"Swamp Thing" | ||||
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Single by the Grid | ||||
from the album Evolver | ||||
Released | 23 May 1994 [1] | |||
Genre | Country Music, Bluegrass Music, Electronic Dance Music | |||
Length | 3:56 | |||
Label | Deconstruction | |||
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) | The Grid | |||
The Grid singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Swamp Thing" on YouTube |
"Swamp Thing" is a song by British electronic music group the Grid, released on 23 May 1994 by Deconstruction as a single and is included on the group's third album, Evolver (1994). The song peaked at number three on the UK, Australian, and Danish singles charts and reached the top five in an additional seven countries, including Finland and Norway, where it reached number two. Its computer generated music video, consisting of dancing robots and a crawling baby, received solid airplay on music television channels. The song was later sampled in "Banjo Thing" by Infernal and "Swamp Thing" by Pegboard Nerds. British magazine NME ranked "Swamp Thing" number 41 in their list of the 50 Best Songs of 1994. [2]
"Swamp Thing" is almost completely instrumental, consisting mainly of: drums, synthesizer sounds and banjo. The only vocals are Well alright, watch out, Feel alright and I just dig it, sampled from the 1973 reggae song "Papa Do It Sweet" by Lloyd & Patsy. [3] The banjo part was written and performed by Roger Dinsdale – a folk musician who also played the guitar and the mandolin. Dinsdale died in July 2009. [4]
Music writer and columnist James Masterton wrote, "I can detect a theme developing here over who can make the best dance record out of the silliest original idea. As if Doop wasn't bad enough we now have the Grid moving away from ambient dub and scoring their biggest hit ever with a dance track based on a banjo reel." He added that it "actually is quite inspired". [5] Holly Barringer from Melody Maker complimented "Swamp Thing" as "a cheeky little number" and "a kind of Deliverance with disco up its butt", concluding, "You can't help but squeal like a pig at the sheer foot-tappingness of the darn thing." [6] Maria Jimenez from Music & Media constated that the group "storms through Europe with their banjo-ignited stormer". [7] Andy Beevers from Music Week's RM Dance Update commented, "Part Two of the Grid's US travelogue takes us east from Texas [with their 1993 single "Texas Cowboys"] to the Deep South, where they successfully set frantic banjo picking against uptempo house beats to create a high energy hoe down." [8] He also declared it as "a mad banjo and house hybrid [that] works surprisingly well." [9]
Another RM editor, James Hamilton, described it as "a breezy progressive throbber." [10] Ben Willmott from NME named it Single of the Week, writing, "Bonkers cowpunk disco of the highest order from the vastly underrated Texas cowboys. No need for reams of descriptive prose here — "Swamp Thing" is the first and last word in banjo house and, more to the point, it's damn good fun too. Roll on the kazoo-gabber crossover." [11] NME editor John Mulvey felt "Swamp Thing" "is veteran techno-esoterics the Grid's latest whimsical sonic journey; a long, fierce trip into Deliverance country that mixes square dance-friendly banjos with the kind of sleek trance disco perfected by Underworld and Fluke. A bit of a novelty — all that finger-picking nonsense gets royally on your tits after a while — but endearing enough in its own backwoods, inbred, rabble-rousing redneck way." [12] The magazine's Paul Moody named it a "brain-denting belter". [13]
"Swamp Thing" was very successful on the charts across several continents. In Europe, it soared to number two in Finland, Norway and Scotland. It was a top-10 hit also in Austria (4), Belgium (4), Denmark (3), [14] Iceland (8), Ireland (4), the Netherlands (5), Spain (8), Sweden (4), Switzerland (6) and the United Kingdom. On the Eurochart Hot 100, it hit number four on 3 September. [15] In the UK, the single peaked at number three in its fifth week on the UK Singles Chart, on 26 June. [16] It also reached number-one on Music Week's Dance Singles chart. [17] Additionally, it was a top-20 hit in Germany (13) and a top-50 hit in France (45). Outside Europe, "Swamp Thing" reached number three in Australia as well as on the RPM Dance/Urban chart in Canada. It also peaked at number 41 in New Zealand.
The single was awarded with a silver record in the UK with a sale of 200,000 copies and a platinum record in Australia, after 70,000 units were sold.
"Swamp Thing" was accompanied by a music video. The video switches back and forth between two scenes: computer-generated imagery of a group of robots dancing to a techno beat and a blank white landscape with a crawling baby and music synthesiser instruments. The scene with the baby and the instruments also inspired the Evolver album cover art. The video received heavy rotation on MTV Europe [18] and was A-listed on Germany's VIVA. [19] Later it was made available by Vevo on YouTube, and as of early 2024, the video had generated more than 2.7 million views. [20]
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Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
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Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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Australia (ARIA) [41] | Platinum | 70,000^ |
United Kingdom (BPI) [50] | Silver | 200,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
The Grid are an English electronic dance group, consisting of David Ball and Richard Norris, with guest contributions from other musicians. They are best known for the hits "Swamp Thing", "Texas Cowboys", "Crystal Clear", "Rollercoaster" and "Floatation".
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