From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Baby Got Back
1992 single by Sir Mix-A-Lot
1992 single by Sir Mix-A-Lot
| Field | Value | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | Baby Got Back | |||||
| cover | BabyGotBack.jpg | |||||
| type | single | |||||
| artist | Sir Mix-a-Lot | |||||
| album | Mack Daddy | |||||
| B-side | "Cake Boy"/"You Can't Slip" | |||||
| released | May 1992 | |||||
| recorded | 1991 | |||||
| * dirty rap<ref>{{Cite web | title | Songs Similar to Baby Got Back by Sir Mix-A-Lot | url=https://www.chosic.com/similar-songs/baby-got-back-by-sir-mix-a-lot/ | access-date=2025-01-13 | website=Chosic | language=en-US}} |
| length | ||||||
| label | ||||||
| writer | Sir Mix-a-Lot | |||||
| prev_title | One Time's Got No Case | |||||
| prev_year | 1991 | |||||
| next_title | Swap Meet Louie | |||||
| next_year | 1992 | |||||
| misc | ||||||
| type | single | |||||
| file | Baby Got Back sample.ogg |
| B-side = "Cake Boy"/"You Can't Slip"
- Hip-hop
- dirty rap
- Sir Mix-a-Lot
- Rick Rubin
"Baby Got Back" is a song written, co-produced and recorded by American rapper Sir Mix-a-Lot. Released in May 1992 by Def American and Reprise as the second single from his third album, Mack Daddy (1992), the song samples the 1986 Detroit techno single "Technicolor" by Channel One. At the time of its original release, the song caused controversy because of its outspoken and blatantly sexual lyrics objectifying women, as well as specific references to the buttocks, which some people found objectionable. The song's accompanying music video, directed by Adam Bernstein, was briefly banned by MTV. Mix-a-Lot defended the song as being empowering to curvaceous women who were being shown skinny models as an ideal for beauty.
"Baby Got Back" topped the US Billboard Hot 100, and spent five weeks atop the chart. It was the second best-selling song in the US in 1992. The song was ranked number 17 on VH1's "100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop" in 2008. In October 2023, Billboard ranked it among the "500 Best Pop Songs of All Time".
{{Anchor|Lyrics}}Synopsis
The song begins with a spoken word segment involving two presumably thin, white valley girls. One of the girls (dubbed Linda by Amylia Diaz-Dorsey) remarks to her friend, "Oh, my, God Becky, look at her butt! It is so big!" This section ends with Linda saying "she's just so... black!", at which point the song proper begins.
The first verse begins with "I like big butts and I cannot lie" and the narrator's attraction to women with large buttocks is a major theme of the song. The second and third verses challenge mainstream norms of beauty with lyrics such as "I ain't talkin' 'bout Playboy/'Cause silicone parts are made for toys" and "So Cosmo says you're fat/Well I ain't down with that!"
The song came from a meeting between Sir Mix-a-Lot and Amylia Dorsey, who saw little representation of full-figured women in media. The idea came from a 1980s-era Budweiser commercial featuring thin, valley girl-esque models of varying ethnicities. They decided to dedicate a song to the opposite, featuring curvy women of color. Mix and Dorsey sought to "broaden the definition of beauty."
Sir Mix-a-Lot commented in a 1992 interview: "The song doesn't just say I like large butts, you know? The song is talking about women who damn near kill themselves to try to look like these beanpole models that you see in Vogue magazine." He explained that most women respond positively to the song's message, especially black women: "They all say, 'About time.
The dialogue of actress Papillon Soo Soo saying "Me so horny" is sampled from the 1987 film Full Metal Jacket to complete Sir Mix-a-Lot's lyric, "That butt you got makes..."
In 2014, according to TMZ, Sir Mix-a-Lot said it was Jennifer Lopez's moves as a Fly Girl on the 1990s show In Living Color that first inspired him to write "Baby Got Back".
Critical reception
Larry Flick from Billboard magazine wrote, "First offering from rapper's major-label debut, Mack Daddy, cheekily rhapsodizes about the joys of women with prominent backsides. Cute rhymes and slammin' beats add up to a potential smash at several formats."
J.D. Considine from The Baltimore Sun commented, "In some cases, what's said can be as simple as Sir Mix-a-Lot's assertion 'I like big butts!' in the single 'Baby Got Back'. On the surface, it may seem that all he's doing is expressing an opinion, but there's more to it than Mix-a-Lot's personal preferences. At root, 'Baby Got Back' challenges the dominant standard for physical beauty in our culture, a standard that stresses long legs, slim hips, small buttocks and has no room for women with wide hips or protuberant posteriors. And the fact that 'Baby Got Back' spent five weeks at No. 1 suggests that there are millions who agree with his assessment."
