Term for several belly dance-like dances
The
hoochie coochie
(
) is a catch-all term to describe several sexually provocative
belly dance
-like dances from the mid-to late 1800s. Also spelled
hootchy-kootchy
and a number of other variations, it is often associated with "
The Streets of Cairo, or the Poor Little Country Maid
" song, also known as "the snake charmer song". "
Hoochie Coochie Man
" (originally titled "I'm Your Hoochie Cooche Man") is also a blues standard written by
Willie Dixon
and first recorded by
Muddy Waters
in
Chicago
, January 7, 1954. Numerous cover versions of this classic continue to be recorded. Hoochie Coochie is also mentioned in
Alan Jackson
's hit country music song "
Chattahoochee
", and the
Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller
songs "
Little Egypt (Ying-Yang)
" and "
Saved
" (sung by
LaVern Baker
).
Overview
[
edit
]
Such dances, or something similar, were performed at the Crystal Palace Exhibition in London in 1851, the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876, and the World's Fair in Paris in 1889.
[1]
Although such dances became wildly popular in the United States during the
Chicago World's Fair
in 1893, there is no evidence of them being known by the name, "Coochie Coochie" until about a year after the fair closed, and "Hoochie Coochie" about a year later.
[2]
Before, during and immediately after the fair, these dances were frequently called, "Mussel dance", "stomach dance",
danse du ventre
and sometimes, "Kouta Kouta".
[3]
The transition from "kouta kouta" to "coochie coochie", and later, "hoochie coochie", may have been influenced by the expressions, "hoochy, coochy, coochy", "kutchy, kutchy", or "kutchy, kutchy coo", which were found in popular song lyrics from the 1860s and the 1880s.
[2]
Described by the
New York Journal
in 1893 as "Neither dancing of the head nor the feet", it was a dance performed by women of, or presented as having, Middle-Eastern and/or
Gypsy
heritage,
[4]
often as part of traveling
sideshows
.
The hoochie coochie replaced the much older
can-can
as the ribald dance of choice in New York dance halls by the 1890s.
[5]
A carnival company recently rented a large open space in a New York town of 5000 population and opened up for business. The most lucrative part of their business is a "girl" show, too foul to write of. The barker in his endeavor to secure customers appeals to all that is opposed to decency, while the three main attractions emphasize his harangue by "hoochie-coochie" dances and other physical contortions.
?
The Social Hygiene Bulletin
, Vol. VII, No. 7, July 1920
Since the dance was performed by women, female impersonators or drag queens,
[6]
a
goochie man
, or
hoochie coochie man
, either watched them or ran the show. Alternatively, from the directly sexual meaning of
goochie goochie
, he was successful with women. The dance was still popular at the
Louisiana Purchase Exposition: the World's Fair
of 1904, and is even mentioned in the song "
Meet Me in St. Louis, Louis
", but had all but disappeared by the
Second World War
.
Spelling variations
[
edit
]
Pronounced
or
huch?|kuch?
according to Webster's dictionary definition,
[7]
the words can be found in literature with a number of alternate spellings:
- Hoochie ? hootchy hootchey hootchie hoochy hoochey
- Coochie ? kootchy kootchey kootchie koochy koochey, cootchy cootchey cootchie coochy coochey
References
[
edit
]