"Cotton Eye Joe" is a song by Swedish
Eurodance group
Rednex, released in August 1994 by
Jive and
Zomba as the first single from their debut studio album, Sex & Violins (1995). Based on the traditional American
folk song "
Cotton-Eyed Joe", it combines the group's style with traditional American instruments such as
banjos[5] and
fiddles. The song was written by Janne Ericsson, Örjan Öban Öberg and Pat Reiniz, and produced by Reiniz. The vocal verses are performed by
Annika Ljungberg, while the "Cotton Eye Joe" chorus is sung by Göran Danielsson, who never appears in the music video for the song, directed by Stefan Berg. It was a number one hit in at least eleven countries, and reached numbers 25 and 23 on the US
Billboard Hot 100 and
Cash Box Top 100. In 2002, "Cotton Eye Joe" was remixed in a new dance version, and was released on Rednex's first greatest hits album, The Best of the West (2002).
Composition
"Cotton Eye Joe" is based on the old traditional country folk song "
Cotton Eyed Joe" and opens with the chorus sung by the male singer. Almost a minute into the song, the female singer performs the first of two vocal verses. It has a tempo of 132 BPM and runs 3 minutes and 14 seconds long with an A key and a minor mode, and a
time signature of 4 beats per bar.[6] In the 2002 book, Move Your Body (2 The 90s): Unlimited Eurodance, writer Juha Soininen states that the song "broke the euro mould by letting a man sing the refrain while a woman sang the middle part."[7]
Chart performance
The Rednex version of the song (using "Eye" instead of "Eyed"), along with a dance-mix version, was very successful in Europe, where it remained at number one in
Norway for 15 weeks,
Switzerland for 13 weeks,
Germany for 10 weeks,
Sweden for 8 weeks,
Austria for 7 weeks, and for 3 weeks on the
UK Singles Chart. In the latter, the single reached the top spot in its fifth week on the chart, on 8 January 1995.[8] Additionally, it also peaked at number one in Belgium, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands and Scotland, as well as on the
Eurochart Hot 100. In
Ireland, it peaked at number two in January 1995. In Oceania, it topped the
New Zealand Singles Chart for 6 consecutive weeks. In
Australia it peaked at number eight in April 1995. In the
US, it peaked in April/May 1995 at number 25 on the
Billboard Hot 100 and number 23 on the
Cash Box Top 100.
"Cotton Eye Joe" was awarded with a
gold record in Australia (35,000), the Netherlands (50,000) and the US (500,000). It also received a
platinum record in Austria (50,000), New Zealand (10,000), Sweden (50,000), Switzerland (50,000) and the UK (650,000), and a
2× platinum record in Germany (1 million) and Norway.
Critical reception
Johnny Loftus from
AllMusic named "Cotton Eye Joe" a "backwater
Euro-dance novelty".[9]Larry Flick from Billboard described it as "
country hoedown fiddling sewn into a raucous
pop/
ravedance beat", noting that the song has "cheeky
rap poking stereotypical fun at Southerners".[10]J.D. Considine from The Daily Gazette called it "the piece de resistance, a track so infernally catchy that you almost don't notice how screamingly funny it is."[11] Jim Farber from Daily News complimented the band for managing "to crack the pop singles chart at a time when even country stars who sell millions of albums can't make hay on the pop song list."[12]David Browne from Entertainment Weekly commented, "For sheer audaciousness, it's not surprising that the record is garnering such attention. Where else can you hear a barn-dance staple gone techno, complete with dance-diva wailing and manic
banjos and
fiddles?"[13] Tom Ewing of
Freaky Trigger said that "Cotton Eye Joe” work "on that basic, energetic, ass-moving level", adding that "the hollering diva interludes actually change things up a little, though that decades-old
hook is solid enough to stand on its own."[14] Dave Sholin from the Gavin Report noted that "this group from Sweden puts a techno spin on a square dance staple", stating that its "fresh, unique approach makes 'Cotton Eye Joe' so hot."[15] A reviewer from Knoxville News Sentinel described it as "techno-hoedown".[16] In his weekly UK chart commentary,
James Masterton deemed it "a massive party smash no matter where you are".[17]
