Mine, Mine, Mine (Pocahontas) Lyrics
Mine, Mine, Mine (Pocahontas)
[Ratcliffe]The gold of Cortes
The jewels of Pizarro
Will seem like mere trinkets
By this time tomorrow
The gold we find here
Will dwarf them by far
Oh, with all ya got in ya, boys
Dig up Virginia, boys
Mine, boys, mine ev'ry mountain
And dig, boys, dig 'til ya drop
Grab a pick, boys
Quick, boys
Shove in a shovel
Uncover those lovely
Pebbles that sparkle and shine
It's gold and it's mine, mine, mine
[English Settlers]:
Dig and dig and dig and diggety ...
Dig and dig and dig and diggety ...
[Wiggins]
Hey nonny nonny
Ho nonny nonny
[Ratcliffe]
Oh, how I love it!
Riches for Cheap!
[Wiggins]
There'll be heaps of it ...
[Ratcliffe]
And I'll be on top of the heap!
My rivals back home
It's not that I'm bitter
But think how they'll squirm
When they see how I glitter!
The ladies at court
Will be all a-twitter
The king will reward me
He'll knight me ... no, lord me!
It's mine, mine, mine
For the taking
It's mine, boys
Mine me that gold!
With those nuggets duggets ...
It's glory they'll gimme
My dear friend, King Jimmy
Will probably build me a shrine
When all of the gold is mine
[English Settlers]
Dig and dig and dig and diggety
Dig and dig and dig and diggety-dig!
[Smith]
All of my life, I have searched for a land
Like this one
A wilder, more challenging country
I couldn't design
Hundreds of dangers await
And I don't plan to miss one
In a land I can claim
A land I can tame
The greatest adventure is mine!
[Ratcliffe and English Settlers together]
[Ratcliffe]
Keep on working, lands
Don't be shirking, lands
Mine, boys, mind
Mine me that gold
Beautiful gold
[English Settlers]
Mine
Find a mother lode
Then find another load!
Dig! Dig! and diggety
Dig! Dig! for that gold
All
Make this island
My land!
[Ratcliffe]
Make the mounds big, boys
I'd help you to dig, boys
But I've got this crick in me spine
[Smith]
This land we behold ...
[Ratcliffe]
This beauty untold ...
[Smith]
A man can be bold!
[Ratcliffe]
It all can be sold!
[Ratcliffe and English Settlers together]
[Ratcliffe]
And the gold
Is ...
Mine!
Mine!
Mine!
Mine!
[English Settlers]
So go for the gold
We know which is here
All the riches here
From this minute
This land and what's in it is
Mine!
[Ratcliffe]
Dig and dig and diggety-dig!
Hey nonny nonny nonny it's mine!
Song Overview
TL;DR: A swaggering villain showpiece from Pocahontas that sells greed as destiny, then undercuts it with a whiff of satire. Performed by David Ogden Stiers (Governor Ratcliffe), Mel Gibson (John Smith) and chorus, with music by Alan Menken and lyrics by Stephen Schwartz. Released on the film soundtrack on May 30, 1995.
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- Type: Ensemble villain song with a contrasting adventure aside.
- Story role: Announces the settlers’ mindset: the land is a vault, and Ratcliffe is sure he has the key.
- Performance split: Ratcliffe drives the pitch and posture; Smith briefly reframes the New World as thrill and legend.
- Sound: March-like pulse, clipped patter, and choral shouts that feel built for synchronized shovels.
- Afterlife: Still a favorite for rock and novelty covers because the hook is easy to weaponize.
Pocahontas (1995) - film song - not. Early in the Virginia camp sequence, Ratcliffe whips the crew into a digging frenzy while Smith slips in a verse about exploration and swagger, as Pocahontas watches from a distance (approx early first half). Why it matters: it flips the story’s moral weather: the soundtrack stops admiring the horizon and starts measuring it.
What I admire, even after decades of hearing Disney antagonists boast, is how this number makes greed sound like a civic program. The rhythm is a boot heel: steady, communal, and a little too proud of itself. Menken writes it with theatrical bite, and Schwartz sharpens the edges with name-drops and tallying language, the kind that turns people into tools. If you have ever watched a room get talked into a bad idea because it was packaged as certainty, you know this scene.
