Drowning (Hootie & the Blowfish song)

"Drowning"
Single by Hootie & the Blowfish
from the album Cracked Rear View
Released November 1995
Format CD single
Recorded 1994
Genre Pop rock, roots rock
Length 5:01
Label Atlantic
Writer(s) Mark Bryan, Bob Dylan, Darius Rucker, Jim Sonefeld
Producer(s) Don Gehman
Hootie & the Blowfish singles chronology
"Time"
(1995)
"Drowning"
(1995)
"Old Man & Me (When I Get To Heaven)"
(1996)

"Drowning" is a song by American rock group Hootie & the Blowfish. It is the seventh track on their debut album Cracked Rear View (1994), and was released as the album's last single in late 1995. The song centers on themes of prejudice and racism, and drew attention to the "rebel" flags displayed at the South Carolina State House at the time, twenty years before that symbol was removed by a vote of the state's legislature. The lyrics also reference singer-songwriter Nanci Griffith, and her 1989 song "It's a Hard Life Wherever You Go".

Reception

"Drowning" was not as successful as Cracked Rear View's first four singles, and failed to chart anywhere else but the Mainstream Rock Tracks, where it peaked at #21 in November 1995.[1][2]

Charts

Chart (1995–96) Peak
position
US Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks 21

References

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