James Bernard from Entertainment Weekly remarked that the song "alternates deftly between a critique of the Cosmo/Playboy narrow-minded – and narrow-hipped – standard of female beauty and a bawdy appreciation of, er, generous rear ends."
In Melody Maker review of the album, "Baby Got Back" was named "worst of all" and "a hip hop 'Fatty Bum Bum' and – Warning! Warning! – could be a novelty hit."
Mark Coleman from Rolling Stone said the song "celebrates a section of the anatomy long revered by rappers ("beggin' for a piece of that bubble" is a new twist)."
In 2020, Cleveland.com ranked "Baby Got Back" number 24 in their list of the best *Billboard * Hot 100 No. 1 song of the 1990s. They described it as "the novelty song that never went away", adding, "You could put this on at a wedding today and women will recite the opening word for word before the rap breaks in and everyone (and I mean everyone) joins in. Sir Mix-a-Lot was never shy about playing up the song's "playful" nature, rapping on top of a giant butt in the video."
The song has been cited in demonstrating the limitations of the Bechdel test. It has been described as passing the test because it begins with a valley girl saying to another "Oh my god, Becky, look at her butt!".
Chart performance and awards
"Baby Got Back" reached number one on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart for five weeks in the summer of 1992, and won a 1993 Grammy Award for Best Rap Solo Performance. In the years following the song's release on the album Mack Daddy, it has continued to appear in many movies, television shows, and commercials, as detailed below. It was ranked number six on VH1's "Greatest Songs of the '90s", and number one on VH1's "Greatest One Hit Wonders of the '90s". In 2017, Rolling Stone magazine ranked it number 64 in their list of "100 Greatest Hip-Hop Songs of All Time". In 2023, Billboard ranked it number 327 in their "500 Best Pop Songs of All Time". Same year, Time Out ranked "Baby Got Back" number 23 in their "The 100 Best Party Songs Ever Made".
Track listing
Charts
Weekly charts
| Chart (1992–93) | Peak |
|---|---|
| position | |
| Canada Top Singles (RPM) | 89 |
| UK Dance (Music Week) | 54 |
| US Cash Box Top 100 | 1 |
Year-end charts
| Chart (1992) | Position | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| url=https://www.ariacharts.com.au/annual-charts/1992/singles-chart | title=1992 ARIA Singles Chart | publisher=ARIA | access-date=April 4, 2020 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171006163157/https://www.ariacharts.com.au/annual-charts/1992/singles-chart | archive-date=October 6, 2017 | url-status=dead}} | 32 |
| New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ) | 47 | ||||||
| US Billboard Hot 100 | 2 | ||||||
| US Cash Box Top 100 | 2 |
Decade-end charts
| Chart (1990–1999) | Position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard Hot 100 | 30 |
Certifications
In popular culture
In 2019, former governor of Alaska and Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin performed the song on Fox's The Masked Singer while dressed as a bear.
Jonathan Coulton/''Glee'' cover
Jonathan Coulton released a cover of "Baby Got Back" during his Thing a Week project in October 2005, with the song being released as part of the first Thing A Week compilation album the next year. Coulton performs the song on acoustic guitar with a gentle and tender melody at odds with the lascivious nature of the lyrics.
Coulton's arrangement of the song was used in a 2013 episode of the musical television series Glee without Coulton's knowledge or permission. Coulton publicly lambasted the show's producers, and alleged that they had even lifted elements from his recording, but claimed that Fox responded that "they're within their legal rights to do this, and that [Coulton] should be happy for the exposure", though Coulton pointed out that he was not credited within the episode. Coulton released his cover of "Baby Got Back" to iTunes, labelling it "a cover of Glee's cover of my cover of Sir Mix-a-Lot's song", with proceeds going to charity. Coulton pursued legal charges against the show's producers, but ultimately dropped them, deciding a seeming victory in the court of public opinion was "a good enough win." The controversy was referenced in a season 5 episode of The Good Wife entitled "Goliath and David".
References
References
- "Songs Similar to Baby Got Back by Sir Mix-A-Lot".
- Pond, Steve. (July 30, 2014). "Emmy Nominated Director's Strange Trip: From Sir-Mix-a-Lot's 'Baby Got Back' to 'Fargo'". [[TheWrap]].
- "Baby Got Back by Sir Mix-A-Lot Songfacts". Songfacts.
- Winistorfer, Andrew. (2008-09-29). "VH1's 100 Greatest Hip-Hop Songs". [[Prefixmag]].
- (19 October 2023). "The 500 Best Pop Songs: Staff List".
