The Tokens – The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Wimoweh)

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The Lion Sleeps Tonight (song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“The Lion Sleeps Tonight”

The Lion Sleeps Tonight by The Tokens single cover.jpg
By May be found at the following website: http://musicsojourn.com/AR/oldies/img/t/Tokens/45nl_

TheLionSleepsTonight_300.jpg, Fair use, Link

Single by The Tokens
from the album The Lion Sleeps Tonight
A-side“Tina”
Released1961
Recorded1961
GenreRhythm and blues
doo-wop
Length2:41
LabelRCA Victor
Songwriter(s)Solomon Linda Hugo Peretti Luigi Creatore George David Weiss Albert Stanton
Producer(s)Hugo & Luigi

The Lion Sleeps Tonight” is a song originally written and recorded by Solomon Linda under the title “Mbube” for the South African Gallo Record Company in 1939. Linda’s original was written in isiZulu, while the English version’s lyrics were written by George David Weiss.

The song was adapted and covered internationally by many pop and folk revival artists in the 1950s and 1960s. It was recorded as “Wimoweh” by the Weavers in November 1951, and published by Folkways Music Publishers in December 1951. Artists who recorded various versions of the song included Henri SalvadorJimmy DorseyYma SumacNoro MoralesMiriam Makeba, and the Kingston Trio.

In 1961, a version adapted into English with the title “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” by the doo-wop group the Tokens became a number-one hit in the United States. It went on to earn millions in royalties from cover versions and film licensing. The pop group Tight Fit had a number one hit in the UK with the song in 1982. This song is written and composed in the key of E.

The Tokens

Weekly charts
Chart (1961–62) Peak position
Australia Kent Music Report 15
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders) 6
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Wallonia) 13
Canada CHUM Chart 1
New Zealand Lever 1
UK Singles (OCC) 11
US Billboard Hot 100 1
US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs (Billboard) 7
US Cash Box Top 100 1
West Germany (Official German Charts) 23
Year-end charts
Chart (1962)Rank
US Cash Box  10

History

“Mbube” (Zulu for “lion”) was written by Solomon Linda, a South African Zulu singer, who worked for the Gallo Record Company in Johannesburg as a cleaner and record packer. He spent his weekends performing with the Evening Birds, a musical ensemble, and it was at Gallo Records, under the direction of producer Griffiths Motsieloa, that Linda and his fellow musicians recorded several songs, including “Mbube”, which incorporated a call-response pattern common among many Sub-Saharan African ethnic groups, including the Zulu.

According to journalist Rian Malan:

“Mbube” wasn’t the most remarkable tune, but there was something compelling about the underlying chant, a dense meshing of low male voices above which Solomon yodelled and howled for two exhilarating minutes, improvising occasionally. The third take was the best, achieving immortality 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.

Issued by Gallo as a 78-rpm phonograph record in 1939, and marketed to black audiences, “Mbube” became a hit and Linda a star throughout South Africa. By 1948, the song had sold over 100,000 copies in Africa and among black South African immigrants in Great Britain. Linda’s song also gave the name to a style of African a cappella music that evolved into isicathamiya (also called mbube), popularized by Ladysmith Black Mambazo.

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. 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 and released it as a 78 single titled “Wimoweh”, a mishearing of the original song’s chorus of “Uyimbube” (“You are a lion” in Zulu). Their version contained the chanting chorus “Wimoweh” and Linda’s improvised melodic line. The Weavers credited the song as “Traditional”, with arrangement by “Paul Campbell”, later found to be a pseudonym used by the Weavers in order to claim royalties. It reached Billboard‘s top ten and became a staple of The Weavers’ live repertoire, achieving further exposure on their best-selling The Weavers at Carnegie Hall LP album, recorded in 1955 and issued in 1957. The song was also covered extensively by other folk revival groups such as The Kingston Trio, and exotica singer Yma Sumac. However, Miriam Makeba, in 1960, recorded the same song as “Mbube”, with the writing credit given to “J. Linda”.

