Album: Cracked Rear View (1991)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Hootie & the Blowfish lead singer Darius Rucker takes on racism in this song, where he sings about those with "hatred trying to hide your fears." He's a proud native of South Carolina but had a hard time dealing with the state's regressive attitude toward race - it was the last state to recognize Martin Luther King Day as a paid holiday, for example.

    Rucker is Black but his three bandmates are white, and the band makes the kind of smoothed-out rock music that draws a predominately white audience. This put him in a lot of places, like certain golf courses and fraternity houses, where he was a rare minority, and he had some ugly encounters along the way.
  • In the first verse, Rucker sings about how South Carolina flies the Confederate flag at the state capitol building:

    Why is there a rebel flag hanging from the state house walls?
    Tired of hearin' this s--t about heritage not hate


    South Carolina was one of the Confederate states in the US Civil War, fighting to keep slavery legal. The Confederate flag went up at the capitol in 1961 to commemorate the 100-year anniversary of the start of the Civil War. State leaders claimed it was part of their "heritage" and should be celebrated. Most Black citizens disagreed, seeing it as a symbol of segregation and slavery.

    Over the years, there were efforts to get the flag removed, but they weren't successful until 2015, when it finally came down. When Rucker wrote this song, it was still flying high and very much an issue.

    "If I didn't love South Carolina so much and if I didn't love my friends and family, I would never live there 'cause the government is absolutely asinine," he said. "As far as I'm concerned, the South Carolina government can all go to hell."
  • "Drowning" first appeared on an EP called Time that Hootie & the Blowfish released independently in 1991. All of the songs on the EP (the others are "Time," "Running From An Angel," and "Let Her Cry") ended up on their 1994 debut album, Cracked Rear View in far more polished form. By the time the band recorded the album, the songs had been throughly tested on the road and tweaked accordingly.

    "What better test market do you have but to get up with no pretension or anything in front of a group of people who have paid $3 to get in a bar and play that song and watch how they react?" the band's drummer Jim Sonefeld told Songfacts. "All these songs that ended up on Cracked Rear View in '94 had been played hundreds of times in front of people."
  • Nanci Griffith's 1989 song "It's a Hard Life Wherever You Go" gets a mention in the lines:

    Nanci singing it's a hard life wherever you go
    About some fat racist living in Chicago


    In that song, Griffith sings:

    A cafeteria line in Chicago
    The fat man in front of me
    Is calling Black people trash to his children

Comments: 1

  • Timothy from Summerville, ScI went to college at The University of South Carolina with Darius Rucker while forming the band Hootie and The Blowfish. I can prove it because Jim Sonifeld said to me when I was looking for Darius “F#ck Darius, we do all the work and he (Darius) gets all the recognition. Sorry Soni I’m sure this happens in lots of bands with a front singer!
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Charlie Daniels

Charlie DanielsSongwriter Interviews

Charlie discusses the songs that made him a Southern Rock icon, and settles the Devil vs. Johnny argument once and for all.

Dar Williams

Dar WilliamsSongwriter Interviews

A popular contemporary folk singer, Williams still remembers the sticky note that changed her life in college.

Carl Sturken

Carl SturkenSongwriter Interviews

Hitmaker Carl Sturken on writing and producing for Rihanna, 'N Sync, Christina Aguilera, Kelly Clarkson, Donny Osmond, Shakira and Karyn White.

Weezer

WeezerFact or Fiction

Did Rivers Cuomo grow up on a commune? Why did they name their albums after colors? See how well you know your Weezer in this Fact or Fiction.

Matt Sorum

Matt SorumSongwriter Interviews

When he joined Guns N' Roses in 1990, Matt helped them craft an orchestral sound; his mezzo fortes and pianissimos are all over "November Rain."

Intentionally Atrocious

Intentionally AtrociousSong Writing

A selection of songs made to be terrible - some clearly achieved that goal.