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Coconut (song)
1971 novelty song by Harry Nilsson From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Coconut" is a novelty song written[3] and first recorded by American singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson, released as the third single from his 1971 album, Nilsson Schmilsson. It was on the U.S. Billboard charts for 14 weeks, reaching #8,[4] and was ranked by Billboard as the #66 song for 1972. It charted in a minor way in the UK, reaching #42.[5] "Coconut" did best in Canada, where it peaked at #5.[6]
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Lyrics
The lyrics feature Nilsson singing two characters (a narrator and a woman), each in a different voice.[7] The woman drinks a mixture of lime juice and coconut milk, becomes sick, and calls the doctor. The doctor, annoyed at being woken up, tells her to drink the same thing again and call in the morning.
Music
An arpeggiated C7 chord accompanies the song throughout.
Personnel
According to the 1971 LP credits:[8]
- Harry Nilsson – vocals
- Caleb Quaye – guitar
- Ian Duck – acoustic guitar
- Herbie Flowers – bass
- Jim Gordon – drums, percussion
- Roger Pope – drums
Chart history
Dannii Minogue version
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Dannii Minogue recorded the song in 1994 with UK dance producers DNA. When Minogue parted ways with Mushroom Records in 1995 and signed to Eternal Records in 1996, she had the track remixed by producers Flexifinger.
The track was originally used as a hidden bonus track on her third album Girl. It was subsequently released in Australia on 16 November 1998 as the fourth and final single from that album, peaking at number 62 on the ARIA singles chart upon its debut, on the chart dated week commencing 23 November 1998.[16]
In 2009, the original version of "Coconut" was made available on the compilation The 1995 Sessions.
Charts
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In popular culture
The Muppets performed a version in The Muppet Show episode 4x10 with Kenny Rogers. In this version, Kermit the Frog portrays the patient, so the lyric about a “belly ache” is changed to a “flipper ache.”
The song is used during the end credits of Quentin Tarantino's 1992 crime film Reservoir Dogs,[17] and it also featured in the soundtrack of the 1997 film The Ice Storm.
The famous "Midnight Margaritas" moment from the cult-classic, 1998 fantasy film, Practical Magic featured the song.
A patient sang this song in an episode of House.
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References
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