The Lion Sleeps Tonight
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“The Lion Sleeps Tonight” | ||
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The Lion Sleeps Tonight by The Tokens
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Single by The Tokens from the album The Lion Sleeps Tonight |
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Released | 1961 | |
Genre | R&B Doo-wop World music |
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Length | 2:38 | |
Label | RCA Records | |
Writer(s) | Solomon Linda Hugo Peretti Luigi Creatore George David Weiss Albert Stanton |
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Audio sample | ||
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"The Lion Sleeps Tonight" began as a 1939 African popular music hit "Mbube" that, in modified versions, also became a hit in the US and UK.
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[edit] History
"Mbube" (Zulu for "lion") was first recorded by its writer, Solomon Linda, and his group, The Evening Birds, in 1939. Gallo Record Company paid Linda a single fee for the recording and no royalties. "Mbube" became a hit throughout South Africa and sold about 100,000 copies during the 1940s. The song became so popular that Mbube lent its name to a style of African a cappella music, though the style has since been mostly replaced by isicathamiya (a softer version).
Alan Lomax brought the song to the attention of Pete Seeger of the folk group The Weavers. It was on one of several records Lomax lent to Seeger.[1] After having performed the song for at least a year in their concerts, in November, 1951, the Weavers recorded their version entitled "Wimoweh", a mishearing of the original song's chorus of 'uyimbube' (meaning "you're a lion"). Pete Seeger had made some of his own additions to the melody. The song was credited exclusively to Paul Campbell, a fictitious entity used by Harry Richmond to copyright material in the public domain.
Pete Seeger explains in one recording, "it refers to an old legend down there, [about] their last king [of the Zulus], who was known as Shaka The Lion. Legend says, Shaka The Lion didn't die when Europeans took over our country; he simply went to sleep, and he'll wake up some day." (See "Senzenina / Wimoweh" on Seeger's With Voices Together We Sing (Live).) cf. sleeping hero
It was published by Folkways, a subsidiary of Richmond/TRO. Their 1952 version, arranged by Gordon Jenkins, became a top-twenty hit in the U.S., and their live 1957 recording turned it into a folk music staple. This version was covered in 1959 by The Kingston Trio.
New lyrics to the song were written by George David Weiss, Luigi Creatore, and Hugo Peretti, based very loosely upon the meaning of the original song. The Tokens' 1961 cover of this version rose to number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and still receives fairly frequent replay on many American oldies radio stations. In the UK, an up-tempo, yodel-dominated rendering was a top-ten hit for Karl Denver and his Trio. In 1971, Robert John also recorded this version, and it reached #3 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1972. Since then, "Wimoweh" / "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" has remained popular and frequently covered.
[edit] Copyright issues
Pete Seeger later said in the book A Lion's Trail, "The big mistake I made was not making sure that my publisher signed a regular songwriters’ contract with Linda. My publisher simply sent Linda some money and copyrighted The Weavers’ arrangement here and sent The Weavers some money."
Seeger's publisher was The Richmond Organization (TRO), which also goes by a number of other names, including Ludlow, Cromwell, Essex, Hollis, Melody Trails, and Folkways Music Publishers. Since Solomon Linda's 1939 "Mbube" was apparently not under copyright protection, TRO founder Howard Richmond had himself claimed authorship to "Wimoweh" using a pseudonym, in this case "Paul Campbell".
The songwriter and publisher customarily split the earnings of a song 50-50, and the performers, song pluggers', and agents' shares usually come out of the composer's half. By claiming authorship, TRO thus secured for itself a nice chunk of the songwriters' half as well as all of the publishers' share of the song's earnings.[2].
In 2000, South African journalist Rian Malan wrote a feature article for Rolling Stone magazine, highlighting Linda's story and estimating that the song had earned U.S. $15 million for its use in the movie The Lion King alone; this prompted the South African documentary "A Lion's Trail" by François Verster that documented the song's history. Screened by PBS, in September 2006, the documentary won an Emmy Award.
In July 2004, the song became the subject of a lawsuit between the family of its writer Solomon Linda and Disney. The suit claimed that Disney owed $1.6 million in royalties for the use of "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" in the film and stage production of The Lion King. Meanwhile, publisher of The Weavers' "Wimoweh", TRO/Folkways, began to pay $3000 annually to Linda's heirs.
