"Whoomp! (There It Is)" is the debut single by American
hip-hop/
pop-rap duo
Tag Team, released in May 1993 by label
Life as the first single from their
debut album by same name (1993). The song is written by members Cecil "DC the Brain Supreme" Glenn and Steve "Rolln" Gibson,[citation needed] and reached No. 1 on the US
Billboard Hot R&B chart, as well as No. 2 on both the BillboardHot 100[1][2][3] and the
Cash Box Top 100. "Whoomp!" reached
multi-platinum status and broke records for the number of consecutive weeks in the Billboard top 10.[4] Tag Team is considered a
one-hit wonder, as their subsequent singles did not find the same success. "Whoomp!" has remained a pop culture staple with multiple placements in film, television, and advertisements. The song has also endured as a mainstay at sporting and arena events.[citation needed]
Background
Tag Team recorded "Whoomp! (There It Is)" in October 1992. At that time, Glenn was working as the main DJ at
Magic City, an Atlanta
gentlemen's club that would later become recognized as a hub of
Atlanta hip-hop and rap music.[5][6] The song sampled a synthesizer line from the 1980
Italo disco hit "I'm Ready" by
Kano. Glenn played the track in the club on the same day it was mixed and received a positive reaction from the audience. In the following months, people requested the song so often that it became clear to Glenn that he had a potential hit.
Tag Team shopped the single to multiple labels hoping to get a record deal but were constantly rejected because many executives were unfamiliar with
southern bass and considered it too provocative for the single to have any chance at mainstream success. In a last-ditch effort, Glenn borrowed $2,500 from his parents to press eight hundred records. The singles quickly sold out in Atlanta on word of mouth alone.[5]
A representative from
Mercury Records suggested that Tag Team should pitch their song to former
Stax Records mogul
Al Bell, the founder of struggling independent label
Bellmark Records. Glenn reached out to Bell, who agreed to sign Tag Team without even hearing the song. Bell reportedly told Glenn, "I don’t need to hear the record. I hear it in your spirit."[7]
Reception
The song was praised by critics for its positive and uplifting tone.[8] Within months of its release, "Whoomp!" reached the top position on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop chart.[2] The record held the #2 spot on the Hot 100[3] for seven consecutive weeks and reached
platinum status. In February 1994, it received its fourth platinum certification.[9]
"Whoomp! (There It Is)" received an award in the category for "Best Rap 12-inch" at the 1994
WMC International Dance Music Awards in the US.[10] It was rated #97 in
VH1's 100 Greatest
One-Hit Wonders. The song is listed at #58 on "Billboard's Greatest Songs of all time".[11] "Whoomp" has been called "da bomb party song" of the 1990s by
Atlanta magazine and "among the country's most commercially successful singles of all time."[6][12][13]
Chart performance
The hit song spent one week at #1 on the US Billboard R&B chart in 1993. On the
Billboard Hot 100 dated July 10, "Whoomp! (There It Is)" reached a new peak at number two, sandwiched between
Janet Jackson's "
That's the Way Love Goes" above and
UB40's "
Can't Help Falling in Love" beneath - all three songs ended up next to each other at the Year-End edition of the chart, occupying exactly the same positions, albeit in slightly different orders. It eventually spent seven weeks at #2 in September through October 1993[14] on the
Billboard Hot 100, but was kept out of the top slot by "Can't Help Falling in Love" and
Mariah Carey's "
Dreamlover". The single is certified
4× Platinum in the US for shipments of over 4,000,000 copies and, despite never reaching number one on the pop chart, the song spent 24 non-consecutive weeks in the top ten becoming the longest running top ten song of all time until
Toni Braxton’s “
Un-Break My Heart” spent a week longer in 1997. It was ranked the second biggest song of 1993, behind
Whitney Houston's "
I Will Always Love You". It has sold over 3.5 million copies in the United States.[4]
