Awesome Music (animation)

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

"And your second wish?"

"I have just the thing! I wish I had my own theme music!"
—Peter Griffin of Family Guy, being very, very meta(l)
Why else do you think it was called Looney Tunes?

Examples of awesome music in Western Animation.

Cartoons are notorious for having catchy theme songs. But some 'toons take it a step further.


Dreamworks Animation

  • The Prince of Egypt
    • "When You Believe". Especially the multilanguage version, which features 27 versions of When You Believe from around the world. It really shows how music is the universal language.
    • "Deliver us! / Send a shepherd to shepherd us / and deliver us / to the Promised Land!" And the Call Back at the very, very end to Ofra Haza's One-Woman Wail of "Deliver us!".
    • All the songs. But Plagues is especially so. Yahweh is a scary, scary god. There's the part of that song with the Dark Reprise duet between Moses and Rameses. Definitely one of the all-time highlights of animated musicals. The fact that Ralph Fiennes actually sings Rameses' part is awesome! And the choir speaking for God. "I send the swarm / I send the horde / Thus saith the Lord!" The song is so good it actually makes you sympathize with the pharaoh. His brother has turned against him. Now an all-powerful deity rains fire down on his land. The pharaoh's response is to refuse surrender, no matter what the cost. Sure, it hurts everyone involved, but one cannot help but admit that Rameses has got style.
      • Say what you will of dubbed films, but "The Plagues" in Japanese is pretty awesome too. Especially Japanese!Rameses.
    • After the 'Through Heaven's Eyes' scene, when Moses walks out of his and Tzipporah's tent to go a-shepherding, the piece of music that accompanies "this is my home" in 'All I Ever Wanted' plays as he looks out at the landscape.
    • Instrumentally, Goodbye Brother is the most epic piece of music in ages from a movie. The ominous choir and orchestra combo at the beginning, the mournful cello solo, the single woman's voice—it has it all.
    • "The Mission", the score that plays right after the Burning Bush scene.
    • River Lullaby.
    • "Playing With the Big Boys Now" is a good song, sung by Steve Martin and Martin Short, who seem to have fun with it.
    • Another instrumental piece, the "Red Sea" is utterly beautiful...before becoming terrifying.
    • "Through Heaven's Eyes" is so often overlooked. It's encouraging and warm and beautiful, which is nice considering that after this particular song, the movie gets a bit darker...
  • Shrek 2
  • Kung Fu Panda.
    • "Oogway's Ascension"
    • Tai Lung's Theme, which appears at various points throughout "Tai Lung Escapes", "The Bridge", and "Shifu vs. Tai Lung." (And all the cool kung fu fighting music!)
    • "Panda Po", "Hero", and "Sacred Pool of Tears" are also legendarily legendary pieces.
    • "Kung Fu Fighting" during the credits.
  • Shrek is just brimming to the top with stuff like this. From Jennifer Saunders' heartfelt rendition of "Holding out for a Hero" set against the backdrop of an epic assault on a castle led by fairy-tale misfits, to Eddie Murphy and Antonio Banderas ' perfectly synchronized duet of "Livin' La Vida Loca", to even the heartwarming montages at the opening of each film.
  • How to Train Your Dragon has proven itself with an epic, epic score. Just for example, Test Drive and Astrid Goes Out For A Spin, also This is Berk, and Battling the Green Death. It all culminates in Coming Back Around, which is physically impossible to listen to without getting at least a tiny swelling in your chest at the sheer epic.
    • Forbidden Friendship is what happens when the concept of True Companions is turned into music.
    • Sticks and Stones, the song for the credits. Mmm, delicious Icelandic prog-rock performed by the lead of Sigur Ros.
    • Several tracks have multiple internal moments of awesome, Battling the Green Death has some: Stoick and Gobber initiating their Heroic Sacrifice, The Big Damn Heroes arrival of the Dragonriders of Berk, Stoick saving Hiccup and Toothless, and finally Hiccup and Toothless saving Astrid.
    • "New Tail" starts out quiet ...then turns into pure EPIC.
    • Romantic Flight The score is beautiful.
  • Chicken Run has a wonderful soundtrack. Particularly the Main Titles, Flip Flop and Fly, and every piece of music in the movie after and including Rocky, A Fake All Along. One would be surprised how awesome the soundtrack to a film about chickens can get.
  • Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron is almost a soundtrack of awesome.
  • Madagascar had Will.I.Am's version of "I Like To Move It"
  • The Road to El Dorado
  • Megamind Even when looking at the choice of regular music (all the way from AC/DC to Guns an' Roses) you can see they knew what they were doing. But the soundtrack itself is also made of awesomeness
    • Ollo 'Evil Lair' and 'Black Mamba.' And if Rejection In the Rain doesn't at least make you sad... Well, it's a good soundtrack. It was made by Hans Zimmer and Lorne Balfe, for gods sake!
    • 'Giant Blue Head' is pretty good.
    • Sadly, finding the actual soundtrack can be a bit of a hassle...
    • One word: "PRESENTATION!"


Don Bluth

  • Anastasia
    • "Once Upon a December" is particularly good, as is "In the Dark of the Night".
    • How can you forget "At the Beginning"?
  • The Pebble and the Penguin - the lyrics to the songs may be insipid, but the tunes themselves are cool. Sounds like everything else by Barry Manilow. Is this statement a Take That or a guilty Shout-Out? Though it's agreed on that the Villain Love Song ('Don't make me laugh') was the best part of the movie
  • An American Tail has several, though the best come from that or Fievel Goes West.
  • Most if not all of the music from Titan A.E.. Not just the songs in the movie (Over My Head, Cosmic Castaway, It's My Turn to Fly, all awesome); the score of the movie, composed by Graeme Revell. In particular, the music playing during the scenes near the death of Earth and the birth of Planet Bob, which underscore the scenes perfectly. Unfortunately, the soundtrack was never released.
    • For those who would like to purchase the score CD, here
      • And for those who want to hear the most awesome music ever, here (but beware the spoilers that piece of music will bring).
  • Over The Land Before Time's closing credits, this version of the music that has been playing at all the best moments plays.
    • Even more powerful is The male cover.
    • Say what you will about the sequels, but they certainly had their musical moments. The odd one or two of the musical numbers fall into this (Best examples being "When You're Big", "Very Important Creature" and the magnum opus of LBT songs, "Bestest Friends", sung to Littlefoot by his friends as he faces the choice of staying with his grandparents and friends, or leaving with his long-lost father. Even better, an orchestral reprise of the song plays later in the film during a very heartwarming ending.
    • "Things Change", as sung by Cera. Granted the lyrics aren't spectacular, but still, it's the only song that Cera gets to herself. And being arguably the best singer in the gang, what we got was a touching lament over how she wishes things could go back to how they used to be.
      • And to a lesser extent, "Flip Flap and Fly" simply because of the scale. It probably holds the record for most characters singing in one musical number. And that slick piano intro.
  • "Yer Beautiful, Baby" from Don Bluth's Thumbelina. Yeah, yeah, the movie's a shallow Disney rip-off and it reeks of sweetness, but godammit if that opening bass line isn't awesome. Then the vocals kick in...
  • Jerry Goldsmith's brilliant score to The Secret of NIMH, especially the cue that plays during the film's climax.


Warner Bros/Animation

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Nickelodeon


Cartoon Network Original



"Wherever she is, it must be in the land of epic!"