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michael jackson Pregunta

help please? :3

what does "Ma Ma Se,Ma Ma Sa, Ma Ma Coo Sa" mean? i always wondered...

 chokladen94 posted hace más de un año
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michael jackson Respuestas

rakshasa said:
Just a little info...you can check into it más then:

The coda at the end of the song comes directly from Cameroonian saxophonist Manu Dibango's 1972 disco song "Soul Makossa". The coda is "Mama-sah mama-sah ma-ma-coo-sah". Makossa is a Cameroonian música genre and dance.

link

Hope it helps out ^_^
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posted hace más de un año 
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whaaaaaaaaaat i am sooo lost
tkdiamond posted hace más de un año
UmOkayThen said:
That's the sound of my underwear being thrown across the room.
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posted hace más de un año 
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and that makes sence?.... O_o
chokladen94 posted hace más de un año
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LoL!!! =D
Vespera posted hace más de un año
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looool
iluvfantasia posted hace más de un año
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ha ha ha........exactly what I dicho when I read that.
tkdiamond posted hace más de un año
Vespera said:
""Mama se mama sa ma ma coo sa" from "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'" doesn't actually mean anything (according to "Rolling Stone"). It's just a cool sound effect, like they use in the songs from Cameroon.


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 ""Mama se mama sa ma ma coo sa" from "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'" doesn't actually mean anything (according to "Rolling Stone"). It's just a cool sound effect, like they use in the songs from Cameroon.
posted hace más de un año 
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loooooooooooove the pic ................I hear dat when people do fake spells o voodo .....don't know if I spelled dat right .
tkdiamond posted hace más de un año
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Mhm... Michael was ca. 25 years , and cute as always, on that pic. It was the cover foto of "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'".)
Vespera posted hace más de un año
journeemj said:
Duala is spoken in Douala, Cameroon's largest city, which has long been a musical hotbed. Since the 1960s, Cameroonian pop música has been dominated por a rhythmic style of dance música from Douala known as makossa. The Duala word makossa is often glossed as "(I) dance" (as in this articulo por Cameroonian linguist George Echu). The entry for makossa in the oxford English Dictionary further explains that makossa is "derivative of kosa 'to peel o remove the skin of (a frutas o vegetable)'; the name refers to the twisting and shaking movements of the dancer."

i know it's a lot 2 read but i hoped it helped ;)
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posted hace más de un año 
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wow it makes so much sence! :) best answer
chokladen94 posted hace más de un año
someone_save_me said:
I dunno, I always thought it was just some of those misceláneo sounds. Like "nanana" o "lalala" o whatever.
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posted hace más de un año 
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me too
tkdiamond posted hace más de un año
peterdaddy said:
I thought I had heard it was some kind of African chant o song.
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posted hace más de un año 
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i have heard that too
chokladen94 posted hace más de un año
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I thought it was like egyptian o something.
tkdiamond posted hace más de un año
SUNFLOWER-MJJ said:
It is an african chant
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posted hace más de un año 
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but what does it mean?
chokladen94 posted hace más de un año
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i know right
tkdiamond posted hace más de un año
MJlover101 said:
I think it means something along the lines of "I dance". I've tried finding it out too and that's what I've got.
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posted hace más de un año 
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It was originally meant to be "I dance to the sound of Michael's song". Just thought I'd throw that in :-)
MJlover101 posted hace más de un año
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maybe its I dance to good música o I dance with happiness o soo on.....
tkdiamond posted hace más de un año
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