In February 2006, Linda's heirs reached a legal settlement for an undisclosed amount with Abilene Music, who held the worldwide rights and had licensed the song to Disney. This settlement has applied to worldwide rights, not just South Africa, since 1987.
[edit] Selected list of recorded versions
[edit] Mbube
- 1939 Mbube - Solomon Linda's Original Evening Birds (South African hit)
- 1960 Mbube - Miriam Makeba
- 1988 Mbube - Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Coming to America
- 1993 Mbube - Mahotella Queens, Women of the World
- 1999 Mbube - Ladysmith Black Mambazo, In Harmony
- 2006 Mbube - Mahotella Queens, Reign & Shine
- 2006 Mbube - Ladysmith Black Mambazo, Long Walk to Freedom
[edit] Wimoweh
- 1952 Wimoweh - The Weavers US #6
- 1952 Wimoweh - Jimmy Dorsey
- 1952 Wimoweh - Yma Sumac
- 1957 Wimoweh - The Weavers on live Carnegie Hall album
- 1959 Wimoweh - The Kingston Trio
- 1961 Wimoweh - Karl Denver Trio UK #4 (1962 release)
- 1962 Wimoweh - Bert Kaempfert on "That Happy Feeling" album
- 1993 Wimoweh - Nanci Griffith with Odetta, on Other Voices, Other Rooms
- 1994 Wimoweh - Roger Whittaker on Roger Whittaker Live!
“The Lion Sleeps Tonight” | |||||
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The Lion Sleeps Tonight by Tight Fit
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Single by Tight Fit from the album Tight Fit |
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Released | January 1982 | ||||
Genre | Pop | ||||
Length | 3:18 | ||||
Label | Jive Records | ||||
Writer(s) | Hugo Peretti Luigi Creatore George David Weiss Albert Stanton Solomon Linda |
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Producer | Tim Friese-Greene | ||||
Certification | Gold | ||||
Tight Fit singles chronology | |||||
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[edit] The Lion Sleeps Tonight
- 1961 The Tokens US #1, UK #11
- 1962 Henri Salvador (French language version "Le lion est mort ce soir" lit. "The lion has died tonight") French #1
- 1965 The New Christy Minstrels
- 1971 Eric Donaldson
- 1972 Robert John US #3
- 1972 Dave Newman UK #34
- 1974 Ras Michael and the Sons of Negus (as "Rise Jah Jah Children")
- 1975 Brian Eno
- 1975 Bamse (Flemming Jørgensen) (Danish language version "Vimmersvej")
- 80s Flying Pickets
- 1981 Roboterwerke ("Futurist" LP)
- 1982 Tight Fit UK #1, NL #1[3]
- 1982 The Nylons
- 1984 Hotline (on "Pop Shop Party Pack Volume 2" and "The Best Of PJ Powers and Hotline")
- 1989 Sandra Bernhard (recorded October, 1988)
- 1990 Ladysmith Black Mambazo & the Mint Juleps, on the PBS television special Spike & Co.: Do It a Cappella and on its soundtrack album
- 1992 name tk Japanese #1
- 1992 They Might Be Giants with Laura Cantrell as "The Guitar (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)"
- 1993 Pow woW French #1 (Cover of "Le lion est mort ce soir")
- 1993 R.E.M. (B-side track on the single release of "The Sidewinder Sleeps Tonite", which itself references "The Lion Sleeps Tonight")
- 1994 Film and 1997 Broadway versions of The Lion King ...Broadway Cast version by Lebo M
- 1997 *NSYNC
- 2000 Helmut Lotti and Golden Symphonic Orchestra in "Out of Africa"
- 2000 Laurie Berkner on "Whaddaya Think of That?" CD
- 2001 Caribbean group Baha Men sampled the song on their own single, "You All Dat".
- 2006 VeggieTales covers the song on their CD "Bob and Larry Sing the 70's".
- 2008 Everlasting Films releases alternate version The Tiger Sleeps Tonight sung by Caroline Marshall as a bonus track to the soundtrack to The Tigers' Second Quest.
- (Unknown) Utah A Cappella group InsideOut recorded a version with comedic background noises referencing popular people or products, including Tony the Tiger and Steve Irwin.
