube (Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group), Cartoon Research, Wikipedia (Ludwig Von Drake), Discogs, Disneyland Records discography site, Apple Music
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Statement (S-V-O) |
|---|---|---|
| Paul Frees | Person | Paul Frees voiced and performed the professor on television and recordings. |
| Richard M. Sherman | Person | Richard M. Sherman co-wrote the song for the character's record material. |
| Robert B. Sherman | Person | Robert B. Sherman co-wrote the song for the character's record material. |
| Disneyland Records | Organization | Disneyland Records released the 1961 LP that popularized the track. |
| Professor Ludwig Von Drake | Work (Album) | The album placed the track as its opening introduction and mixed in spoken comedy segments. |
| Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color | Work (TV) | The television series introduced the professor character in 1961. |
| Tutti Camarata | Person | Tutti Camarata is credited with production supervision on discographic notes for the 1961 LP. |
| Jimmy Johnson | Person | Jimmy Johnson is credited as executive producer on discographic notes for the 1961 LP. |