Hakuna Matata (Lion King) Lyrics
Hakuna Matata (Lion King)
[Timon:] Hakuna Matata!What a wonderful phrase
[Pumba:] Hakuna Matata!
Ain't no passing craze
[Timon:] It means no worries
For the rest of your days
It's our problem-free philosophy
Hakuna Matata!
When he was a young warthog
[Pumba:] When I was a young warthog
[Timon:] He found his aroma lacked a certain appeal
He could clear the savannah after ev'ry meal
[Pumba:] I'm a sensitive soul though I seem thick-skinned
And it hurt that my friends never stood downwind
And, oh, the shame
Thought-a changin' my name
And I got downhearted
Ev'rytime that I...
[Timon:] Hey, not in front of the Kids
[Pumba:] Oh, sorry.
[Both:] Hakuna Matata!
What a wonderful phrase
Hakuna Matata!
Ain't no passing craze
[Simba:] It means no worries
For the rest of your days
It's our problem-free philosophy
[All:] Hakuna Matata!
Hakuna...it means no worries
For the rest of your days
It's our problem-free philosophy
Song Overview
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- Where it appears: A mid-film jungle sequence in The Lion King (1994), teaching Simba a coping motto through comedy and a growing-up montage.
- Who sings it (1994): Timon and Pumbaa (Nathan Lane, Ernie Sabella) with Simba vocals (Jason Weaver and Joseph Williams).
- Songwriters: Music by Elton John, lyrics by Tim Rice.
- Big afterlife: A charting single spin (Jimmy Cliff featuring Lebo M, 1995) and fresh cast recordings for stage and the 2019 remake.
- Signature move: A punchline-first show tune that keeps reappearing whenever Disney needs a pressure valve.
The Lion King (1994) - film song - diegetic. Timon and Pumbaa pitch their motto to a shaken Simba, then the number blossoms into a time-lapse gag of Simba growing up. The scene works like a hinge: grief is still in the room, but the movie briefly changes shoes, slips into vaudeville, and lets laughter do the heavy lifting.
Screen and media placements - A shortened form became the opening theme for Timon & Pumbaa (first aired September 8, 1995). The 2019 remake keeps the sequence as a set piece, with Billy Eichner and Seth Rogen leaning into buddy-comedy timing while young Simba and adult Simba share the melody.
Creation History
Elton John and Tim Rice wrote the song as one of the film’s comic pillars, letting the lyric run on breezy patter while the arrangement plays musical-theater dress-up: a little march, a little cabaret, and enough rhythmic snap to carry jokes without stepping on them. On record, the 1994 soundtrack performance is built around character voices and quick handoffs, the kind of studio craft that makes a “simple” singalong feel like a miniature scene. Years later, a reggae-leaning single version by Jimmy Cliff with Lebo M re-framed the tune for radio and compilation life, pairing it with “He Lives in You” and sneaking in a verse that feels like deleted character backstory.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
Simba has fled home and is running on fumes. Timon and Pumbaa find him, keep him alive, and offer a worldview in three words: no worries. The number sells that philosophy as both self-help and slapstick. As the song rolls, Simba’s posture straightens, his laugh returns, and the film fast-forwards through his teenage years like a postcard rack of easy days. The catch is baked into the scene: this is relief, not resolution.
Song Meaning
The motto is real comfort and real denial at the same time. On the surface it is permission to stop spiraling, to eat, breathe, and live. Underneath, it is a clever way of outrunning responsibility - a philosophy that works until the past catches up with you. The song’s trick is that it never scolds; it charms. By the time the story demands Simba face home again, the audience has already tasted the appeal of disappearing into the jungle.
Annotations
“What a wonderful phrase”
The lyric is a sales pitch, plain and proud. “Phrase” matters: this is a slogan you can repeat when your brain gets noisy, the way people cling to mantras in real life.
“Ain’t no passing craze”
It is a defensive line delivered like a joke. Timon and Pumbaa insist the motto is not a fad, which hints they have needed it for a long time.
“It means no worries”
The plainest sentence in the song, and the one that turned into a cultural shortcut. It also shows how translation can become a brand: a complex life stance shrinks into something you can hum.
“Problem-free philosophy”
That word “philosophy” is doing comic work. It sounds like a grand system, but the punchline is just survival: eat bugs, nap, keep moving.
