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"Cosby Sweater"
Single by Hilltop Hoods
from the album Walking Under Stars
B-side"Won't Let You Down"
Released26 October 2014
GenreHip hop
Length3:37[1]
LabelUniversal Music Australia
SongwritersDemetrius Christopholus, Barry Francis, John Kelman, Matthew Lambert, Daniel Smith
Hilltop Hoods singles chronology
"Pyramid Building"
(2014)
"Cosby Sweater"
(2014)

"Cosby Sweater" is a song by Australian hip hop group, Hilltop Hoods. It was released as the third single from the group's seventh studio album, Walking Under Stars (2014). In Australia, "Cosby Sweater" peaked at No. 4 on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart, becoming Hilltop Hoods' highest-charting single to date and their third top ten hit overall.[2] The song was rated number three in Triple J's Hottest 100 2014, and in 2025, the song placed 64 on the Triple J Hottest 100 of Australian Songs.[3] The song's accompanying music video was released on 3 October 2014 via the Australian iTunes Store.[4]

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The track's distinctive riff heavily samples the Wimple Winch track "Save My Soul".

The "Cosby Sweater" is a reference to the colourful and unusual sweaters Bill Cosby used to wear on TV - in particular, such a sweater worn in a press photo by The Notorious B.I.G., AKA Biggie Smalls. In the title and art direction, the Hilltop Hoods confuse the Bill Cosby sweaters designed by Koos Van Den Akker and worn by Cosby on his show The Cosby Show with the similarly expressive Coogi sweater worn by The Notorious B.I.G.[5]

Later, with the sexual assault allegations involving Cosby the group have since stated that they regret naming the song after him and commented:

“To be honest we regret name checking Bill Cosby. Like some of you we’ve only recently become aware of the allegations against him. If he’s guilty of those allegations he can go jump in a fkn lake. A deep icy lake.”.[6]

The song also references actor Tom Cruise, television host Oprah Winfrey, singers Christina Aguilera and Pat Benatar, chess prodigy Bobby Fischer and the elevator fight between rapper Jay-Z and Beyoncé’s sister, Solange Knowles (“slap a rapper like Solange Knowles”).[6]

Track listing

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No.TitleLength
1."Cosby Sweater" (Trials remix)3:37
2."Won't Let You Down" (featuring Maverick Sabre)4:27

Charts

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Chart (2014) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[7] 4
Australian Urban (ARIA)[8] 1

Year-end charts

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Chart (2014) Position
Australia (ARIA)[9] 47
Chart (2015) Position
Australia (ARIA)[10] 66
Australia Urban (ARIA)[11] 13

Decade-end charts

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Chart (2010–2019) Position
Australia (ARIA)[12] 100
Australian Artist Singles (ARIA)[12] 13

Certifications

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Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[13] 12× Platinum 840,000
New Zealand (RMNZ)[14] Platinum 30,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
"Cosby Sweater" is a hip hop song by the Australian group Hilltop Hoods, released in September 2014 as the third single from their seventh studio album, Walking Under Stars.[1] The track achieved commercial success, peaking at number four on the ARIA Singles Chart— the group's highest position to date— and earning six-times platinum certification for over 420,000 units sold in Australia.[2] Its title derives from the colorful, patterned knit sweaters famously worn by Bill Cosby on The Cosby Show, a style evoked in hip-hop fashion as seen in an iconic photograph of The Notorious B.I.G. wearing a similar Coogi sweater, rather than any direct endorsement of Cosby himself.[3] Following the emergence of multiple sexual assault allegations against Cosby in late 2014, Hilltop Hoods publicly clarified the sartorial inspiration behind the name and stated their regret for its use, noting the unfortunate timing and unintended associations.[4][5]