Howard Cohen from The Miami Herald wrote that "every decade has its novelty song", adding that "it deserves credit for its gumption, at least."[18] Pan-European magazine Music & Media said "it takes three to set a trend:
the Grid's "
Swamp Thing", the
Two Cowboys' "
Everybody Gonfi-Gon" and
Bravado's 'Harmonica Man'. Rednex are the next modern barn dance act."[19] A reviewer from Music Week gave it five out of five, describing it as "
Europop meets country in an irritatingly catchy tune", that is "guaranteed to pack the dance floors at party time and a cast iron cert of a hit."[20] John Kilgo from The Network Forty complimented "Cotton Eye Joe" as a "outright winner", stating that "this novelty track is not only catchy and fun, but uptempo as well."[21] Stuart Bailie from NME wrote, "A fantastic western dance (and if you haven't thrown shapes to this at The Broken Spoke in
Austin, well, you've missed out, mate) is given the full-on techno treatment, like that cowboy outfit The Grid have done already this year. Maybe another novelty turn, but fun with it."[22]Neil Spencer from The Observer viewed it as "an initially amusing joke".[23]James Hamilton from the Record Mirror Dance Update declared it a "happily galloping Swedish disco hoedown with square dance caller, fiddle and banjo".[24] Chuck Campbell from Scripps Howard News Service felt it "has the same novelty appeal" as "
I'm Too Sexy", "but in addition to the aggressive dance rhythm and offbeat vocals, the Rednex song also features an impossibly high-voiced woman and manic fiddle and banjo."[25]
Music video
The accompanying music video for "Cotton Eye Joe" was directed by Swedish director Stefan Berg. It won the prize for the best Swedish dance video at the
1995 Swedish Dance Music Awards.[26] The video features the band performing in a barn during a hoedown where the guests did activities such as dancing, playing and splashing in old wild west baths, and riding a mechanical bull. Several signs can be seen in the barn, with inscriptions like "Horses outside", "No bath!" and "No sex allowed". The video ends with a short fast-motion clip of a girl riding the mechanical bull. Göran Danielsson, who sings the "Cotton Eye Joe" chorus, never appears in the video. It received
heavy rotation on
MTV Europe[27] and was A-listed on Germany's
VIVA.[28] In the US, the video generated massive reaction on its first week on
The Box.[29] "Cotton Eye Joe" was later made available on Rednex's official
YouTube channel in 2013, and had generated more than 196 million views as of December 2022.[30]
Impact and legacy
MTV Dance ranked "Cotton Eye Joe" number 51 in their list of "The 100 Biggest 90's Dance Anthems of All Time" in November 2011.[31]BuzzFeed ranked it number 97 in their list of "The 101 Greatest Dance Songs of the '90s" in 2017.[32]Paste magazine ranked the song number 17 in "The 60 Best Dancefloor Classics" list in 2017.[33]ThoughtCo ranked it number 92 in their list of "The Top 100 Best Party Songs of All Time" in 2018, adding, "What happens when you combine
folk,
techno, and
bluegrass music? It goes something like this hit".[34][35]Billboard magazine ranked "Cotton Eye Joe" number 49 in their list of "The 100 Greatest Jock Jams of All Time" in February 2024, writing, "A dangerously stomping Eurocountry reinvention of a 150-plus-year-old folk song, and one of the most demented crossover hits of the ’90s."[36]
On August 12, 2023, "Cotton Eye Joe" interrupted a tiebreaker during a Canadian Open match between Iga Świątek and Jessica Pegula. The point was replayed. The song could later be heard playing over the loudspeakers after Pegula went on to defeat Swiatek in three sets.[40]
* Sales figures based on certification alone. ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.
^Kilgo, John (27 January 1995).
"Mainstream: Music Meeting"(PDF). The Network Forty. p. 20.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 9 December 2021. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
^Bailie, Stuart (10 December 1994).
"Singles". NME. p. 41. Retrieved 28 November 2023.
^Pennanen, Timo (2006). Sisältää hitin - levyt ja esittäjät Suomen musiikkilistoilla vuodesta 1972 (in Finnish) (1st ed.). Helsinki: Tammi.
ISBN978-951-1-21053-5.