Showing posts with label Beatles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beatles. Show all posts

That'll Be The Day (1957) (1958)

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By: Buddy Holly (and the Crickets.)

Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin Holley September 7, 1936, in Lubbock, Texas, and died at the age of 22 in a plane crash February 3, 1959, in Clear Lake, Iowa.

Buddy Holly was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1986.

In 2004 Rolling Stone magazine ranked him at #13 on their list of the Greatest Rock And Roll Artists Of All Time.

On February 8, 1956, Holly signed a recording contract with Decca Records that mistakenly dropped the "e" from his last name (Holley). When "That'll Be The Day" was first recorded July 22, 1956 in Nashville, Tennessee, Decca producer Owen Bradley thought it was of poor quality. He insisted that Holly sing it above his normal range while playing it very slow.

When Holly and The Crickets (rhythm guitarist Niki Sullivan, bassist Larry Welborn and drummer Jerry Allison) re-recorded it February 25, 1957, in producer Norman Petty's Clovis, New Mexico, studios, a few changes were made: the song's key was lowered from D to A (to better suit Holly's guitar intro and solo, and vocal range), and backing vocals were added by Sullivan, June Clark, and Gary and Ramona Tollett.

When the new version of "That'll Be The Day" (credited to the Crickets and released on Brunswick Records) became a hit, Decca attempted to capitalize on it by releasing the earlier version.

In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked "That'll Be The Day" at #39 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

Don McLean's 1972 song "American Pie", about the history of rock and roll music, talks about "the day the music died," referring to the plane crash that killed Holly, Ritchie Valens and J.P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson. McLean based the phrase "This'll be the day that I die" on Holly's "That'll be the day when I die" lyric.

Chart position:
#1 (US), #1 (UK).

It was preceded at #1 in the US by "Diana" (Paul Anka) and succeeded by "Mary's Boy Child" (Harry Belafonte).

The Top Ten Songs:
September 23, 1957 (US Billboard Hot 100).
  1. "That'll Be The Day" (Buddy Holly and the Crickets)
  2. "Tammy" (Debbie Reynolds)
  3. "Diana" (Paul Anka)
  4. "Honeycomb" (Jimmie Rodgers)
  5. "Whole Lotta Shakin' Goin' On" (Jerry Lee Lewis)
  6. "Teddy Bear"/"Loving You" (Elvis Presley)
  7. "Mr. Lee" (Bobbettes)
  8. "Rainbow" (Russ Hamilton)
  9. "In The Middle Of An Island" (Tony Bennett)
  10. "Remember You're Mine"/"There's A Gold Mine In The Sky" (Pat Boone)

Written by: Buddy Holly, Jerry Allison, and producer Norman Petty.

Though Petty was not involved in writing the song, he was given a composing credit. Holly and Allison went to see the John Ford-directed Western film The Searchers, starring John Wayne, in June of 1956. In the film, Wayne frequently said, "That'll be the day!" The phrase stuck with Holly. Soon after, he and Allison wrote the song, marking the first time they wrote together.



Also by: The Quarrymen, who recorded it in 1958 at Percy Phillips' Kensington Custom Service, an electrical goods shop in Liverpool, England. It was their first recording, costing them about $2. They later became better known as the Beatles.

Paul McCartney owns the only known original copy, which ranked at #2 on a list of the 25 Most Valuable Recordings of All Time. It was finally released on the collection Anthology 1 in 1995.

Interestingly, Paul McCartney has owned the publishing rights to the Buddy Holly song catalogue since 1979, after purchasing them from Norman Petty.



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Yesterday (1965)

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By:
The Beatles.

Though it is credited to the group, the only Beatle on the song is Paul McCartney. He sang and played acoustic guitar with a string quartet.  Producer George Martin had said, "We can't put Ringo on it, it's too heavy…what about a classical string quartet?"

It was released on the soundtrack for the Beatles' 1965 film Help! Because "Yesterday" differed so greatly from their other songs, the other Beatles vetoed the song's release as a single in the UK.

