Uploaded by GPITRAL3 on Aug 4, 2011
"The Lion Sleeps Tonight", also known as "Wimoweh" and originally as "Mbube" is a song recorded by Solomon Linda and his group The Evening Birds for the South African Gallo Record Company in 1939. It was covered internationally by many 1950s pop and folk revival artists, including The Weavers, Jimmy Dorsey, Yma Sumac, Miriam Makeba, and The Kingston Trio. "Mbube" (Zulu: lion) was written in the 1920s by Solomon Linda, South African singer of Zulu origin, who worked for the Gallo Record Company as a cleaner and record packer, and who performed with a choir, The Evening Birds. According to South African journalist Rian Malan:
"Mbube" wasn't the most remarkable tune, but there was something terribly compelling about the underlying chant, a dense meshing of low male voices above which Solomon yodelled and howled for two exhilarating minutes, occasionally making it up as he went along. The third take was the great one, but it achieved immortality only in its dying seconds, when Solly took a deep breath, opened his mouth and improvised the melody that the world now associates with these words:
In the jungle, the mighty jungle, the lion sleeps tonight.[1]
Issued by Gallo as a 78 recording in 1939 and marketed to black audiences, "Mbube" became a hit and Linda a star throughout South Africa. By 1948 the song had sold about 100,000 copies in Africa and among black South African immigrants in Great Britain and had lent its name to a style of African a cappella music that evolved into isicathamiya (also called mbube), popularized by Ladysmith Black Mambazo.[2]
In 1949, Alan Lomax, then working as folk music director for Decca Records, brought Solomon Linda's 78 recording to the attention of his friend Pete Seeger of the folk group The Weavers.[3][4] In November 1951, after having performed the song for at least a year in their concerts, The Weavers recorded an adapted version with brass and string orchestra and chorus as a 78 single entitled "Wimoweh", a mishearing of the original song's chorus of "Uyimbube", Zulu: You are a lion. Their version, which contained the chanting chorus "Wimoweh" and Linda's line, "In the jungle, the mighty jungle, the lion sleeps tonight", reached Billboard's top ten and became a staple of The Weavers' live repertoire. It achieved mass exposure (without orchestra) in their best-selling The Weavers at Carnegie Hall LP album, recorded in 1955 and issued in 1957, and was covered extensively by other folk revival groups, such as The Kingston Trio.
In the liner notes to one of his recordings, Seeger explained his interpretation of the song, which he believed to be traditional, as an instance of a "sleeping-king" folk motif about Shaka, Warrior King of the Zulus, along the lines of the mythical European sleeping king in the mountain: Shaka the Lion, who heroically resisted the armies of the European colonizers, is supposed not to be dead but only sleeping and will one day awaken and return to lead his oppressed people to freedom. University of Texas folklorist, Veit Erlmann, however, argues that the song's meaning is more literal and refers to an incident in Linda's own youth when he actually killed a lion cub.[5]
In 1961 two RCA producers, Hugo Peretti and Luigi Creatore, nick-named "Huge" and "Luge" by some of their clients, engaged Juilliard-trained musician and lyricist George David Weiss,[6] to fashion an arrangement for a planned new pop music cover of "Wimoweh", intended as the B-side of a 45-rpm single called "Tina" by the teenage doo-wop group The Tokens. Weiss added additional new English lyrics:
Near the elephants, the quiet elephants
The hippo sleeps soundly...
and
Hush, my darling, don't fear, my darling, etc.
He also brought in the soprano voice of opera singer Anita Darian to vocalize (reprising Yma Sumac) during and after the saxophone solo, her eerie descant sounding almost like another instrument.[4] The Tokens, who loved The Weavers' version of the song and had used it to audition for Huge and Luge at RCA, were appalled and were initially reluctant to sing the new arrangement. But ultimately they allowed themselves to be persuaded. Issued by RCA in 1961, "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" rocketed to number one[4] on the Billboard Hot 100. The publishers of this recording, Abilene Music (owned by Weiss), listed one "Albert Stanton" (a pseudonymn for Al Brackman, the business partner of Pete Seeger's music publisher Howie Richmond), as one of the song's writers (or arrangers), thus permitting TRO/Folkways a share of the author's half of the royalty earnings.[7] A cover of the Weavers' version by Scots singer Karl Denver and his group likewise reached the charts in the United Kingdom in 1962. The song continued to be extremely popular and subsequent cover versions were more or less continuous.
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Artist: Tight Fit
15 videos

YouTube Mix for Tight Fit
3:27
Tight Fit The Lion sleeps tonightby sailor19554,066 views
1:17
Madagascar, I like to move it, Erick Sermon - Reactby hushpuppy918,362,042 views
3:05
The lion sleeps tonight Tight Fitby stephenles221 views
2:28
The Lion Sleeps Tonight - Lion Kingby PinaColadaChicka9,100 views
2:41
THE LION SLEEPS TONIGHT - THE TOKENSby adecastor5,865 views
3:01
The Lion Sleeps Tonight - Tight Fit.mp4by antonietaalves8,249 views
2:01
The Kingston Trio - Blow Ye Windsby djl109812,403 views
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The Lion Sleeps Tonight Remix - Tight Fitby jebekijkthetmaar1,768 views
2:36
Ramrods - Ghost Riders in the Skyby gmailvsl2,616,709 views
3:00
Tight Fit - Fantasy Island - 1982 - Excellent qualityby fmatiyat63,839 views
2:40
The Tokens "The Lion Sleeps Tonight" Lyricsby jthebigman16,544 views
2:38
The tokens - The lion sleeps tonightby gerrit19521,240,587 views
2:49
Anita Darian - Misirlouby eclecticmusiclover119,164 views
2:38
The Lion King-The Lion Sleeps Tonight With Lyricsby XxneginxX74,132 views
3:16
TIGHT FIT - FANTASY ISLANDby thepiperchile191,268 views
2:54
The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Barmy Army in Wellington)by barmypom33,073 views
3:38
My Choice - Lebo M: The Lion Sleeps Tonightby mychoicealfred3970 views
2:28
Tight Fit - The Lion Sleeps Tonight 1982by memorylane1980s66,893 views
3:38
Arabian Nights Bellydance Music-Misirlou Indian Version on Organ Harmonica.wmvby cinoka636,182 views
2:31
Wimoweh - Karl Denverby potatoscone186,014 views
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The video is class I never sang with the lyrics.
melissa84996 1 month ago