The chorus is the real trick. Ratcliffe does not just sing at the men, he sings through them. Each repeated word becomes a handshake, then a chant, then a permission slip. That is why the brief Smith detour lands: it is a different appetite. He is not counting coins, he is counting legends. Same hunger, cleaner suit.
Creation History
As part of Pocahontas, the song sits inside Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz’s collaboration for Disney in the mid-1990s, a period when studio animation leaned hard on Broadway craft and clean narrative function. The track was produced for the soundtrack release on May 30, 1995, credited to Menken and Schwartz as producers, with additional music-team roles (conductor and orchestrator among them) documented in modern digital credits. The Disney pipeline of that era treated each song like a mini-scene: built to explain motive fast, then leave room for plot to move.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
Ratcliffe promises riches in the new land and turns the settlement into a single-purpose machine: dig, seize, repeat. The chorus echoes his certainty, while Smith’s brief interlude reframes the place as adventure rather than profit. The sequence ends with the camp committed to extraction, and the film’s central conflict tightening into place.
Song Meaning
The meaning is not subtle, but the craft is. The number is a sales pitch that treats conquest as entitlement. The repeated hook is the point: ownership is asserted before it is earned, and desire is mistaken for law. The mood is bright on the surface, but the scene reads like a warning label: when a leader can make a crowd sing in unison, the next step is often action in unison.
Annotations
- Greed as choreography: the chorus is staged like a workforce pep rally, turning private lust into public duty.
- Historical bragging as persuasion: the lyric’s conquistador references are not history lessons, they are proof texts: “others took, so we can take.”
- Two appetites, one empire: Smith’s verse is framed as wonder, yet it still treats the land as a stage for the self.
- Hook mechanics: the repeated single-syllable word is designed for mass participation, the musical equivalent of a stamped document.
“gold of Cortes”
Schwartz uses the name like a trophy tag: the lyric is less about Spain than about permission. If someone else got away with it, why not us?
“jewels of Pizarro”
Same move, different label. The song stacks references to make greed feel like tradition, not choice.
“mine for the taking”
That phrase is the engine. It removes negotiation, morality, and consequence in one breath.
Style and rhythm
The song’s style is stage-savvy: patter-like lines, punchy choral replies, and a steady pulse that keeps the lyric intelligible at speed. You can hear the theater logic: Ratcliffe’s phrases land like cues, the chorus answers like a rehearsed crowd, and the arrangement keeps resetting the groove so the hook can hit again with fresh force.
Emotional arc without the soft edges
This is not a confession, it is a recruitment. It begins as Ratcliffe’s private fantasy and quickly becomes a shared script. By the end, the camp feels committed not because they found anything, but because they sang about it together.
Symbols and subtext
The song treats “mine” as both noun and verdict. That double-use is the joke and the menace. It sounds playful until you realize how many real-world land grabs begin with a sentence that simple.
For a useful bit of context, according to Billboard, the Pocahontas soundtrack was one of the rare animated-film albums to dominate the mainstream charts in the mid-1990s, which helps explain why even the deeper cuts like this stayed in circulation for years.
Technical Information
- Artist: David Ogden Stiers, Mel Gibson, Chorus
- Featured: Ensemble chorus
- Composer: Alan Menken
- Lyricist: Stephen Schwartz
- Producer: Alan Menken, Stephen Schwartz
- Release Date: May 30, 1995
- Genre: Soundtrack, musical theater
- Instruments: Orchestra, percussion, choir
- Label: Walt Disney Records
- Mood: Boastful, satirical, marching energy
- Length: 3:05 (some releases list a few seconds longer)
- Track #: 9 (original soundtrack sequencing)
- Language: English
- Album: Pocahontas: An Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack
- Music style: Broadway-influenced ensemble villain number
- Poetic meter: Mixed, speech-driven patter with repeated hook
Questions and Answers
- Who is doing the main vocal lifting?
- David Ogden Stiers leads the villain side as Ratcliffe, with Mel Gibson stepping in for Smith and a chorus backing the settlers. The contrast is part of the point: command voice versus frontier swagger.
- Why does the hook feel so sticky?
- It is built from one syllable and a crowd response. That kind of chant is made for group timing, which is why the scene looks like work turning into ritual.
- Is the song meant to be funny?
- Yes, but with teeth. The bragging is theatrical, almost operetta-like in attitude, yet the visuals make the consequences plain: the land gets treated like a pit to be emptied.
- What do the conquistador references do in the lyric?