Controversy
A similar song, "
Whoot, There It Is", was released by the Miami-based group
95 South a month prior to Tag Team's "Whoomp!"[15] Both groups' record companies maintained that the similarities were a coincidence, as the phrase, "Whoomp (or whoot), there it is", was a common expression used by dancers in Atlanta and Miami nightclubs that members from both groups frequented.[15]Arsenio Hall hosted both groups on
his television show to perform their versions of the songs and let viewers vote on their favorite by calling a 900 number to donate money to the relief effort for the
1993 Midwest floods.[16] The phrase "Whoomp! There it is!" has come to mean something similar to "Look at that!". It is intended to encourage "positive partying".[17][15][6] Tag Team has explained that the phrase refers to "anything that one agrees with on a positive level."[15]
Decades later, 95 South has maintained that the similarity of songs was not a coincidence, and that "Whoot, There It Is" was stolen by Tag Team.[18]
Music video
The accompanying music video for the song features a large outdoor party. It was filmed at an
Atlanta fairground and shows the duo riding a
carousel. Extras were recruited by word-of-mouth and also by an announcement on a local radio station. More than a thousand extras showed up for the shoot.[19]
Within a year of the release of "Whoomp! (There It Is)", Tag Team remixed the backing music with a version of
the theme song from the original Addams Family television series to create the song "Addams Family (Whoomp!)" for the film Addams Family Values. Actors
Christina Ricci and
Jimmy Workman reprised their film roles as
Wednesday Addams and
Pugsley Addams (respectively) for the song's music video. This version appears as the closing track on
the soundtrack album. "Addams Family (Whoomp!)" won the 1994
Razzie Award (Worst Original Song) for its writers (
Ralph Sall, Stephen Gibson and Cecil Glenn).[46]
More recently, a variant of the lyric was created by
Vancouver Canucks fans to laud the popularity of the (at the time) recently-hired coach
Bruce Boudreau, with a "Bruce, there it is!" chant during hockey games, beginning in December 2021.[53]
The
Chicago Cubs play the song whenever they hit a home run.
In June 1995, British pop/dance act
Clock released a
Eurodancecover of the song titled "Whoomph! (There It Is)". It was their fifth single from the debut album, It's Time... (1995), and peaked at No. 5 in Ireland, No. 4 in the United Kingdom, No. 14 in Finland, No. 36 in Sweden, and No. 96 in Australia.
Track listing
CD single, UK (1995)
"Whoomph! (There It Is)" (Short Stab) – 3:33
"Whoomph! (There It Is)" (Clock GMT mix) – 5:02
"Whoomph! (There It Is)" (Time Gents Please) – 5:03
"Whoomph! (There It Is)" (Clock 10 to 2 mix) – 5:09
"Whoomph! (There It Is)" (GMT dub) – 5:01
"Whoomph! (There It Is)" (The Visa Treatment) – 5:01
In 2001,
UK garage producer
BM Dubs (Andrew Kirby) released a version credited as BM Dubs presents Mr. Rumble featuring Brasstooth and Kee. It is based on Mr. Rumble's "Whoops.... We'll Be in Trouble!" from 2000, in which this version directly samples the vocals from Tag Team's "Whoomp! (There It Is)", whereas BM Dubs' 2001 version is a
cover with vocals by Kee. It samples the
Timo Maas remix of "
Dooms Night" by
Azzido Da Bass and reached No. 32 on the
UK Singles Chart[63] and No. 4 on the
UK Dance Singles Chart[64] in March 2001.
GEICO spot
In December 2020, the
GEICO insurance company used a parody of "Whoomp! (There It Is)" and the members of Tag Team as the punchline to a joke in a commercial. It featured Glenn and Gibson replacing the lyrics of the song with lyrics about ice cream, turning the lyric to "Scoop! (There It Is)". While the song had been used in advertisements previously, this was the first time the members appeared in a
spot.[65][66]
"(Pussy Pussy Pussy) Whose Kitty Cat Are You?" – Music and Lyrics by Marvin Montgomery (1996)
The entire song score from The Postman – Music and Lyrics by Jeffrey Barr, Glenn Burke, John Coinman, Joe Flood, Blair Forward, Maria Machado, and Jono Manson (1997)