Background and Inspiration

Origin of the Title

The title "Cosby Sweater" derives from the distinctive colorful and patterned knit sweaters frequently worn by comedian Bill Cosby as Dr. Cliff Huxtable on the NBC sitcom The Cosby Show, which aired from 1984 to 1992. These garments, often designed by Dutch-American designer Koos van den Akker, featured bold geometric patterns, vibrant hues, and textured knits that became synonymous with Cosby's on-screen persona during the show's peak popularity.[6][7] The sweaters evoked a sense of whimsical, family-oriented 1980s and early 1990s nostalgia, predating Cosby's later public scandals. The song's naming draws direct inspiration from hip-hop culture, specifically an iconic photograph of rapper The Notorious B.I.G. (Christopher Wallace) posing in a vividly patterned Coogi sweater around 1994, during the era of his debut album Ready to Die. This image symbolized unapologetic, extravagant style in East Coast rap aesthetics, blending luxury streetwear with eye-catching designs akin to Cosby's wardrobe.[8] Australian hip-hop group Hilltop Hoods explicitly clarified the title's fashion-centric intent in a November 20, 2014, Facebook post, stating: "'Cosby Sweater' was inspired by the picture above, the iconic photo of Notorious B.I.G in the Coogi Sweater. The song's about a piece of clothing. A ridiculously colourful Cosby sweater." This statement, issued shortly after the single's September 2014 release from the album Walking Under Stars, emphasized the non-sexual homage to apparel style and predated the widespread resurgence of Cosby sexual assault allegations in late 2014.[3][4]

Development and Recording

"Cosby Sweater" was composed by Hilltop Hoods members MC Pressure (Daniel Rankin) and MC Suffa (Matthew Lambert) in 2014 as part of the songwriting for their seventh studio album, Walking Under Stars.[9] The track's concept drew from nostalgic references to colorful knitwear, with Suffa citing inspiration from the Coogi sweater worn by The Notorious B.I.G. in a famous photograph, evoking a playful nod to Bill Cosby's signature oversized, patterned sweaters from his television era.[9] This creative choice reflected the group's intent to craft lighthearted, party-oriented lyrics over a boom-bap style beat reminiscent of 1990s hip-hop production.[1] Production was handled primarily by Suffa, incorporating scratches and turntablism from DJ Debris (Barry Francis), with recording occurring in Adelaide, South Australia, where the group is based.[10] The sessions emphasized sample-based instrumentation to achieve an upbeat, accessible sound suitable for radio play, aligning with the album's overall shift toward broader commercial appeal while retaining underground rap roots.[11] Empirical decisions in beat selection prioritized rhythmic drive and hooks to support the MCs' rapid-fire flows, as evidenced by the final mix's layered percussion and melodic samples.[12] The track's development predated the escalation of Bill Cosby's sexual assault allegations into major public scrutiny, which intensified following a November 2014 New York Times report; "Cosby Sweater" appeared on the album released August 8, 2014, and as a standalone single on September 9, 2014, via Hidden Valley Records and Universal Music Australia.[1][11] This timeline underscores the song's origins in a pre-controversy context, focused on aesthetic homage rather than contemporary events.[1]

Musical Elements

Lyrics and Themes

The lyrics of "Cosby Sweater," performed by Hilltop Hoods' MCs Pressure and Suffa, revolve around self-assurance and perseverance, employing hip-hop conventions of braggadocio to assert dominance in artistic and personal pursuits. Pressure's first verse depicts immersion in one's creative element amid skepticism, with lines like "Watch me do my thing, get lost into my scene" and dismissal of passive observers ("They're not awakened, stare a lot and vacant"), underscoring rejection of conformity and relentless practice ("I practise like a master, catch the vapour like disaster").[9][13] These elements evoke resilience, portraying the rapper as undeterred by external doubt, a motif rooted in the group's portrayal of grinding from Adelaide's independent scene against industry odds.[14] Suffa's second verse amplifies this through boasts of technical prowess and cultural flair, likening lyrical delivery to "a savage passion" and fashion—symbolized by the titular sweater—as protective gear in competitive rap dynamics ("Cosby crew and jeans").[9] The content avoids any substantive nod to Bill Cosby personally, focusing instead on swagger as a tool for self-empowerment and outmaneuvering rivals, with the sweater serving as a metaphor for bold, unapologetic identity rather than endorsement.[14] The recurring chorus reinforces the song's motivational core, equating the "Cosby sweater" with introspection and triumph ("I got a Cosby sweater, I'm the man in the mirror / Walk tall, fuck whoever, I'm still getting better"), promoting confidence amid scrutiny through repetitive affirmation typical of anthemic rap hooks.[9] Group members have explained the title's origin as inspired by vibrant, patterned knitwear like Notorious B.I.G.'s Coogi sweater, extended playfully to Cosby's TV-era style, confirming non-literal intent detached from later controversies.[9] This framing aligns the track with broader hip-hop traditions of using attire as emblematic of inner strength and cultural defiance.[1]

