The
Screen Songs are a continuation of the earlier Fleischer series
Song Car-Tunes in color. They are sing-along shorts featuring the famous "
bouncing ball", a sort of precursor to modern
karaoke videos. They often featured popular melodies of the day. The early Song Car-Tunes were among the earliest sound films, produced two years before
The Jazz Singer. They were largely unknown at the time because their release was limited to the chain of 36 theaters operated by The Red Seal Pictures Company, which was equipped with the early
Lee DeForest Phonofilm sound reproduction equipment. The Red Seal theater chain—formed by the Fleischers, DeForest, Edwin Miles Fadiman, and
Hugo Riesenfeld—went from the East Coast to
Columbus, Ohio. Between May 1924 and September 1926, the Fleischers released 36
Song Car-Tunes series, with 19 using the Phonofilm
sound-on-film process. The films included
Oh Mabel,
Come Take a Trip in My Airship,
Darling Nelly Gray,
Has Anybody Here Seen Kelly?, and
By the Light of the Silvery Moon. Beginning with
My Old Kentucky Home (1926), the cartoons featured the "follow the
bouncing ball" gimmick, that lead the audience singing along with the film. The other 17 films in the Song Car-Tunes series were silent, designed to be shown with live music in movie theaters. The Fleischers were ahead of the sound revolution, and just missed the actual change when Red Seal Pictures filed for bankruptcy in the fall of 1926. ==Releases after Red Seal Pictures==