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Indian Outlaw

"Indian Outlaw"
Tim McGraw - Indian Outlaw.jpg
Single by Tim McGraw
from the album Not a Moment Too Soon
Released January 22, 1994
Format CD single
Recorded 1993
Genre Country
Length 3:01
Label Curb
Writer(s)
Producer(s)
Tim McGraw singles chronology
"Two Steppin' Mind"
(1993)
"Indian Outlaw"
(1994)
"Don't Take the Girl"
(1994)

"Indian Outlaw" is a song written by Tommy Barnes, Jumpin' Gene Simmons and John D. Loudermilk, and performed by American country music artist Tim McGraw. It was released in January 1994 as the first single from his album Not a Moment Too Soon. It was his first Top 40 country hit, and his fourth single overall. It peaked at number 8 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks charts, and number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100.

The song is an up-tempo set in minor key, backed by tom-tom drums and fiddle. The narrator describes himself as a rebellious American Indian character, "Half Cherokee and Choctaw". He describes, among other things, his pursuit of a Chippewa lover.

The song contains a sample of John D. Loudermilk's song "Indian Reservation, which is sung as shouting at the end ("Cherokee people, Cherokee tribe! / So proud to live, so proud to die").

A dance remix of the single was also made. This remix appears on McGraw's 2010 album Number One Hits. The song was considered controversial at the time, due to its stereotypical portrayal of Native Americans; as a result, some radio stations refused to play it.

Larry Flick of Billboard called it an "incredible single" that is "positively stuffed with lyrical and musical Native American cliches, from tomtoms to wigwams to peace pipes." He went on to say that if the song became a hit, it would "set relations back 200 years." In a review of Not a Moment Too Soon for the same publication, "Indian Outlaw" was again noted as clichéd; the authors deemed it "either one of the catchiest or one of the stupidest songs ever written."


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