It won the Ivor Novello award for Most Outstanding Song of 1965. 

On BMI's Top 100 Songs of the Century (based on American radio and television airplay), "Yesterday" ranked #2 for having been played more than seven million times. 

In 2000, it ranked #1 on Rolling Stone & MTV's list of 100 Greatest Pop Songs.

 Chart position: #1 (US, 4 weeks).

"Yesterday" sold a million copies within the first 10 days of its release.

It also reached #1 in Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, Hong Kong, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway and Spain. It wasn't issued as a single in the UK until 1976 (when it reached #8.)

The Top Ten Songs:
October 30, 1965 (US Billboard Hot 100).
  1. "Yesterday" (Beatles)
  2. "A Lover's Concerto" (Toys)
  3. "Get Off Of My Cloud" (Rolling Stones)
  4. "Keep On Dancing" (Gentrys)
  5. "Everybody Loves A Clown" (Gary Lewis and the Playboys)
  6. ""Treat Her Right (Roy Head)
  7. "You're The One" (Vogues)
  8. "Positively 4th Street" (Bob Dylan)
  9. "Hang On Sloopy" (McCoys)
  10. "1-2-3" (Len Barry)

Written by:
Paul McCartney, though all Beatles compositions by McCartney and/or John Lennon are credited as "Lennon/McCartney".

McCartney has said the entire melody came to him in a dream one night.  Upon waking, he went to a piano and recorded the tune on a tape recorder to avoid letting it slip from his mind.  McCartney was concerned that he might have subconsciously plagiarised someone else's work.

McCartney said, "For about a month I went round to people in the music business and asked them whether they had ever heard it before. Eventually it became like handing something in to the police. I thought If no one claimed it after a few weeks then I could have it".

The initial working title was "Scrambled Eggs", which was used until something more suitable could be written.  The final lyrics were written on the back of an envelope, which is still owned by McCartney.

In July 2003, British musicologists stumbled upon remarkable similarities between the lyric and rhyming schemes of "Yesterday" and the popular song "Answer Me" (recorded by singers such as Frankie Laine and Nat "King" Cole,) leading to speculation that McCartney had been influenced by the song.

Others have speculated that McCartney subconsciously based "Yesterday" on Ray Charles' version of "Georgia On My Mind".  One claim goes even furthur back, to a 19th century Neapolitan song called "Piccere' Che Vene a Dicere".

Also by: Too many to list!

The Guinness Book of Records ranks "Yesterday" as the world's most recorded popular song ever written, with over 3,000 versions. A short list: the Supremes, Perry Como, Jan and Dean, Ray Charles, Floyd Kramer, Smokey Robinson & the Miracles, Marvin Gaye, Elvis Presley, Bill Medley, Bob Dylan, Dr. John, Michael Bolton, Boyz II Men, Tom Jones, Andy Williams, Tammy Wynette, the Smothers Brothers, Placido Domingo, Eddie Fisher, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Burl Ives, Gladys Knight & the Pips, Brenda Lee, the Letterman, Liberace, Johnny Mathis, Willie Nelson, Ray Price, Lou Rawls, the Seekers, Frank Sinatra and the Temptations.

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We Can Work It Out (1965)

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By:
The Beatles.

The Beatles are perhaps the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful popular music bands in history. Their highly influential music and style revolutionized the music industry in the 1960s, and they continue to be held in high regard for their artistic achievements and role in the history of popular music.

"We Can Work It Out"
was recorded on October 20 and 29, 1965, with Paul McCartney (born James Paul McCartney June 18, 1942) on vocal and bass, John Lennon (born John Winston Lennon October 9, 1940, died December 8, 1980) on vocal, rhythm guitar and harmonium, George Harrison (born February 24, 1943, died November 29, 2001) on backing vocals and tambourine and Ringo Starr (born Richard Starkey July 7, 1940) on drums.