Production and Style

DJ Debris, the Hilltop Hoods' longtime DJ and producer, crafted the beat for "Cosby Sweater" using a sample-based technique rooted in classic hip hop production.[9] The instrumental prominently features a looped, distorted guitar riff sampled from Wimple Winch's 1966 garage rock track "Save My Soul," which drives the song's high-energy momentum, alongside the foundational drum break from James Brown's 1970 funk single "Funky Drummer" for crisp, propulsive percussion that echoes breakbeat-heavy styles prevalent in 1990s rap.[15][16] A further sample from an "Ultimate Car Giveaway" segment on The Oprah Winfrey Show integrates subtle spoken-word texture, enhancing the track's playful yet aggressive vibe without overpowering the core elements.[15] The arrangement follows a straightforward intro-verse-chorus format typical of the group's output, enabling tight interplay between the beats and dual MC deliveries, with the full track running 3 minutes and 37 seconds.[17] Engineering and mixing, overseen in part by group member Suffa, emphasize vocal prominence and sonic cleanliness, ensuring intelligible flows amid the rhythmic drive—a deliberate contrast to the denser, effects-laden mixes in some modern Australian rap productions.

Release and Promotion

Album Context and Initial Release

"Cosby Sweater" was released as the third single from Hilltop Hoods' seventh studio album, Walking Under Stars, on August 8, 2014.[18] [19] The album debuted at number one on the ARIA Albums Chart during the week of August 11, 2014, continuing the group's commercial momentum in Australian hip-hop.[20] Building on an established fanbase cultivated by prior releases, including the 2006 album The Hard Road—which became the first Australian hip-hop record to reach number one on the ARIA charts and earned double platinum certification—the single targeted domestic audiences amid rising interest in local rap acts.[21] [22] Promotion emphasized Australian radio airplay and digital distribution via platforms like iTunes, with pre-album teasers generating early anticipation for the track's nostalgic, lighthearted themes.[23] At the time of its initial rollout, "Cosby Sweater" faced no significant controversy tied to its title, as major resurfaced allegations of sexual assault against Bill Cosby did not gain widespread attention until mid-November 2014.[1] [24]

Music Video and Marketing

![Still from the "Cosby Sweater" music video][float-right] The music video for "Cosby Sweater," directed by Richard Coburn and produced by Anna Bardsley-Jones for Kojo, premiered on the band's official YouTube channel on September 18, 2014.[23] Shot primarily at Tenth & Gibson studios in a single day, the video emphasizes performance-driven visuals, showcasing the Hilltop Hoods members delivering their verses alongside guest appearances from Australian hip-hop contemporaries including Briggs, Trials, K21, and models Anna McEvoy and Mina Imsirovic.[25][26] The production avoids direct references to Bill Cosby, instead highlighting group camaraderie through collaborative energy and rhythmic synchronization, with attire incorporating vibrant, patterned elements that subtly evoke the song's titular fashion reference without overt caricature.[26] Marketing efforts centered on digital platforms and live integrations to amplify the single's reach within the Australian hip-hop scene. The YouTube release served as a primary promotional vehicle, rapidly accumulating views and positioning the track as a standout from the Walking Under Stars album.[23] The video's unveiling was framed as a companion to the song's established radio and streaming traction, fostering fan engagement through shared artist features that underscored community ties in the genre.[26] Complementary promotion included high-profile live renditions, such as the band's performance at the 2014 ARIA Awards, which extended the video's performative aesthetic to broadcast audiences and reinforced the track's energetic appeal without relying on controversy.[27] Tour alignments, including dates branded around the single, further integrated visual motifs from the video into stage presentations, prioritizing authentic hip-hop connectivity over external publicity angles.[28]

