It received mixed reviews from music critics but gained commercial success around the world.
A new music video was issued for this version but does not feature Coco, which was a decision from Positiva Records.
In 1999,[1] British DJ Vimto had the idea of taking the 1995 sound recording of Coco's a cappella vocals from the song "I Need a Miracle" and mixing it with the music of Fragma's "Toca Me".
Fragma's producer Ramon Zenker was asked by Positiva Records to mix "Toca Me" with the vocals of "I Need a Miracle" in a proper way for a single-release.
'"[5] While mixing both recordings, he stated he couldn't believe how the music of "Toca Me" and the vocals of "I Need a Miracle" fit together.
[8] According to Star, she has never been paid for her vocal contribution to "Toca's Miracle" despite it selling over 3 million copies worldwide.
[9] Shortly after, Kirsty Hawkshaw revealed that Fragma had never paid her royalties for her contribution to the 2006 single "Radio Waves".
On 1 July 2022, Coco Star released a new version of "Toca's Miracle" on Spinnin' Records.
The release is credited solely to Coco Star, but is musically similar to the 2000 Fragma version.
DJ Ron Slomowicz from About.com said ""Toca's Miracle" became one of those dance (and even club) standards - reaching the same pinnacle as Darude's "Sandstorm", which is considered the "gold-standard" of music production and Cher's "Believe".
Nick Levine from Digital Spy gave it a fairly mixed review, only awarding it two stars out of five.
[17] The song also entered inside the top twenty of the Irish Singles Chart, peaking at number 20.
Toca's Miracle peaked inside the top forty in Finland, Sweden, Belgium and managed to chart in countries including Switzerland, France and the Netherlands.
In Coco's native United Kingdom, the mash-up peaked at number one on the UK Singles Chart.
The track entered with over 185,000 copies sold in its first week, becoming the highest-charting single that month and was certified platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) in 2013.
In Austria, a 2012 update version of Coco's original (known as the "Guru Project Remix") debuted at number sixty for a sole week until falling out.
At the end of the video, it shows Coco's team make a comeback to win the game 3-2.
The video starts with a woman in a room, lip-syncing the song, then begins to strip her clothes off and tries to kiss a man.
The next shot features another woman in her bra and underwear, dancing in a supposed bathroom, with another man in the room.