It was released as a "double A-sided" single with "Day Tripper", the first time both sides of a single were so designated in an initial release.

Chart position:
#1 (US), three weeks, #1 (UK), five weeks.

It was their fastest-selling single, breaking the record held by "Can't Buy Me Love". It ranked #6 on Billboard's Top 100 songs of the year for 1966.

It was the last of six #1 US singles in a row, a record at the time. It was preceded by "I Feel Fine", "Eight Days a Week", "Ticket to Ride", "Help!", and "Yesterday".

It was preceded at #1 in the US by "The Sounds Of Silence" (Simon And Garfunkel) and succeeded by "My Love" (Petula Clark).

The Top Ten Songs: January 8, 1966 (US Billboard Hot 100).
  1. "We Can Work It Out" (Beatles)
  2. "The Sounds of Silence" (Simon and Garfunkel)
  3. "She's Just My Style" (Gary Lewis and the Playboys)
  4. "Flowers on the Wall" (Statler Brothers)
  5. "Ebb Tide" (Righteous Brothers)
  6. "Over and Over" (Dave Clark Five)
  7. "I Got You (I Feel Good)" (James Brown)
  8. "Five O'Clock World" (Vogues)
  9. "Turn! Turn! Turn!" (Byrds)
  10. "Day Tripper" (Beatles)

Written by:
John Lennon and Paul McCartney.

Lennon and McCartney are two of the most popular composers and singers of popular music. Paul McCartney is listed in the Guinness World Records as the most successful composer in popular music history, with a record twenty-nine US number one singles (twenty of them with The Beatles, the rest with his group Wings and as a solo artist). McCartney has written/co-written credit on over 50 top ten hits, more than any other songwriter.

"We Can Work It Out"
is one of the rare Lennon/McCartney collaborations that happened after they wrote their first hit singles in 1963.

In the 1998 biography Paul McCartney: Many Years From Now, McCartney said, "I wrote it as a more uptempo thing, country and western. I had the idea, the title, had a couple of verses and the basic idea for it, then I took it to John to finish it off and we wrote the middle together. Which is nice: 'Life is very short. There's no time for fussing and fighting, my friend.' Then it was George Harrison's idea to put the middle into waltz time, like a German waltz. That came on the session, it was one of the cases of the arrangement being done on the session."

Also by:
Stevie Wonder, whose version reached #13 (US) in 1971. It also earned Wonder a second Grammy Award nomination in 1972 for Best Male R&B Vocal Performance.


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Roll Over Beethoven (1956) (1963)

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By:
Chuck Berry (born Charles Edward Anderson Berry born October 18, 1926 in St. Louis, Missouri.)

One of the pioneers of rock and roll music and rock guitar. John Lennon said, "If you tried to give rock and roll another name, you might call it 'Chuck Berry'."

Berry was one of the first musicians to be inducted into the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame on its opening in 1986.

In 2004, Berry was rated #5 in Rolling Stone Magazine's 100 Greatest Artists of All Time.

In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine ranked
"Roll Over Beethoven" at #97 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

During the mastering (final mixing) of "Roll Over Beethoven", the finished track was intentionally sped up half a step.


In 1973, "Tell Tchaikovsky the news" took on new meaning. The new owners of NYC classical music station WNCN announced a change of format to rock & roll by interrupting a performance of the Mozart Requiem with "Roll Over Beethoven". The station's classical audience was so outraged they successfully petitioned the FCC to force a return to the previous format.


Chart position:
#29 (US), #2 (US R&B).

Written by:
Chuck Berry.

Berry also wrote and recorded such songs as "Maybellene", "Johnny B. Goode", "Memphis, Tennessee", "Rock And Roll Music", "Sweet Little Sixteen", "School Days", "No Particular Place To Go" and "Promised Land".

Berry wrote the song as an affectionate dig at his sister Lucy, who spent so much time playing classical music on the family piano that young Chuck rarely got a turn.



