Amateur music composer
Thomas Oliphant (1799–1873) noted in 1843 that:
Robert Schumann's Kreisleriana #7, which is arguably about a cat (Murr), appears to be based upon "Three Blind Mice", but in a predominantly minor key. "Three Blind Mice" is to be found in the fugue which is the centerpiece of #7.
Joseph Holbrooke (1878–1958) composed his Symphonic Variations, opus 37, based on
Three Blind Mice.
Joseph Haydn used its theme in the Finale (4th Mvt) of his
Symphony 83 (La Poule) (1785–86); one of the 6
Paris Symphonies, and the music also appears in the final movement of English composer
Eric Coates' suite
The Three Men. "Three Blind Mice" was used as a theme song for
The Three Stooges and a
Curtis Fuller arrangement of the rhyme is featured on the
Art Blakey live album of the same name. The song is also the basis for
Leroy Anderson's 1947 orchestral "
Fiddle Faddle". The theme can be heard in
Antonín Dvořák's
Symphony No. 9 IV. Allegro con fuoco and
Manuel de Falla's
El Paño Moruno. The British composer
Havergal Brian (1876–1972) used the tune as the basis of his orchestral work "Fantastic Variations on an Old Rhyme" (1907–08). The work was originally intended as the first movement of a satirical "Fantastic Symphony" (Symphony No.1), a programmatic work, based on the nursery rhyme. The second movement was intended as a scherzo for pizzicato strings, depicting the souls of the departed mice going to heaven and the third movement was a Lament for the dead mice. Both these movements are lost. "Festal Dance" (1908) formed the finale, depicting the wild dance of triumph of the farmer's wife in which passing references to the tune can be heard. Having been performed separately, the first and last movements became independent works around 1914. The theme of the second movement of
Sergei Rachmaninoff's
Piano Concerto No. 4 (1926, revised 1928 and 1941) was criticized as resembling
Three Blind Mice. A
calypso version of the tune with new lyrics by
Monty Norman was recorded by
Byron Lee and the Dragonaires for the film
Dr. No, and is featured in
its soundtrack as part of the track "Kingston Calypso". The reworked rhyme alludes to the three black assassins whose deadly march through the streets of
Kingston, Jamaica opens the film. Other Jamaican versions include
dancehall artists, like
Josey Wales and
Brigadier Jerry.
"Complete version" Published in 1904 by
Frederick Warne & Co. in London, an illustrated children's book by John W. Ivimey entitled
The Complete Version of Ye Three Blind Mice, fleshes the mice out into mischievous characters who seek adventure, eventually being taken in by a farmer whose wife chases them from the house and into a bramble bush, which blinds them. Soon after, their tails are removed by "the butcher's wife" when the complete version incorporates the original verse—although the earliest version from 1609 does not mention tails being cut off. The story ends with them using a tonic to grow new tails and recover their eyesight, learning a trade (making wood chips, according to the accompanying illustration), buying a house and living happily ever after. == North American sports usage ==