- https://www.usatoday.com/embed/video/28302693/
- (19 December 2013). "'And I Cannot Lie': The Oral History of Sir Mix-a-Lot's 'Baby Got Back' Video".
- (August 20, 2016). "Spuds McKenzie".
- "OMG, meet the real 'Becky' from 'Baby Got Back'".
- Keizer, Brian. (September 1992). "Big Buts". [[Spin (magazine).
- (13 November 2014). "Sir Mix-A-Lot's 'Baby Got Back' Was About".
- Flick, Larry. (February 29, 1992). "Single Reviews".
- [[J.D. Considine. Considine, J.D.]] (1992). "Are today's rock stars just troublemakers or voices of discontent?". ''[[The Baltimore Sun]]''. – via ''[[Edmonton Journal]]''. (November 11, 1992).
- Bernard, James. (March 13, 1992). "Mack Daddy".
- Push. (January 25, 1992). "Albums".
- Coleman, Mark. (September 30, 2007). "Sir Mix-A-Lot: Mack Daddy".
- Smith, Tony L.. (October 21, 2020). "Every No. 1 song of the 1990s ranked from worst to best". [[Cleveland.com]].
- [https://lifehacker.com/the-bechdel-test-and-other-media-representation-tests-1819324045 The Bechdel Test, and Other Media Representation Tests, Explained] {{Webarchive. link. (2018-04-18 , by Nick Douglas, at ''[[Lifehacker]]''; published October 10, 2017; retrieved April 17, 2018)
- [https://jezebel.com/this-bechdel-test-simulator-shows-how-easy-it-is-to-pre-1753250185 This Bechdel Test Simulator Shows How Easy It Is to Predict Who Makes Sexist Movies (Men)] {{Webarchive. link. (2017-10-17 , by Kara Brown, at ''[[Jezebel (website)). Jezebel]]''; published January 15, 2016; retrieved April 17, 2018
- (2015). "Entertainment Computing – ICEC 2015: 14th International Conference, ICEC 2015, Trondheim, Norway, September 29 – October 2, 2015, Proceedings". Springer.
- (June 2, 2017). "100 Greatest Hip-Hop Songs of All Time".
- (July 28, 2023). "The 100 Best Party Songs Ever Made". [[Time Out (magazine).
- link. (2015-02-02)
- (August 8, 1992). "Top 60 Dance Singles".
- [https://www.popmusichistory.co.uk/_files/ugd/b4848d_4f9128176360450ba51be67a0468e9fa.pdf Cash Box Chart Entries 1990-1996]
- "1992 ARIA Singles Chart". [[Australian Recording Industry Association.
- "End of Year Charts 1992". [[Recorded Music NZ]].
- "Billboard Hot 100 – 1992".
- (December 26, 1992). "Awards: Top 50 Pop Singles".
- "Billboard Hot 100 Decade-End 1990–1999".
- (June 23, 2016). "Chart: Digital Songs". [[Nielsen Soundscan]].
- Lewis, Sophie, [https://www.cbsnews.com/news/sarah-palin-bear-the-masked-singer-rap-baby-got-back/ "Sarah Palin raps 'Baby Got Back' while dressed as a bear, shocking 'The Masked Singer' viewers"], ''[[cbsnews.com]]'', March 12, 2020. Retrieved 20-11-27.
- ''Lexington'' (columnist), [https://www.economist.com/united-states/2020/11/26/the-end-of-the-embarrassment "The end of the embarrassment"] {{Webarchive. link. (2020-11-27 , ''[[The Economist]]'', November 26, 2020. Retrieved 20-11-27.)
- Doctorow, Cory. (2005-10-15). "Nerd folksinger covers Baby Got Back". [[Boing Boing]].
- Eakin, Marah. (2013-01-18). "Jonathan Coulton says Glee ripped off his cover of "Baby Got Back"". [[The A.V. Club]].
- Landau, Elizabeth. (2013-01-26). "Singer alleges 'Glee' ripped off his cover song". [[CNN]].
- Cantalano, Michele. (2013-01-27). "Jonathan Coulton vs. Glee: It's About the Ethics". [[Forbes]].
- (7 January 2014). "Jonathan Coulton on Seeing His Glee Flap Play out on The Good Wife". New York.
- Sir Mix-a-Lot. (October 2000). "Still Bumpin'". [[Vibe (magazine).
- Aubry, Erin J.. (2003). "Body outlaws: rewriting the rules of beauty and body image". [[Seal Press]].
- (September 12, 2014). "Sir Mix-A-Lot on Nicki Minaj's 'Anaconda,' Booty Fever & New Music".
- (March 2019). "Status, Votive Luxury, and Labour: The Female Rapper's Delight". Fashion Studies.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Baby Got Back — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report