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  1. Nov 17, 2013 · Lyrics:Hakuna Matata, what a wonderful phraseHakuna Matata, ain't no passing crazeIt means no worries for the rest of your daysIt's our problem free philosop...

    • Nov 17, 2013
    • 51.4M
    • dudu
  2. Stream/Buy@crazyfrogMusic: https://bit.ly/CrazyFrogMusicSubscribe to@crazyfrogYT Channel: https://bit.ly/CrazyFrogYoutubeEnjoy more @crazyfrogVideos: https:/...

    • 3 min
    • Crazy Frog
  3. Sep 15, 2018 · Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupThe Lion Sleeps Tonight (Full Version) · Lebo MRhythm Of The Pride Lands℗ 2003 Walt Disney RecordsReleased on: 19...

    • Sep 15, 2018
    • 1.5M
    • Lebo M - Topic
  4. Hakuna Matata. [Timon:] When he was a young warthog. [Pumbaa:] When I was a young warthog. [Timon:] He found his aroma lacked a certain appeal. He could clear the savannah after every meal. [Pumbaa:] I'm a sensitive soul though I seem thick-skinned. And it hurt that my friends never stood downwind. And, oh, the shame!

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    "Hakuna Matata" (meaning "no worries" in Swahili) is the theme song and personal anthem of Timon (Nathan Lane), Pumbaa (Ernie Sabella), and Simba (Jason Weaver) from Disney's 32nd animated feature The Lion King. It was composed by Elton John, who also composed other songs from the film, and with the lyrics by Tim Rice. It is Timon and Pumbaa's sign...

    In the movie, the song was sung after the wildebeest stampede and Mufasa's death. Timon and Pumbaa tried to cheer up the depressed Simba (after saving him from dying in the desert), who feels guilty for his father's death according to his uncle Scar. The song is to teach Simba to slack off and relax and enjoy the life with no worries, while he grows older as time passes. At one part, Pumbaa almost said, "Every time that I farted," but Timon cuts him off, warning Pumbaa, "Not in front of the kids!" (referencing the audience and Simba).

    In Timon & Pumbaa, the song was used as the theme song of the TV series. In the episode "Swiss Missed", Timon is about to perform the song to Fronk Fegnugen, only for Fronk to interrupt him, telling him that he doesn't have time for an entire musical number. In the episode "To Be Bee or Not to Be Bee", Timon and Pumbaa sing the song alongside Buzz and the other bees, as they teach the bees to relax and enjoy life with no worries. Both of these instances are much like to what they did with Simba.

    The song is mentioned in the sequel, The Lion King 2: Simba's Pride during the fight between the pride landers and the outsiders, Timon tells Pumbaa, "When The Going Gets Tough, The Tough Get Going" is their new motto.

    In the midquel The Lion King 1½, the song was used as a sing-along version when Timon and Pumbaa find a quiet home where they perform after Timon is thinking of a correct catchphrase. The song suddenly pauses when Pumbaa (in the audience) starts chewing the bug following the lyrics on the screen in which Timon prompts him to bring the bug back to the big screen so they can finish the song. The song suddenly continues when Timon and Pumbaa spend time together in their new home.

    In The Lion Guard, the song is sung twice in the episode "Bunga and the King". It is first sung by Bunga and Simba while lost in underground tunnels, and later at the end of the episode by the whole cast.

    In the 2019 version, Pumbaa sings the full lyric "Every time that I farted", instead of getting cut off.

    •"Hakuna Matata" is a Swahili phrase that is literally translated as "There are no worries." It is sometimes translated as "no worries". The production team learned the phrase during their research trip in Kenya.

    •"Hakuna Matata" is based on a song called "Warthog Rhapsody", which was written early in the production stage of The Lion King. Although the two songs shared the same message and position in the film, when Elton and Tim began working on the music, the song was completely rewritten and eventually evolved into "Hakuna Matata". "Warthog Rhapsody" was eventually re-produced and released on the Rhythm of the Pride Lands CD, as well as rewritten as "That's All I Need," which was used in The Lion King 1½.

    •There is a lost verse of "Hakuna Matata" which explained Timon's past situation, like Pumbaa's. It was later cut, but used in The Lion King 1½.

    •It was nominated for the 67th Academy Award for Best Original Song, but lost to another song in the film, "Can You Feel the Love Tonight?".

    •The song is ranked #99 on the list AFI's 100 Years... 100 Songs, along with "When You Wish Upon a Star" (#7), "Someday My Prince Will Come" (#19), "Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious" (#36), "Wind Beneath My Wings" (#44), "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah" (#47), "Beauty and the Beast" (#62), and "The Rainbow Connection" (#74). It is one of only seven songs from Disney that made the cut.

    •One of the bugs that Timon pulls out of a knothole during the song is wearing Mickey Mouse ears.

    1.Schrager, Noah. "10 things you probably didn't know about The Lion King". The Christian Science Moniter.

    2."AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs".

    • 2 min
    • 2
  5. "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" is a well-known song featured in both the film and musical versions of The Lion King, as well as at the end of the third episode of Timon & Pumbaa and on Track 3 from the CD, Rhythm of the Pride Lands. It was originally sung by The Tokens, as well as written and recorded as "Mbube" ("Lion" in Zulu) in South Africa by Solomon Linda in 1939. The song is also performed ...

  6. "Hakuna Matata" is a song from Disney's 1994 animated feature film The Lion King. The music was written by Elton John with lyrics by Tim Rice.The song is based on Timon and Pumbaa's catchphrase in the movie, Hakuna matata, a Swahili phrase meaning "No worry(ies)".

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