The second cartoon under Hugh Harman and Rudolf Ising's contract with MGM is this one about a faun and a satyr cavorting to Johann Straus's waltz. The character design is a bit primitive, but there is full animation, with both of the main characters wagging their tails while wearing goofy smiles. The color design - in the two-color variety; Disney would continue with its cartoon monopoly on the more advanced process for some time -is likewise primitive, although the background artist does a good job.
Mostly it's the faun and satyr cavorting, with occasional pratfalls, and a pack of hunting dogs showing up. It's sweet-tempered, but not saccharine (as the Harman-Ising cartoons too often were) because there are no voices and the cartoon isn't much more than a late example of the synchronized cartoon, that would evolve into the sort of purely musical cartoons that would distinguish the output of Friz Freleng.