- They frame conquest as precedent. Instead of arguing morality, the song argues momentum: history happened, therefore it should happen again.
- Why give John Smith a verse in a villain number?
- It shows a second flavor of entitlement. Smith is not chasing gold in that moment, but he still treats the world as a backdrop for his legend. Two roads, same empire.
- What is the central dramatic function in the film?
- It clarifies motive and raises stakes quickly. After this, the conflict is not just cultural misunderstanding, it is organized extraction with a leader who enjoys the sound of agreement.
- Why do modern covers lean rock or metal?
- The chant and the march pulse translate easily to heavier styles. Add distortion and it becomes a rally song, which is both ironic and fitting.
- Is there a widely cited vocal range for singers practicing it?
- One commonly cited range for the track is C3 to A4, which keeps it approachable for baritone or high baritone voices, with ensemble support taking pressure off sustained solo high notes.
- Does the song exist outside the original 1995 album?
- Yes. It appears on later expanded soundtrack editions and continues to circulate via official digital platforms, plus fan and cover ecosystems.
Awards and Chart Positions
The song itself was not positioned as a pop single, but it rides on an unusually successful album. According to the Recording Academy, major soundtracks can dominate year-end listening in ways ordinary studio albums rarely do, and Disney releases have repeatedly been exceptions to the rule.
| Category | Credit | Result | Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Album peak | Pocahontas: An Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack | Billboard 200 peak: 1 | Week of July 22, 1995 |
| Album certification | Pocahontas soundtrack (US) | Triple-platinum (RIAA) | 1995 (widely reported) |
| Academy Awards | Film music | Best Original Score won; Best Original Song won for "Colors of the Wind" | 1996 ceremony year |
How to Sing Mine, Mine, Mine
Public practice databases commonly list the track around 73 BPM in C major, with a reported vocal span of roughly C3 to A4. Treat those as practical guides, not holy writ: releases and edits can vary by a few seconds and small pitch shifts.
- Tempo first: Set a metronome near 73 BPM. Practice the chorus rhythm on a single vowel so your mouth does not outrun your timing.
- Diction: Keep consonants crisp, especially repeated M and N sounds. The hook dies if it turns to mush.
- Breath planning: Mark quick resets before long patter strings. Think “short sip” breaths, not big dramatic gulps.
- Flow and rhythm: Aim for speech-like delivery on the verse lines, then lock into a steadier tone on the hook for contrast.
- Accents: Lean into downbeats like you are stomping a boot. This song likes authority more than prettiness.
- Ensemble strategy: If you are singing multiple roles, assign vocal colors: brighter for the chorus, darker and more clipped for Ratcliffe’s lines.
- Mic technique: Back off slightly on the loudest hook repetitions to avoid harsh peaks, then come closer for the patter to keep words readable.
- Pitfalls: Rushing the patter, swallowing consonants, and over-belting the hook until it loses bite. The power comes from precision.
Additional Info
Later releases kept the track in circulation. The expanded Legacy Collection edition (a Disney archival series entry) places it within a more chronological presentation of score and songs, and the set is often discussed by collectors because it frames the story beats with tighter musical continuity. If you want to hear how durable the writing is, jump to cover culture: the hook survives stylistic overhauls remarkably well.
Two notable examples from the modern internet era:
- A rock-leaning, cover-album adaptation by Jonathan Young that turns the chant into a rally.
- A popular fan cover performance circulated widely on video platforms, showing how the song’s character work can be recast through a different voice and persona.
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Relationship statement (S-V-O) |
|---|---|---|
| Alan Menken | Person | Alan Menken composed the music for the song. |
| Stephen Schwartz | Person | Stephen Schwartz wrote the lyrics for the song. |
| David Ogden Stiers | Person | David Ogden Stiers performed the lead villain vocals as Ratcliffe. |
| Mel Gibson | Person | Mel Gibson performed John Smith’s vocal lines. |
| Chorus | Organization | The chorus performed the settlers’ ensemble responses. |
| Walt Disney Records | Organization | Walt Disney Records released the soundtrack containing the song. |
| Pocahontas | Work | The film includes the song during the Virginia camp sequence. |
| Pocahontas: An Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack | Work | The album lists the track as part of its main program. |
Sources: Apple Music album listing, Billboard, Recording Academy, IMDb soundtrack credits, Discogs release credits, Shazam credits, Disney Music Emporium product listing, VGMdb album entry