- (Unknown) Jimmy Cliff reggae artist covered the song
[edit] References
- ^ Liner notes, "Pete Seeger's Greatest Hits," released 1962.
- ^ [1]
- ^ "De Nederlandse Top 40, week 16, 1982". http://www.radio538.nl/web/show/id=44685/chartid=6462. Retrieved on 2008-02-18.
[edit] References to the song in the media
Lists of miscellaneous information should be avoided. Please relocate any relevant information into appropriate sections or articles. (June 2007) |
- In the sitcom Friends, Ross Geller's monkey, Marcel, is shown to have a particular liking for the song in the episode "The One with all the Poker". In fact, in a later episode, "The One After the Superbowl, Part Two", another character in the show, Joey Tribbiani, sings most of the song along with the rest of the gang to help the monkey remember Ross.
- In an early college film by Sam Raimi entitled Cleveland Smith: Waders of the Lost Park, Bruce Campbell plays a parody of Indiana Jones. Falling from the sky, he lands in a cannibal cookpot. As they boil him, the blackface "natives" dance around singing "Oweemboay-oweemboay-oweemboay" in an obvious send-up of the song.
- The Portuguese comedy show Gato Fedorento featured the song in one of his sketches, "El Chato", where El Chato (Spanish for The Annoying, played by Zé Diogo Quintela), a bull annoyer, sings the song very loud to annoy a bull.
- The song features on the soundtrack of the movie Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, right before he makes love with his girlfriend.
- The song was featured in the movie The Sandlot.
- Timon and Pumbaa briefly sang the Tokens' version of the song in the Disney film The Lion King. A year later they would sing the complete song in a musical sketch from their TV series, The Lion King's Timon and Pumbaa, with Simba making a cameo at the end.
- On an episode of The Simpsons (My Big Fat Geek Wedding), Bart Simpson, his friends, and Seymour Skinner sing to try to win Edna's heart back is a parody of Solomon Linda/The Tokens' hit "The Lion Sleeps Tonight".
- Dave Chappelle sang the song (while dressed as Nelson Mandela) during a talk show spoof in the second season of Chappelle's Show.
- The song has been referenced in three episodes of The Simpsons: "Insane Clown Poppy", "Treehouse of Horror XIII" and "My Big Fat Geek Wedding".
- In Rise of the Cybermen, an episode of Doctor Who, the song is played by a character to drown out the sound of people screaming.
- The song was featured in the movie No Reservations.
- A parody called "My Husband Sleeps Tonight" is featured in the Off-Broadway show Menopause the Musical.
- Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman sang the song in the movie The Bucket List when their characters were in the jungle.
- The Tracy Ullman Show featured a sketch in which a sad-looking woman (Ullman) encourages an entire crowded bus stop full of people to join her in singing "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" to distract them as she and an accomplice pick their pockets.
- In the Season 3 episode of The Office entitled Product Recall Andy and Jim do a version of this in the car
[edit] External links
- Florencom @ YouTube channel devoted exclusively to covers of Mbube (125+)
- Pat et Stanley
- Rondo Histriae mixed choir from Croatia chant The Lion Sleep Tonight - (video)
- In the Jungle, Rian Malan, 2000
- In the Jungle, Rian Malan, 2003 (40 page pdf)
- Solomon Linda, Songwriter Who Penned ‘The Lion,’ Finally Gets His Just Desserts
- Sample of Mbube performed by Solomon Linda's Original Evening Birds (WMA Stream].
- PBS: The Lion's Trail
- Time: It's a Lawsuit, a Mighty Lawsuit
- NPR: All Things Considered: Family of 'Lion Sleeps Tonight' Writer to Get Millions
- Telegraph: Penniless singer's family sue Disney for Lion King royalties
- Article on the song's history by Mark Steyn, specifically illuminating Pete Seeger's role
- Bob Shannon's BEHIND THE HITS background story of the song originally published with John Javna in 1986
Preceded by "Please Mr. Postman" by The Marvelettes |
Billboard Hot 100 number one single (The Tokens version) December 18, 1961 (three weeks) |
Succeeded by "The Twist" by Chubby Checker |
Preceded by "Town Called Malice" by The Jam |
UK number one single (Tight Fit version) 6 March 1982 - 20 March 1982 |
Succeeded by "Seven Tears" by Goombay Dance Band |