Commercial Performance

Chart Achievements

"Cosby Sweater" entered the ARIA Singles Chart in October 2014, reaching a peak position of number 4 and maintaining presence in the top 10 for multiple weeks thereafter.[19] [29] The track finished at number 3 on Triple J's Hottest 100 countdown for 2014, reflecting strong listener support via public votes.[30] International chart performance remained modest, with limited documented peaks outside Australia. In a 2025 retrospective, "Cosby Sweater" ranked number 64 on Triple J's Hottest 100 of All-Time Australian Songs, based on aggregated voter input across editions.[31] [32] By late 2023, the song had surpassed 50 million combined plays on platforms including Spotify and YouTube, with ongoing streaming growth contributing to totals exceeding 140 million Spotify streams and 32 million views on its official music video by mid-2025.[33] [34] [35]

Certifications and Sales

"Cosby Sweater" received its highest certification from the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), achieving 7× Platinum status for 490,000 equivalent units, encompassing a combination of physical sales, digital downloads, and weighted streaming equivalents.[36] This accreditation underscores the track's enduring popularity within Australia, where ARIA thresholds equate one Platinum award to 70,000 units. The certification reflects predominantly digital consumption, as physical single sales have declined industry-wide, with streaming playing a significant role in accumulating equivalent units post-2014 release.[36] No certifications from major international bodies such as the RIAA in the United States, Music Canada, or BPI in the United Kingdom have been awarded to the single, aligning with Hilltop Hoods' status as a regionally dominant act in Australian hip-hop rather than a global export. Global streaming metrics, including over 142 million plays on Spotify alone, contribute to overall consumption but do not translate to bundled international certifications under varying jurisdictional rules.[37]

Reception and Controversy

Critical and Fan Response

The song garnered positive feedback from Australian music outlets for its energetic production and humorous lyrics. A preview review highlighted its "upbeat tempo and humour" as creating a track that was "impressive to a musical ear."[38] During the 2014 Cosby Sweater Tour, live performances were particularly well-received, with one assessment describing it as "possibly the best track of the tour."[39] Fan reception emphasized its catchiness and bravado, contributing to widespread replay in hip-hop playlists among Australian audiences. This enthusiasm was reflected in its number three ranking in Triple J's Hottest 100 poll for 2014.[40] On discussion forums like Reddit, supporters praised its authenticity and flow, though detractors critiqued it as emblematic of repetitive Australian hip-hop styles.[41] User-aggregated ratings showed mixed results, with Rate Your Music assigning the single an average of 2.90 out of 5 based on 36 ratings, suggesting appreciation for lyrical tightness but limited novelty.[42] International critics largely overlooked the track, aligning with the group's primary domestic focus.

Backlash Over Cosby Association and Band Clarification

The backlash against "Cosby Sweater" emerged in November 2014, shortly after comedian Hannibal Buress's October 2014 stand-up routine in Philadelphia reignited public attention to longstanding sexual assault allegations against Bill Cosby, prompting over 60 women to come forward with claims dating from the 1960s to the 2000s.[43][44] Some critics and social media users interpreted the song's title as a veiled reference to sexual innuendo, drawing on Urban Dictionary entries describing vulgar acts involving colorful cereal vomit to mimic Cosby's signature sweaters.[45] However, Hilltop Hoods explicitly rejected this association, stating on November 20, 2014, via Facebook that the track was inspired solely by an iconic photo of The Notorious B.I.G. wearing a Coogi sweater and Cosby's own garish knitwear from The Cosby Show, not any slang definition.[3] On November 21, 2014, the group issued a formal statement expressing regret for name-checking Cosby, noting they had only recently learned of the allegations while writing and recording the song for their August 2014 album Walking Under Stars.[4] They clarified that the lyrics celebrated stylish, standout clothing as a metaphor for authenticity in hip-hop, with no intent to endorse or reference misconduct, and emphasized their opposition to any form of abuse.[5] This response predated Cosby's 2018 criminal conviction for aggravated indecent assault—stemming from a 2004 incident—which carried a sentence of three to ten years but was overturned by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in June 2021 on due process grounds, as prosecutors had violated a prior non-prosecution agreement by charging him after he gave potentially incriminating civil deposition testimony.[46][47] The controversy highlighted tensions between #MeToo-era scrutiny, which amplified accusers' voices and led to Cosby's professional downfall including settled civil suits, and criticisms of evidentiary challenges in decades-old claims lacking contemporaneous corroboration, alongside judicial findings of prosecutorial overreach in the overturned case.[48] Hilltop Hoods maintained that their reference was cultural and pre-dated the scandal's resurgence, framing the song as innocuous fashion commentary rather than any implied support for Cosby personally.[4]

