Popular Disney songs for kids | Fun Disney songs
Disney that kids love!
When it comes to Disney, not only are the films amazing, but the songs that perfectly match their worlds are wonderful too—there are so many classics that kids just can’t help singing along to.
Focusing on those songs, this article introduces Disney tunes that are popular with children.
From universally known classics to lesser-known hidden gems and even the latest tracks, just hearing the music will make you want to watch the films again!
There are also perfect dance songs for children’s playtime events and recitals.
Parents, please join in and immerse yourselves in the charm of Disney songs together!
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Disney Songs Popular with Children | Fun Disney Songs (91–100)
Let It GoIdina Menzel

This is the theme song from the 2013 Disney film, known for its powerful vocals and dramatic musical development.
Centered on the themes of self-liberation and embracing one’s true self, it perfectly fuses a heartfelt melody with a grand arrangement.
Idina Menzel’s commanding vocals elevate the story’s emotion to its fullest, earning the song the 2014 Academy Award for Best Original Song.
Composers Kristen Anderson-Lopez and Robert Lopez drew inspiration from many pop stars in creating the piece.
It’s a song I’d wholeheartedly dedicate to anyone about to take a new step in life or searching for a way to live authentically.
Paired with the film’s climactic scene of release, its courageous, hope-filled voice resonates deeply.
In This Place ~ The Bond Between Two People

Released in 2018, Disney’s “Ralph Breaks the Internet” is the sequel to the hugely popular film “Wreck-It Ralph.” The song “In This Place ~Two of Us, One Heart~,” sung by Thelma Aoyama, serves as the ending theme for the Japanese version.
Since the song plays during a particularly memorable scene in theaters, many children likely still remember it.
Stay by my side.

The song used in the ballroom scene of the film Enchanted.
Although not widely known, it was nominated for an Academy Award along with the other songs.
It’s a piece that seems to convey the bittersweet feelings when the heroine from a fairy-tale world and Robert from the real world dance to it.
Colors of the Wind

A song featured within the story of Pocahontas, daughter of the Powhatan tribe.
Pocahontas was actually based on a real Native American woman named Pocahontas.
It was Disney’s first film based on a real person, and unusually, it does not end in a happy ending.
The song and story convey that the plants and animals in the world you don’t know—or don’t try to know—also have life, each with its own colors.
It’s a quintessentially Disney piece and narrative that values the natural world.
Ignite your fighting spirit

A song in which the story unfolds one scene after another and the heroine undergoes rapid growth.
Training in martial arts among unimpressive men, Mulan worries that her identity as a woman will be discovered, yet she becomes even stronger than the men.
This is an important song that helps us read Mulan’s feelings for her ailing father at the beginning of the film.



