Chacarron Macarron

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"Chacarron" (often known as "Chacarron Macarron" or "Shark Around"[1]) is a song by Panamanian artists Rodney Clark (El Chombo) and Andres de la Cruz (also known as Andy's Val Gourmet).

It is a reworking of the original version from 2003 by Andy's Val Gourmet, who is credited as 'Andy's Val' on the release.[2] A cover by Yahari appears as the first track of their 2005 album Las + Bailables de .... Yahari.[3]

El Chombo and Andy's Val Gourmet's version reached the top 20 on the UK Singles Chart in December 2006.[4]

The song was included on the compilation Now That's What I Call Music! 65 of the UK series.[5] It was used as walk up music before at bats by José Reyes when he played for the New York Mets,[6] and is also included in the 2021 dance video game Just Dance 2022.[7]

Andy's Val Gourmet died of cardiac arrest on September 11, 2023, as announced on El Chombo's Instagram.[8]

Composition and lyrics

"Chacarron" is a Panamanian reggaeton song which samples "The Breaks" by Kurtis Blow during the bridge sections.[9] The song is known for its mostly unintelligible lyrics.

Internet popularity

The song gained attention online when the chorus was used on a YTMND page by the name of "Ualuealuealeuale" which was created in 2005 by a user named MowtenDoo. It contained a .gif of Batman played by Adam West being drugged in a scene from the 1966 series' first episode. The page also gained popularity on YouTube with a reupload of it gaining millions of views.[10][11]

"Chacarron Macarron" became a popular viral on the Internet owing to its nonsensical lyrics and odd music video. The lyrics mostly consist of gibberish.[12] The "uale" noise earned de la Cruz (Andy Val) the nickname of "The Mute" ("El Mudo" in Spanish), but due to a mispronunciation, he also earned the nickname of "El Mundo", and the song was subsequently used in numerous viral videos and YouTube poops during the mid-2000s, late 2000s and onward.[11] One particular video involved a loop of Nintendo character Mario headbanging from a Singapore Airlines advertisement.[13] The song was also used as part of the Hurr-Durr JavaScript trojan in 2009.

Charts

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Chart (2005–2007) Peak
position

References

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