"Back to My Roots" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by RuPaul | ||||
from the album Supermodel of the World | ||||
Released | 1993 | |||
Format | CD, 12" | |||
Genre | Dance, house, pop | |||
Length | 3:32 (album version) | |||
Label | Tommy Boy | |||
Songwriter(s) |
|
|||
RuPaul singles chronology | ||||
|
"Back to My Roots" is a song by RuPaul, released as the fourth single from his album Supermodel of the World, released in 1993. Although the single failed to chart on the Billboard Hot 100, it reached #1 on the Hot Dance Club Play chart in July 1993 and helped to further establish RuPaul's popularity, particularly with both the dance music and LGBT audiences in the United States.
The house/dance track is a tribute to black women's hairstyles as well as to the tradition of community often found in urban hair salons. The song was originally entitled "Black To My Roots", but the record company changed it fearing controversy. Within the song RuPaul name-checks a variety of hairstyles such as braids, hair extensions, afro-puffs and cornrows. She also names several of her relatives including her mother Ernestine Charles, who at the time owned a hair salon in Atlanta, Georgia.
The single was released primarily as a CD but with various 12" versions. It also featured a new remix of the hit single "Supermodel (You Better Work)", as well as a pastiche of the track called "Strudelmodel", which changed the theme of the original to a "model for the Der Weinerschnitzel Corporation".