Style and rhythm
The 1994 recording behaves like musical theater comedy: crisp entrances, quick dialogue-like phrasing, and a rhythm section that stays nimble so the jokes land. The later Jimmy Cliff and Lebo M single tilts toward reggae, which changes the meaning slightly - less “put-on showbiz routine,” more “sunlit ease.” Same melody, different posture.
Cultural touchpoints
“Hakuna matata” is presented as a Swahili phrase meaning “no worries,” and the film’s popularity made it globally recognizable. That’s powerful, and a little strange: a lived language reduced to a hook. Still, the song’s endurance comes from craft, not novelty - a tight comic duet, a chorus anyone can join, and an arc that mirrors how people dodge pain. As stated in Entertainment Weekly, early versions of the film even played with how far the comic duo could sing into the big romantic material, which tells you how central their tone was to the filmmakers’ balancing act.
Technical Information
- Artist: Nathan Lane, Ernie Sabella, Jason Weaver, Joseph Williams
- Featured: Timon and Pumbaa (lead), Simba (supporting vocal lines)
- Composer: Elton John
- Producer: Jay Rifkin, Mark Mancina (soundtrack production credits commonly listed)
- Release Date: May 31, 1994 (soundtrack release date)
- Genre: Film song, musical theater comedy
- Instruments: Orchestra, rhythm section, character-voice ensemble approach
- Label: Walt Disney Records
- Mood: Comic relief, carefree mask, kinetic
- Length: About 3:33 (soundtrack track), about 4:24 (single arrangement variant)
- Track #: Commonly listed mid-album on the 1994 soundtrack editions
- Language: English (with a Swahili catchphrase)
- Album: The Lion King: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
- Music style: Show-tune phrasing with pop accessibility; later reggae-pop single interpretation
- Poetic meter: Mixed conversational meter, with frequent trochaic bounce to keep lines punchy
Questions and Answers
- Why does the song hit right after the story turns dark?
- Because it is designed as a release valve. The film needs the audience to breathe before the plot asks for healing, and comedy is the quickest route to oxygen.
- Is the motto meant to be wise or foolish?
- Both. It is wise as a short-term survival tool and foolish as a permanent life plan. The story lets it work, then shows its limits.
- Who carries the performance in the 1994 recording?
- Nathan Lane and Ernie Sabella do the heavy lifting, selling lines like dialogue. Simba’s vocal presence acts like a “before and after” photo for the character.
- Why does the tune adapt so well to different styles?
- The melody is sturdy and the chorus is built for group singing. You can stage it as vaudeville, reggae-pop, or a modern cast showcase and it still reads.
- What changes when the song is sung in the 2019 remake?
- The bones stay the same, but the comic pacing shifts with the new actors’ timing and the film’s more naturalistic visual style.
- Did the song ever chart as a single?
- Yes, primarily through the Jimmy Cliff and Lebo M single tied to Rhythm of the Pride Lands, which placed on several European charts and also appeared on Billboard’s Bubbling Under list.
- Why does the lyric keep repeating the title phrase?
- Because it is a mantra. The repetition is the point: the characters are talking themselves into calm.
- Is it used outside the film?
- It became the opening theme for the Timon & Pumbaa animated series, and it appears in major cast recordings for the stage adaptation.
- What is the hidden character detail inside the joke?
- Pumbaa’s embarrassment story plays like a punchline, but it also explains why a “no worries” code would feel like salvation to him.
- Why did it become such a lasting pop-culture reference?
- The hook is simple, the scene is memorable, and the phrase travels well. Add decades of reissues and revivals, and it never leaves the room.
Awards and Chart Positions
The song earned an Academy Award nomination for Music (Original Song) at the 67th ceremony, in a year when The Lion King placed three songs in the category. It also landed at number 99 on the American Film Institute list of top movie songs, a tidy confirmation that the joke number had become a standard.
| Category | Result | Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Academy Awards - Music (Original Song) | Nominated | 1995 | Lost to “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” from the same film. |
| AFI 100 Years 100 Songs | Ranked number 99 | 2004 | Listed with the 1994 film performers and songwriters. |
Selected chart notes - The radio-facing single most associated with chart runs is the 1995 release credited to Jimmy Cliff featuring Lebo M. It reached a peak of 46 on Belgium’s Ultratop (Flanders) and appeared on France’s official year-end singles list at position 27.