In 1961, two RCA Records producers, Hugo Peretti and Luigi Creatore, hired Juilliard-trained musician and lyricist George David Weiss to arrange a Doo-wop and Rhythm & blues cover of “Wimoweh” for the B-side of a 45-rpm single called “Tina”, sung by group The Tokens. Weiss wrote the English lines “In the jungle, the mighty jungle, The lion sleeps tonight …” and “Hush, my darling, don’t fear, my darling …”

Weiss also brought in soprano Anita Darian to reprise Yma Sumac’s version, before, during and after the soprano saxophone solo. “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” was issued by RCA in 1961, and it rocketed to number one on the Billboard Hot 100. Weiss’s Abilene Music Inc. was the publisher of this arrangement, and listed “Albert Stanton” (a pseudonym for Al Brackman, the business partner of Pete Seeger‘s music publisher, Howie Richmond) as one of the song’s writers or arrangers.

Copyright issues

Social historian Ronald D. Cohen writes, “Howie Richmond copyrighted many songs originally in the public domain but now slightly revised to satisfy Decca and also to reap profits.” Howie Richmond’s claim of author’s copyright could secure both the songwriter’s royalties and his company’s publishing share of the song’s earnings.

Although Linda was listed as a performer on the record itself, the Weavers thought they had recorded a traditional Zulu song. Their managers, publisher, and their attorneys knew otherwise because they had been contacted by— and had reached an agreement with— Eric Gallo of Gallo Records in South Africa. The Americans maintained, however, that South African copyrights were not valid because South Africa was not a signatory to U.S. copyright law. In the 1950s, after Linda’s authorship was made clear, Seeger sent Linda $1000. Seeger also said he instructed TRO/Folkways to henceforth pay his share of authors’ earnings to Linda. The folksinger apparently trusted his publisher’s word of honor and either saw no need, or was unable to make sure these instructions were carried out.

In 2000, South African journalist Rian Malan wrote a feature article for Rolling Stone magazine in which he recounted Linda’s story and estimated that the song had earned $15 million for its use in the Disney movie The Lion King alone. The piece prompted filmmaker François Verster to create the Emmy-winning documentary A Lion’s Trail, that told Linda’s story while incidentally exposing the workings of the multi-million dollar corporate music publishing industry. In 2003 a CGI animation was released with Pat & Stan. It marked the two’s debut appearance and was the pilot episode to ITV‘s shorts and the TV series sketch of the same name.

In July 2004, as a result of the publicity generated by Malan’s article and the subsequent documentary, the song became the subject of a lawsuit between Linda’s estate and Disney, claiming that Disney owed $1.6 million in royalties for the use of “The Lion Sleeps Tonight” in the film and musical stage productions of The Lion King. At the same time, the Richmond Organization began to pay $3,000 annually into Linda’s estate. In February 2006, Linda’s descendants reached a legal settlement with Abilene Music Publishers, who held the worldwide rights and had licensed the song to Disney, to place the earnings of the song in a trust.

The copyright issues were updated in the 2018 TV movie, “Remastered: The Lion’s Share”.

In 2012, “Mbube” fell into the public domain, owing to the copyright law of South Africa. “The Lion Sleeps Tonight”, however, is still in copyright.

Selected list of recorded versions

“Mbube”

Mbube (Singer GE 829).jpg
By Solomon Linda – Fair use (Old-50), Link

Single by Solomon Linda’s Original Evening Birds
B-side“Ngi Hambiki”
Released1939
Recordedc. 1939
StudioGallo Recording Studios
GenreIsicathamiyambube
Length2:44
LabelGallo Record Company
Songwriter(s)Solomon Linda
Audio
Mbube (Audio) on YouTube

The song has been recorded by numerous artists, and is a standard that has become a part of popular culture.

