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Aladdin And The King Of Thieves Songs 'link' Official

The song is a percussive, stomping chant that sounds like a rowdy sea shanty crashed into a Morricone western. It’s pure masculine bravado. The chorus—“Welcome to the forty thieves / We take our gold in golden sheaves”—is dark, catchy, and theatrical. Sa’Luk, voiced by the gravelly Jerry Orbach (yes, Lumiere from Beauty and the Beast ), gets a villainous solo verse that drips with menace.

4 out of 5 golden hand artifacts.

Out of Thin Air is a quiet, acoustic-guitar-driven ballad where the couple admits their fears of marriage. Jasmine worries Aladdin will miss the adventure of being a “street rat,” while Aladdin confesses he’s afraid he can’t provide a future as solid as a prince’s palace. aladdin and the king of thieves songs

Musically, it’s a percussive, Middle Eastern-infused banger. Lyrically, it’s functional (“The carpets are rolled out / The camels are stabled”). But what makes it work is the frantic energy of the Genie (now voiced by the impeccable Dan Castellaneta, stepping into impossible shoes). Castellaneta doesn’t try to be Robin Williams; instead, he unleashes a torrent of Las Vegas-style showmanship. The song is less a masterpiece and more a declaration: This finale is going to be fun. This is the song that had to do the heavy lifting. In the original film, “A Whole New World” was about discovery. In King of Thieves , Aladdin and Jasmine are anxious about commitment. The song is a percussive, stomping chant that