"Zubada" is a song from the "Tri-Stone Area". It is a prehistoric version of "Gitchee Gitchee Goo" with some of the dance moves being the same or very similar to its modern day counterpart.
Lyrics[]
All: Zupa, daya!
Zubadaya!
Zubadaya!
Zubadaya!
Zubadaya! (Ooooh~)
Zubadaya!
Zupbadaya!
Zubadaya!
Zubadaya! (Baljug: Yaiiii, yai yai yai yai yai yai yai yai yaaiioh!)
Zubadaya!
Zubadaya!
Gerb: Ooga ooga ooga ooga.
Phinabunk: Ooh chaka ooh chaka,
Prehistoric Fireside Girls: Kay garna mana hoo! (Hey!)
Da and Jerabung: Ya ya ya,
Gunga larga mungo.
Baljung and Boofgard: Zooga ooga chunga,
Bee-boppa zapadu.
All: Chaka lakka moo eetchie she-ma goo!
Chaka lakka moo eetchie she-ma goo,
Chaka lakka moo eetchie,
Eetchie she-ma ooga!
Ooga!
Ooga!
(Gerb: Ooga ooga ooga ooga.)
All: Chaka lakka moo eetchie she-ma goo!
Gallery[]
View the image gallery for "Zubada". |
Background information[]
- From the position in the song, the title in modern speech would not be "Gitchee Gitchee Goo".
- This song uses the tune of "Gitchee Gitchee Goo", except for the first and second lines.
- As explained by Martin Olson: "...all the characters are cavemen and cavewomen. Because there's no dialogue, we ended the episode with a song around the fire that breaks into a parody of the first Phineas and Ferb song, Gitchee Gitchee Goo." The song's existence was made public in a YouTube video posted by Dan Povenmire on September 7, 2010, of himself and Martin Olson recording a demo of the song.
- A few scenes of the video show the creators dancing to the song in stop motion.
- While "Gitchee Gitchee Goo" was sung in the key of C, this parody transposes it to the key of A.
- Phinabunk can be seen playing a guitar made of bones, while Gerb is playing a traditional drum. Gerb also plays a xylophone made of woods, and the sticks (which are used to play the xylophone) are made up of bones. Baljug also plays drums.
- This song has background vocals by LC Powell.[1]
Songwriters[]
BMI Work #13653200
Allusions[]
- "The Lion Sleeps Tonight (a/k/a Wimoweh)" and "Shout" - In Aliki Theofilopoulos Graff's Tumblr note from October 16, 2013, the two songs mentioned were inspiration for the episode's ending music.[2]
References[]
See also[]
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