“Mbube”

Solomon Linda&The Evening ( The First Version ) – Mbube
Solomon Linda's Original Evening Birds – Mbube Take 2 (Rare 1939 recording)
Miriam Makeba – Mbube (Live, 1963)
Ladysmith Black Mambazo – Mbube
  • 1991 The Elite Swingsters Featuring Dolly Rathebe, as “Mbube” on Woza!
Mbube (Wimoweh)
  • 1994 Ladysmith Black Mambazo, as “Mbube (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)”, on Gift of the Tortoise
Mbube (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)
Imbube
https://youtu.be/WbjbyWJGzlI
  • 2006 Ladysmith Black Mambazo, as “Mbube”, on Long Walk to Freedom
Ladysmith Black Mambazo – Mbube Wimoweh – Africa, donde Dios canta.
Imbube
Mbube
The Lion King: Circle of Life by LEBO M. — LIVE at the HAVASI Symphonic Concert Show in Budapest
BokkieULT, Cuebur, Mahotella Queens & M.O.T.I – Mbube 2020 Lyric Video

“Wimoweh”

The Weavers-Wimoweh
Jimmy Dorsey – Wimoweh
Yma Sumac – Wimoweh
Weavers (Re-union) – Wimoweh
1959 Bill Hayes – Wimoweh
The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Wimoweh – Karl Denver
Wimoweh
Hugh Masekela – Wimoweh
Glen Campbell – Wimoweh
Chet Atkins "Wimoweh" (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)
Rumplestiltskin – The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Wimoweh)
Nanci Griffith-Other Voices|Other Rooms-pt 15 – Wimoweh
Roger Whittaker – The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Live)
Manu Dibango & Ladysmith Black Mambazo – Wimoweh
  • 1998: Pete Seeger on For Kids And Just Plain Folks
Pete Seeger – Wimoweh
Desmond Dekker – Wimoweh

“The Lion Sleeps Tonight”

“The Lion Sleeps Tonight”

The Lion Sleeps Tonight - Robert John.jpg
By Atlantic Records – Discogs, Fair use, Link

Single by Robert John
from the album Robert John
B-side“Janet”
ReleasedDecember 1971
GenrePop
LabelAtlantic
Songwriter(s)Hugo Peretti Luigi Creatore George David Weiss Albert Stanton Solomon Linda
Producer(s)Hank Medress and Dave Appell
Robert John – The Lion Sleeps Tonight

Robert John

Weekly charts
Chart (1971–72) Peak position
Australia (Kent Music Report) 31
Canada Top Singles (RPM) 15
Canada Adult Contemporary (RPM) 17
South Africa (Springbok)15
US Billboard Hot 100 3
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard) 6
US Cash Box Top 100 2
West Germany (Official German Charts) 40
Year-end charts
Chart (1972) Rank
Australia17 2
Canada 45
US Billboard Hot 100 21
US Cash Box 10
“The Lion Sleeps Tonight”

The Lion Sleeps Tonight by Tight Fit.jpg
By The cover art can be obtained from Jive Records., Fair use, Link

