"Handy Manny" Soundtrack Lyrics
Cartoon • 2008
Track Listing
Los Lobos
Chris Rodriguez
Chris Rodriguez
Tom Kenny as "Pat the Hammer"
The Cast of Handy Manny
Chris Rodriguez
Nika Futterman as "Stretch the Tape Measure"
Jaime Babbitt
Chris Rodriguez
The Cast of Handy Manny
Fred Stoller as "Rusty the Wrench"
Chris Rodriguez
"Handy Manny (TV Soundtrack)" Soundtrack Description
Overview
Can a preschool show swing like a garage band and still teach cooperation and Spanish words? Handy Manny does both. The 2008 TV Soundtrack stitches character songs and short, singable cues around a punchy theme by Los Lobos, matching the show’s fix-it comedy with earworm hooks and call-and-response choruses.
The album is compact—about 25 minutes—and built for replay: a big, brassy main title; upbeat work songs for Manny and the Tools; and character-voice features (Pat the Hammer’s tune is pure vaudeville grin). The cues double as learning beats (counting, teamwork, basic Spanish phrases) without dropping momentum. Trusted source: Apple Music.
Questions & Answers
- Who performs the main theme?
- Los Lobos perform the “Handy Manny Main Title Theme,” released by Walt Disney Records in 2008.
- Is there an official album?
- Yes—Handy Manny (TV Soundtrack), a 12-track compilation issued in 2008 by Walt Disney Records; it’s available on major streamers.
- Who sings the in-show character song “I’m a Hammer”?
- Tom Kenny as “Pat the Hammer.” The cut appears on the 2008 TV soundtrack.
- What kind of songs fill the album besides the theme?
- Work-and-play numbers tied to episodes—shop jingles, teamwork chants, and character features like “You Break It, We Fix It.”
- Does the music appear diegetically in episodes?
- Often. Many cues start as source-style jingles (Tools singing in-scene) and then play like short musical interludes.
- Is the series itself older than the 2008 album?
- Yes. The TV series premiered in 2006; the album arrived later, grouping popular songs from the show.
Notes & Trivia
- The main title credits all five core Los Lobos writers (Hidalgo, Pérez, Berlin, Rosas, Lozano).
- Disney’s release credits Brian Malouf and Dani Markman as executive producers; Fred Mollin is listed among producers on compilation materials.
- Tom Kenny voices both Mr. Lopart and Pat the Hammer—hence his vocal feature on “I’m a Hammer.”
- Several songs debuted as short music-video interstitials on Playhouse Disney between episodes.
Genres & Themes
Roots rock & Tex-Mex bounce: the Los Lobos title cut sets a friendly, town-parade groove that says “community first.”
Cartoon vaudeville & call-and-response: character songs use bright brass hits, handclaps, and repeated hooks so preschoolers can sing along.
Workshop percussion: taps, clanks, and brushed snares mimic tool sounds—sound design that doubles as rhythm section.
Tracks & Scenes
“Handy Manny Main Title Theme” — Los Lobos
Where it plays: opening titles of each episode; non-diegetic theme that occasionally tags scene transitions.
Why it matters: a roots-rock welcome that sets Manny’s neighborly tone while signaling bilingual callouts.
“You Break It, We Fix It” — Chris Rodriguez
Where it plays: music-video interstitials and episode montages (Manny and the Tools on a job); partly diegetic when sung by the characters.
Why it matters: the show’s mission statement in jingle form—service, teamwork, optimism.
“Smile While You Work” — Chris Rodriguez
Where it plays: short montage cue in fix-it sequences; non-diegetic with sing-back refrains the Tools echo in-scene.
Why it matters: models cheerful persistence during problem-solving.
“I’m a Hammer” — Tom Kenny as “Pat the Hammer”
Where it plays: character-feature moments and album sequence; diegetic when Pat hams it up for the crew.
Why it matters: comic relief and identity—each Tool gets a musical “bio,” and Pat’s is the hammiest.
“Amigos Forever” — Various
Where it plays: end-of-episode feel-good stingers and album closer slots; non-diegetic sing-along.
Why it matters: wraps the show’s friendship ethic into a tidy chorus preschoolers can repeat.
Trailer music: marketing spots largely recycled the series theme and short editorial stings rather than third-party songs. Trusted source: YouTube trailer postings.
Music–Story Links
The title song frames Sheetrock Hills as a street you already know: guitars strum like a block party, the chorus names neighbors, and the Tools chime in like kids on a stoop. When the plot hits a snag, a jingle—“You Break It, We Fix It”—resets the mood from panic to plan. Character features (Pat, Rusty, Stretch) aren’t filler; they teach roles on the team while sneaking in vocabulary and counting beats.
The pattern trains young viewers: hear the hook, anticipate the fix, celebrate together. It’s musical scaffolding for social skills. Trusted source: series credits and the official album.
How It Was Made
The TV series (2006–2013) anchors around the Los Lobos theme, commissioned by Disney for Playhouse Disney. Walt Disney Records compiled the 2008 album, crediting executive producers Brian Malouf and Dani Markman; producer Fred Mollin appears on release metadata. Character features draw on the voice cast—most notably Tom Kenny—for in-world vocals. Trusted sources: Walt Disney Records listings and the series’ soundtrack credits.
Reception & Quotes
The music’s job is simple and hard: keep kids engaged while pacing story beats. Reviews and parent write-ups emphasize the sticky theme and positive, repeatable choruses.
“A bouncy roots-rock theme that actually swings—kids chant it, parents tolerate it.” Album-listing user consensus
“Short, functional cues that double as teachable moments.” Kids-TV roundups
Availability is steady on Spotify and Apple platforms; individual tracks also circulate as official Disney Junior music videos. Trusted source: Spotify.
Additional Info
- The theme’s writing credits list the five core Los Lobos members.
- Tom Kenny’s “Pat the Hammer” cut is frequently singled out in track listings for featuring the character voice.
- Disney issued several songs as short web/TV music videos independent of episode airings.
- The series debuted in 2006; the soundtrack album followed in 2008 to group popular numbers.
- Most tracks run under three minutes—purpose-built for preschool attention cycles.
Technical Info
- Title: Handy Manny (TV Soundtrack)
- Year: 2008 (compilation)
- Type: Children’s TV soundtrack (songs & character numbers)
- Main Theme Performer: Los Lobos (“Handy Manny Main Title Theme”)
- Key Featured Performers: Chris Rodriguez (songs); Tom Kenny as “Pat the Hammer”
- Label: Walt Disney Records
- Availability: Digital/streaming (Apple Music, Spotify); tracks also on Disney Junior video channels
- Running Time (album): ~25 minutes / 12 tracks
Canonical Entities & Relations
| Subject | Relation | Object |
|---|---|---|
| Los Lobos | perform | “Handy Manny Main Title Theme” |
| Walt Disney Records | releases | Handy Manny (TV Soundtrack) |
| Tom Kenny | performs as | “Pat the Hammer” on “I’m a Hammer” |
| Chris Rodriguez | performs | “You Break It, We Fix It”, “Smile While You Work” |
| Playhouse Disney / Disney Junior | broadcast | Handy Manny TV series (2006–2013) |
Sources: Apple Music; Spotify; IMDb (series page); Disney/Playhouse Disney trailers; Walt Disney Records listings.
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