| Territory | Chart | Peak or year-end | Credited artist |
|---|---|---|---|
| Belgium (Flanders) | Ultratop 50 | Peak 46 | Jimmy Cliff and Lebo M |
| France | Top Singles Annuel | Year-end 27 (1995) | Jimmy Cliff and Lebo M |
How to Sing Hakuna Matata
Core metrics (common lead-sheet references): Original key often published as C major, with a frequently cited melody span around C3 to E4. Tempo depends on edition and staging: many performances sit roughly in the 84 to 96 BPM pocket, but the groove can feel double-time when the patter picks up.
Step-by-step
- Tempo first: Practice the chorus slowly until consonants land cleanly, then bring it up to a brisk, speech-like pace. If you rush, the jokes blur.
- Diction: Treat each line like dialogue. “Phrase,” “craze,” and “philosophy” are punchlines, not just notes.
- Breathing: Mark quick “sip” breaths before long sentences. The song is built on patter, and patter punishes lazy breath plans.
- Flow and rhythm: Keep the beat under your feet, but let the delivery bounce. The comedy lives in tiny delays, not in dragging.
- Accents: Stress keywords, not every syllable. A light touch makes the hook feel effortless.
- Ensemble and doubles: If you are sharing parts, decide who owns the ends of phrases. Clean handoffs beat louder singing.
- Mic technique: On stage, back off slightly on shouted bits so the tone stays warm. In a studio-style take, stay close and let character live in consonants.
- Pitfalls: Don’t turn it into a novelty shout. The best performances keep real warmth under the comedy.
Practice materials: Work the chorus on a single vowel to find placement, then add consonants back in. Finally, speak the full lyric in rhythm without pitch - if it still “plays,” you are ready to sing it.
Additional Info
The tune has multiple “official-feeling” lives. The Jimmy Cliff and Lebo M single was marketed with “He Lives in You,” a pairing that quietly points toward the stage show’s expanded musical world. The Broadway cast recording (1997) includes the number as part of the show’s big comic stretch, where it functions like a curtain pull on Simba’s detour. And in 2019, the remake made a point of recording Eichner and Rogen with a sense of duo chemistry - Vanity Fair described the effort to capture that interplay during the musical sequence.
Covers and borrowings have been constant. One of the more on-the-nose examples is When You Wish Upon a Chipmunk (1995), where Alvin and company dip into the Disney catalog and treat the song as a ready-made singalong template. That is the tell: once a movie song can be repackaged as a novelty cover without breaking, it has crossed into standard repertoire.
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Relationship (S-V-O) |
|---|---|---|
| Elton John | Person | Elton John - composed - the music |
| Tim Rice | Person | Tim Rice - wrote - the lyrics |
| Nathan Lane | Person | Nathan Lane - performed - Timon vocals (1994 soundtrack) |
| Ernie Sabella | Person | Ernie Sabella - performed - Pumbaa vocals (1994 soundtrack) |
| Jason Weaver | Person | Jason Weaver - performed - young Simba vocals (1994 soundtrack) |
| Joseph Williams | Person | Joseph Williams - performed - adult Simba vocals (1994 soundtrack) |
| Jimmy Cliff | Person | Jimmy Cliff - recorded - the 1995 single version (feat. Lebo M) |
| Lebo M | Person | Lebo M - featured on - the 1995 single version |
| Walt Disney Records | Organization | Walt Disney Records - released - soundtrack editions and related singles |
| The Lion King (1994) | Work | The Lion King (1994) - presented - the narrative scene and song |
| Rhythm of the Pride Lands | Work | Rhythm of the Pride Lands - featured - the Jimmy Cliff and Lebo M version |
| The Lion King (stage musical) | Work | The Lion King (stage musical) - staged - the number for live performance |
| Timon & Pumbaa (TV series) | Work | Timon & Pumbaa (TV series) - used - the song as its open theme |
| The Lion King (2019) | Work | The Lion King (2019) - re-recorded - the sequence with a new cast |
Sources: Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Oscars.org), American Film Institute, SNEP year-end singles listing (1995 PDF), Discogs, IMDb soundtrack credits, Vanity Fair, Entertainment Weekly, Wikipedia, Apple Music