Single by Tight Fit
from the album Tight Fit
B-side“Rhythm, Movement And Throbbing”
ReleasedJanuary 1982
Recorded1981
GenrePop
Length3:18
LabelJive
Songwriter(s)Hugo Peretti Luigi Creatore George David Weiss Albert Stanton Solomon Linda
Producer(s)Tim Friese-Greene
Tight Fit singles chronology
“Back to the Sixties Part II”
(1981)”The Lion Sleeps Tonight
(1982)”Fantasy Island
(1982)
https://youtu.be/HCdIyE6JF2s
  • 1962: Henri Salvador – in French as “Le lion est mort ce soir” (“The Lion Died Tonight”) FR No. 1
Henri Salvador – Le lion est mort ce soir (1962)
The New Christy Minstrels – Wimoweh(The Lion Sleeps Tonight)
  • 1965: The Shangaans, on “Jungle Drums”
The Shangaans – The lion Sleeps Tonight
  • 1966: The Townsmen, No. 70 Canada
Townsmen – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
  • 1967: The Hounds (Swedish Popgroup)
The Hounds – The Lions Sleeps Tonight
The Tremeloes – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Eric Donaldson – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Robert John – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Dave Newman – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
  • 1974: Ras Michael and the Sons of Negus, as “Rise Jah Jah Children (The Lion Sleeps)”
https://youtu.be/RPW6cTniAuM
  • 1975: Brian Eno, on single, later on Working Backwards: 1983-1973 and Eno Box II: Vocal
Brian Eno – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Dove – The Lion Sleeps Tonight [1976]
Stylistics – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Passengers – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
  • 1982: Tight Fit: UK No. 1, This version has sold over a million copies in the UK.
  • 1982: The Nylons No. 91 Canada
The Nylons – The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Official Music Video)
The Lion Sleeps Tonight by Maria Conchita Alonso (AMBAR / 80s)
Ladysmith Black Mambazo/Mint Juleps "The Lion Sleeps Tonight"
Big Daddy – Welcome to the Jungle
  • 1992: Talisman, on A Capella
Talisman A Cappella – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
The Guitar – They Might Be Giants (official video) TMBG
  • 1993: Pow woW: FR No. 1, cover of Salvador’s version.
Pow woW – Le lion est mort ce soir
R.E.M. – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Dennis Marcellino – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
The Lion Sleeps Tonight
The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Full Version)
N'Sync – The lion sleeps tonight
The Undertones – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Baha Men – You All Dat
Rockapella In Concert – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Mango groove – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Daniel Küblböck – The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Official Video) (VOD)
The Mavericks – The lion sleeps tonight
  • 2006: VeggieTales characters, on Bob and Larry Sing the 70s
The Lion Sleeps Tonight
  • 2009: Melo-M, on Around the World
Lion Sleeps Tonight
Cooldown Cafe & Gerard Joling – The Lions Sleeps Tonight
Tight Fit – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
Billy Eichner, Seth Rogen – The Lion Sleeps Tonight (From "The Lion King"/Audio Only)
Wiese – The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Official Video)

“The Lion Sleeps Tonight (Wimoweh)”

1997: Barbados (Swedish Dansband)

The Lions Sleeps Tonight (Wimoweh)
  • Dover Steel Drum Band – The Lion Sleeps Tonight
"The Lion Sleeps Tonight" by Dover Steel Drum Band
  • The Lion Sleeps Tonight – Pan Flute
The Lion Sleeps Tonight – Pan Flute
  • The Lion Sleeps Tonight by Straight No Chaser
The Lion Sleeps Tonight by Straight No Chaser
  • Sha Na Na – The Lion sleeps tonight skit
Sha Na Na ~The Lion sleeps tonight skit~
  • André Rieu – Pata Pata / The Lions Sleeps Tonight
Pata Pata / The Lions Sleeps Tonight – André Rieu

Charted singles

Tight Fit

Weekly charts
Chart (1982) Peak position
Australia (Kent Music Report) 11
Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40) 8
Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders) 1
Denmark (Tracklisten) 1
Ireland (IRMA) 1
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40) 1
Netherlands (Single Top 100) 1
New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ) 3
Sweden (Sverigetopplistan) 17
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade) 8
UK Singles (OCC) 1
West Germany (Official German Charts) 3
Year-end charts
Chart (1982) Position
Belgium (Ultratop Flanders) 11
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40) 11
Netherlands (Single Top 100) 11
West Germany (Official German Charts) 46

R.E.M.

Weekly charts
Chart (1993) Peak position
Iceland (Íslenski Listinn Topp 40) 2
Year-end charts
Chart (1993) Rank
Iceland (Íslenski Listinn Topp 40) 47

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