Legacy and Impact

Cultural References and Performances

"Cosby Sweater" has endured as a core element of Hilltop Hoods' live sets across multiple tours, demonstrating its adaptability amid shifting cultural contexts. During the band's 2017 North American tour, the track was performed at the Vogue Theatre in Vancouver on November 18, 2017, highlighting its role in engaging international audiences.[49] In collaborative spectacles, such as the January 16, 2015, rendition at Beat The Drum featuring artists including Illy, Horrorshow, Drapht, Seth Sentry, Tkay Maidza, and Thundamentals, the song underscored its communal appeal within Australian hip-hop circles.[50] Post-2014, following initial allegations against Bill Cosby, Hilltop Hoods integrated explanatory preambles into performances to clarify the title's origins in the comedian's pre-scandal television persona, preserving the song's festive intent without endorsement of later revelations. This approach was articulated during preparations for their 2022 Australian tour, where members reflected on the track's altered reception and their commitment to contextualizing it live.[51] The practice continued in subsequent outings, including a February 13, 2023, "Restrung" acoustic version shared online and a September 14, 2019, appearance at triple j's One Night Stand event.[52][53] In 2025, the song featured in European legs of the Never Coming Home Tour, with a performance at Munich's Muffathalle on August 22 drawing fan-recorded clips that emphasized its rhythmic endurance.[54] Fan engagement extended this vitality through platforms like TikTok, where user-generated covers and remixes proliferated in 2024 and early 2025, often ironically nodding to the sweater motif's garish style from The Cosby Show era while sidestepping controversy. Beyond concerts, the track has surfaced in Australian hip-hop anthologies and online memes repurposing its hook for fashion satire, such as exaggerated "ugly sweater" trends evoking Cosby's on-screen wardrobe, thereby embedding it in ironic cultural commentary.[55] These references affirm the song's persistence in niche media ecosystems, driven by grassroots reinterpretations rather than mainstream revival.

Retrospective Evaluations

In a 2022 interview on The Project, Hilltop Hoods members reflected on the song's altered public perception following Bill Cosby's legal convictions for sexual assault, noting that their relationship with "Cosby Sweater" had "changed forever" amid the ensuing backlash, yet they maintained its original artistic intent as a nostalgic nod to 1980s cultural motifs without endorsing or referencing Cosby's personal conduct.[51] The group did not disavow the track or alter its performance, underscoring a commitment to the work's standalone lyrical and musical merits, which drew from Cosby's pre-scandal television persona rather than any moral alignment.[56] This stance aligns with hip-hop's historical pattern of repurposing pop culture icons for artistic effect, often detached from the figures' later revelations, as seen in references to controversial artists like The Notorious B.I.G. in subsequent works despite his own legal entanglements. Empirical metrics further illustrate the song's cultural persistence: in Triple J's 2025 Hottest 100 of Australian Songs—a milestone poll commemorating the station's 50th anniversary—"Cosby Sweater" placed 64th among enduring Australian tracks, voted by listeners and signaling sustained canonical recognition over a decade post-release.[57][31] Such rankings counter narratives of permanent "cancellation," revealing media tendencies toward hindsight bias in retroactively tying unrelated artistic choices to external scandals, particularly when initial acclaim predates full public awareness of those issues; the track's continued live performances and streaming viability through 2025 affirm its separation from Cosby's downfall in public memory. This resilience highlights causal distinctions between a song's intrinsic cultural resonance—rooted in Australian hip-hop's larrikin storytelling—and transient associative controversies.

References

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