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"Pink Elephants on Parade" is a song and scene from the 1941 Disney animated feature film Dumbo in which Dumbo and Timothy Q. Mouse, having accidentally become intoxicated (through drinking water spiked with champagne), see pink elephants sing, dance, and play musical instruments during a hallucination sequence.
Elephant Parade (registered as Elephant Parade BV) is an open-air exhibition dedicated to saving the Asian elephant from extinction. For one or more months, hundreds of painted elephant sculptures specially created by artists are placed in the streets of one or more host cities to increase public awareness of the plight of the elephant and gain ...
"Baby Elephant Walk" is a song composed in 1961 by Henry Mancini for the 1962 film Hatari! [1] Lyrics by Hal David were not used in the film version. The instrumental earned Mancini a Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement in 1963 .
Eleanor Bartsch was performing with the Wisconsin Chamber Orchestra, during which she played Bach's Concerto in D Minor. During the performance, she noticed two elephants outside a tent at the ...
The band combined Indian classical music and instrumentation with 1960s pop and rock. [2] [1] [3] The band's debut album, The Seven Seas, was released June 2, 2009 on Dhir's own Elephants on Parade label, with distribution by Fontana North. The album was a longlisted nominee for the 2009 Polaris Music Prize on June 15, 2009. [4]
"Colonel Hathi's March (The Elephant Song)" is a song in the 1967 Walt Disney film, The Jungle Book. The song was sung by J. Pat O'Malley , playing the part of " Colonel Hathi ". The song was also sung by Thurl Ravenscroft and The Mellomen , originally Terry-Thomas and Disney Chorus.
Elephant Parade 1987–2023 Zamperla N/A A ride reminiscent of Disney's Dumbo the Flying Elephant, which allowed children to fly an elephant using a lever to control the height. Flying Carpet 1988–2006 Zierer: Flying Carpet Formerly located where Cosmic Chaos is now, this was a high-speed ride that rocked back and forth.
Anton Smit of Soundtrack World described the music as "a true gem". [13] Zanobard Reviews assigned 8/10 to the album, summarising "Dumbo is a welcome return to classic Burton-esque Danny Elfman, complete with a memorable main theme, some truly incredible individual compositions and spectacular orchestration all-round."