"Trust in Me (The Python's Song)" is a song in the popular Walt Disney film The Jungle Book, from 1967. The song was sung by Sterling Holloway playing the part of Kaa, the snake. The song was written by Disney staff songwriters Robert and Richard Sherman.[1] In the song, Kaa quickly hypnotizes Mowgli into a calm, soothing, relaxing trance, sending Mowgli sleepwalking along his body until he finally coils himself around Mowgli just like he did before. As the song concludes, Kaa readies himself to devour the boy, only to be stopped by Shere Khan the tiger in his search for Mowgli.[2]
"Trust in Me" | |
---|---|
Song by Sterling Holloway | |
from the album The Jungle Book | |
Released | 1967 |
Length | 1:30 |
Label | Disneyland |
Songwriter(s) | Richard and Robert Sherman |
Composition
editThe Shermans were brought onto the film by Walt Disney, who felt that the film in keeping with Rudyard Kipling's book was too dark for family viewing. In a deliberate effort to keep the score light, this song as well as the Sherman Brothers' other contributions to the score generally concern darker subject matter than the accompanying music would suggest.[3] "Trust in Me" originated from Disney's suggestion to add a song to Kaa's sequence, and was written by the Shermans based on "The Land of Sand", a song they had composed for 1964's Mary Poppins that ended up not being used.[4] Kaa speaks and sings with a subtle, lilting lisp, giving the song a humorous dimension that it would not otherwise have.[2]
Cover versions
edit- The 2016 live-action adaptation of The Jungle Book features a version in the end credits produced by Mark Ronson and sung by Scarlett Johansson who plays Kaa in the film.[5]
- In Once Upon a Studio, Kaa sings "Trust in Me" while hypnotizing Clarabelle Cow, with Mickey Mouse warning him to stop.
- Siouxsie and the Banshees performed the song on their 1987 cover album Through the Looking Glass. Sounds praised this non-traditional version as "quite astonishing. Whereas once it was about a python getting ready to crush a little boy to death, now it's a harp-laden lullaby of rampant, swirling eroticism".[6]
References
edit- ^ Hischak, Thomas S.; Robinson, Mark A. (2009). The Disney Song Encyclopedia. Scarecrow Press. p. 207. ISBN 9780810869387.
- ^ a b Sherman, Robert B., Walt's Time: from before to beyond, Camphor Tree Publishers, Santa Clarita, California, 1998, p 86., ISBN 0-9646059-3-7
- ^ Sherman, Robert B., Walt's Time: from before to beyond, Camphor Tree Publishers, Santa Clarita, California, 1998, p 84., ISBN 0-9646059-3-7
- ^ The Jungle Beat, The Jungle Book, Platinum Edition, Disc 2. 2007.
- ^ Rebecca Keegan (April 15, 2016). "'Jungle Book' director Jon Favreau keeps the 19th century Kipling tone but updates the classic for modern times". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
- ^ Mr Spencer - (28 February 1987), "Cover Up", Sounds