Karma Chameleon

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“Karma Chameleon”
“Karma Chameleon” cover
Single by Culture Club
from the album Colour by Numbers
B-side "That's the Way (I'm Only Trying to Help You)"
Released 1983
Format 7", 12"
Recorded 1983
Genre Pop
Label Virgin Records
Writer(s) O'Dowd/Hay/Craig/Moss/Pickett
Producer Steve Levine
Culture Club singles chronology
"Church of the Poison Mind"
(1983)
"Karma Chameleon"
(1983)
"Victims"
(1983)

"Karma Chameleon" is a song from British band Culture Club. The song spent three weeks at number one on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 in 1984, becoming the group's biggest hit and only U.S. number-one, as well as the band's biggest Adult Contemporary chart hit (#3). The song hit number one in sixteen countries worldwide. In their home country the single became Culture Club's second song to top the UK singles chart, staying there for six weeks, being the biggest selling single of the year. The single came from 1983's Colour by Numbers album. Ranked #83 in the best selling singles of all time. [1] The song was given a Q Classic Song Award at the Q Awards in 2006. Boy George performs lead vocals.

The song was originally to be called "Cameo Chameleon". The band were recorded in interviews in late '83 stating this was to be the title of their next single.

The b-side of Karma Chameleon is "That's the Way (I'm Only Trying to Help You)" (in an alternate and shorter version).

A cover of the song by happy happy cores appears in Dance Dance Revolution: Hottest Party for the Wii.

Contents

[edit] Music video

The "Karma Chameleon" music video is set in Mississippi in 1870, according to caption. It depicts people in colourful costumes, including dancers in "red, gold and green", waiting on a riverbank. Boy George is dressed in even more colourful and flamboyant costume and is depicted singing the title song. A pickpocket is seen wandering through the crowd. A riverboat, The Chameleon, arrives and people board. A game of cards takes place, with Boy George still singing in the background. The pickpocket is discovered cheating and is forced to walk the plank. Throughout the video, black and white people are depicted singing and dancing together. It was filmed at Despra Island in Weybridge during the summer of 1983.

[edit] Chart performance

Country Peak
position
Australia 1
Austria 3
Belgium 1
Canada 1
Denmark 1
Germany 2
Ireland 1
Italy 4
Netherlands 1[2]
New Zealand 1
Norway 1
Sweden 1
Switzerland 1
United Kingdom 1
United States 1

[edit] Title parodies

Puns on the song's title have appeared in pop culture, often based on misheard lyrics of the song, as the word "Karma" is repeated quickly in the chorus.

  • A parody of the title was used as a Dragon Ball chapter title "Kame Kame Kame Kame Kame Chameleon" regarding the kamehameha attack.
  • Bomfunk MCs's 2000 hit "Freestyler" mentions the song
  • Darkwing Duck also parodied the title with an episode titled "Calm a Chameleon".
  • Jack Johnson's song "Mud Football" features the line "Karma, karma, karma chameleon".
  • "Karma Chameleon" was also the title of the third episode of the TV Series Wonderfalls.
  • "Karma Chameleon" was used as the title for episode 204 of Degrassi: The Next Generation.
  • The game Kingdom of Loathing has a familiar called the Comma Chameleon.
  • A character named Khameleon, in the Mortal Kombat video game series, is in reference to the song. If you fail one of the levels using a character named Nitara, you will receive the following message; "You must successfully learn the Kama. Khameleon would have mastered it with ease had her culture not been clubbed by Shao Kahn ages ago."...The phrase 'culture not being clubbed' referring to the Culture Club.[3]
  • The track Constant Motion from Dream Theater has the working title of "Korma Chameleon".
  • In the February 2000 edition of BBC Top Gear magazine, "Korma Chameleon" was the title of an article that featured the new Nissan Almera, relating to the fact that the car came with a curry hook.
  • The 'Ask A Ninja' Ninja composed his own version titled 'Comma Chameleon' ("Comma, Comma, Comma, Comma, Comma Chameleon. You're hairy and bigtoed, so where did you go, whoah-oh!")
  • It was also parodied by lyricist and rhymer, Ross MacDougall, on his venture to cyprus, where he used the words "cumma cumma"
Preceded by
"Red Red Wine" by UB40
UK Singles Chart number-one single
September 18, 1983 - October 23, 1983
Succeeded by
"Uptown Girl" by Billy Joel
New Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart number-one single
October 28, 1983 - December 2, 1983
Irish Singles Chart number-one single
September 25, 1983 - October 16, 1983
Succeeded by
"They Don't Know" by Tracy Ullman
Dutch Top 40 number-one single
October 22, 1983 - for 1 week
Succeeded by
"All Night Long (All Night)" by Lionel Richie
Preceded by
"Codo" by DÖF
Belgian Singles Chart number-one single
October 29, 1983 - November 19, 1983
Preceded by
"Australiana" by Austen Tayshus
Australian Kent Music Report number-one single
October 24, 1983 - November 21, 1983
Succeeded by
"Reckless" by Australian Crawl
Preceded by
"Major Tom (Coming Home)" by Peter Schilling
Canadian RPM number-one single
January 21, 1984 - February 4, 1984
Succeeded by
"Talking in Your Sleep" by The Romantics
Preceded by
"Owner of a Lonely Heart" by Yes
Billboard Hot 100 number-one single
February 4, 1984 - February 18, 1984
Succeeded by
"Jump" by Van Halen

[edit] References

  1. ^ United World Chart. Retrieved on 2008-02-24.
  2. ^ De Nederlandse Top 40, week 42, 1983. Retrieved on 2008-02-24.
  3. ^ Nitara's Konquest Mode Text. Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance, Midway Games, 2002.
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