The film's theme song , "Colors of the Wind" was originally recorded by American singer and actress Judy Kuhn in her role as the singing voice of Pocahontas. A pop ballad , the song's lyrics are about animism and respecting nature, and have been compared to both transcendentalist literature and New Age spirituality. American actress and recording artist Vanessa Williams 's adult contemporary cover of the song was released as the lead single on May 23, by Walt Disney Records , from the film's soundtrack , and became a top ten hit on the Billboard Hot Following the death of Howard Ashman , the Walt Disney Company wanted to find another musician to collaborate with Alan Menken on his scores for animated films.

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It is dedicated to Enrico Caruso , an Italian tenor. Following Lucio Dalla's death, the song entered the Italian Singles Chart , peaking at number two for two consecutive weeks. The song simply tells about the pain and longings of a man who is about to die while he is looking into the eyes of a girl who was very dear to him. The lyrics contain various subtle references to people and places in Caruso's life. Lucio Dalla told the origin and the meaning of the song in an interview to one of the main Italian newspapers, the Corriere della Sera. He stopped by the coastal town of Sorrento and stayed in the Excelsior Vittoria Hotel, coincidentally in the very same room where many years earlier the tenor Enrico Caruso spent some time shortly before dying. Dalla was inspired to write the song after the owners told him about the last days of Caruso and in particular the latter's passion for one of his young female students. Caruso was an acclaimed Italian operatic singer who was one of the greatest and most sought-after singers during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Unfortunately he lived a very difficult and rather unhappy life, having had many challenges and problems with Italian opera houses, but gained more fame and success in the United States.
If Narcos were filmed in the style of a Bollywood movie or Mamma Mia , then the show's various drug lords would gather at the end of the season, exhaust all their pent-up tension, and have a dance party to the show's theme song, "Tuyo" by Rodrigo Amarante. Unfortunately, Narcos: Mexico offers no such relief from its unrelenting scenes of ruthless gun violence. At least "Tuyo," playing over each episode's opening credits, acts as a brief two-minute reprieve. And what a spectacular reprieve it is. Brazilian singer-songwriter Rodrigo Amarante wrote "Tuyo" keeping in mind Pablo Escobar, the notorious cocaine trafficker who was the focus of Narcos 's first two seasons.