Bing bing pchm dohm dom bam bedam bem bam baddam bom bom baba bam bam bom
[Wha wha-wha-wha-what's going on-on?]
Ding ding
This is the crazy frog!
Ding ding
Bem bem
Ring ding dig dig ding ding
Ring ding dig dig bem bem bem
Ring ding dig dig ding ding
Ring ding dig dig boah boah
Ring ding dig dig ding ding
Ring ding dig dig bem bem bem
Ring ding dig dig ding dring
This is the crazy frog!
[Break down]
Ding ding
[Brea-brea-break it-it Break break it]
Dam dam dada dam dam dam
Dam dam dam dam dam
Dam dam dada dam dam dam dam
Bem bem
Dam dam dada dam dam dam
Dam dam dam dam dam
Dam dam dada dam dam dam
This is the crazy frog!
Ram bam bem ba brea babelbelbla brim bram brraaam brrlam baam baaam baaah baaaaaaaaah
Boaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhh
Ding ding
This is the crazy frog!
Ding ding
Bloam bloam
Ring ding dig dig ding ding
Ring ding dig dig bem bem bem
Ring ding dig dig ding ding
Ring ding dig dig boah boah
Ring ding dig dig ding ding
Ring ding dig dig bem bem bem
Ring ding dig dig ding dring
This is the crazy frog!
Ding ding
[Brea-brea-break it-it Break break it]
Dam dam dada dam dam dam
Dam dam dam dam dam
Dam dam dada dam dam dam dam
Bem bem
Dam dam dada dam dam dam
Dam dam dam dam dam
Dam dam dada dam dam dam
This is the crazy frog!
Bem bem
About This Song
"Axel F" by Crazy Frog is a bizarre electronic novelty hit that transforms Harold Faltermeyer's iconic 1984 synth melody from Beverly Hills Cop into a chaotic celebration of pure absurdity. The "lyrics" consist entirely of nonsensical sounds like "ring ding ding" and "baa bom baa barooumba," creating a deliberately childish and anarchic atmosphere that rejects traditional musical meaning in favor of playful gibberish. Musically, it layers the recognizable synth riff with aggressive electronic beats and the titular frog character's manic vocalizations, creating a hyperactive dance track that borders on audio assault. The song became a cultural phenomenon precisely because of its shameless embrace of the ridiculous, representing the early 2000s internet culture's love of viral absurdity and marking a moment when a completely meaningless ringtone character could dominate European charts through sheer memetic force.
Comments (0)