Wiggly_Safari

<i>Wiggly Safari</i>

Wiggly Safari

2002 studio album/video by The Wiggles


Wiggly Safari is the 14th album by Australian band the Wiggles. It was released in 2002 by ABC Music distributed by Roadshow Entertainment. It was nominated for the 2002 ARIA Music Award for Best Children's Album but lost to Hi-5's Boom Boom Beat.[1]

Quick Facts Wiggly Safari, Studio album by the Wiggles ...

Track list

More information No., Title ...

All tracks are written by Murray Cook, Jeff Fatt, Anthony Field, Greg Page, except listed below

Charts

More information Chart (2002), Peak position ...

Certifications

More information Region, Certification ...

Video

Quick Facts Wiggly Safari, Directed by ...

"Wiggly Safari" was also released in 2002 with special guests Steve Irwin, Terri Irwin, and Bindi Irwin of The Crocodile Hunter.

Song List

  1. "The Crocodile Hunter"
  2. "Australia Zoo"
  3. "Wobbly Camel"
  4. "Cocky Want a Cracker"
  5. "Butterflies Flit"
  6. "Dorothy Queen of the Roses"
  7. "Swim With Me"
  8. "Koala La La"
  9. "Dingo Tango"
  10. "You Might Like a Pet"
  11. "Old Man Emu"
  12. "Feeding Time"
  13. "Do the Owl"
  14. "Kookaburra Choir"
  15. "Snakes (You Can Look But You Better Not Touch)"
  16. "We're the Crocodile Band"

Cast

As listed in the closing credits.

The Wiggles are
With special guests
Also Featuring
  • Captain Feathersword: Paul Paddick
  • Dorothy the Dinosaur: Corrine O'Rafferty
  • Wags the Dog: Andrew McCourt
  • Henry the Octopus: Reem Hanwell
The Wiggly Dancers
  • Chris Luder
  • Larissa Wright
  • Ben Murray
  • Naomi Wallace

Release

The Wiggles Wiggly Safari was released on 8 July 2002 in Australia.

The video was dedicated to the memory of Brian Cannizzaro, a New York City firefighter who was killed in the September 11, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center.

Notes

  1. Matheson also directed and produced an Australian television special: The Wiggles in Disneyland, which aired on the Disney Channel Australia in 1998, 4 years earlier.

References

  1. "Aria Awards History Winners by year 2002". ariaawards.com.au. Retrieved 25 January 2020.
  2. Ryan, Gavin (2011). Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010 (PDF ed.). Mt Martha, Victoria, Australia: Moonlight Publishing. p. 301.

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