Also by:
The Beatles, whose version (with lead vocal and lead guitar by George Harrison) reached #68 in the US in 1965.

Never intended to be released as a single, it was originally a track on their 1963 album With The Beatles, which had advance orders of more than 500,000 copies. It sold another 500,000 copies by September 1965, making it the second album to sell a million copies in the UK, the first being the South Pacific soundtrack.

With The Beatles
stayed at the #1 for 21 weeks, displacing their debut album Please Please Me. Because of this, the Beatles occupied the top spot for the equivalent of almost an entire year (51 consecutive weeks.)

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Act Naturally (1963) (1965)

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By:
Buck Owens (born Alvis Owens, Jr., August 12th, 1929 in Sherman, Texas, died in his sleep of heart attack March 25, 2006 in Bakersfield, CA.)

His nickname of "Buck" was self-anointed when he was just a toddler, and came from a mule on the family farm.

In the 1950s, Buck Owens, along with Wynn Stewart, Merle Haggard and others local country musicians, pioneered a rock and roll-influenced country music style in Bakersfield, CA called the "Bakersfield sound," a then unique and fresh sound defined by being stylistically clean and crisp, with no fiddles or pedal steel, and characterized by sharp, twangy guitar riffs and a strong back-beat. Their influence was so great that Bakersfield is considered today second only to Nashville, Tennessee in their influence on the entire country music genre.

The name of Owens' band, the Buckaroos, was named by Merle Haggard, who was a former member.

Chart position:
#1 (US Country).

"Act Naturally" was Owens' first #1 country hit.

It was #1 on the US Country chart for 6 weeks in June and July 1963. It was preceded by "Lonesome 7-7203" (Hawkshaw Hawkins) and succeeded by "Ring of Fire" (Johnny Cash).

All together, Owens had 20 #1 hits on the country music charts.

The Top Ten Songs: June 29, 1963 (US Billboard Country Singles).
  1. "Act Naturally" (Buck Owens)
  2. "Loneseome 7-7203" (Hawkshaw Hawkins)
  3. "We Must Have Been Out Of Our Minds" (George Jones and Melba Montgomery)
  4. "Still" (Bill Anderson)
  5. "Ring Of Fire" (Johnny Cash)
  6. "Six Days On The Road" (Dave Dudley)
  7. "Roll Muddy River" (Wilburn Brothers)
  8. "Old Showboat" (Stonewall Jackson)
  9. "Pearl, Pearl, Pearl" (Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs)
  10. "The Man Who Robbed The Bank At Santa Fe" (Hank Snow)

Written by:
Voni Morrison & Johnny Russell, who also together wrote the Porter Wagoner/Dolly Parton duet "Making Plans".

Johnny Russell was a singer and songwriter who also wrote/co-wrote such songs as Jim Reeve's "In a Mansion Stands My Love" (which was recorded by Reeves at the suggestion of then RCA producer Chet Atkins, and was released as the B-side of Reeves' hit "He'll Have To Go",) "Have I Told You Lately That I Love You", The Statler Brothers' "You'll Be Back Every Night (In My Dreams)", and George Strait's #1 country hit "Let's Fall to Pieces Together".

The song came to be when Russell broke a date with a girlfriend when he was offered a recording session in Hollywood, and apologetically explained to her that "they're gonna put me in the movies."



Also by:
The Beatles, released on their 1965 album Help!, which, ironically, was the soundtrack for their movie of the same name.

Ringo Starr sang the lead vocal (with Paul McCartney singing harmony). Starr was an avid fan of country music. The Beatles performed this on their third appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, marking the only time Ringo sang on the show.

Another song performed on that show was a solo number by McCartney: "Yesterday", which held at #1 in the US for 4 weeks. "Act Naturally" was the B-side, and it reached #47 (US.)

Buck Owens and Ringo Starr later became good friends, and in 1989 recorded "Act Naturally" as a duet, which was nominated for a Grammy award.

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She Loves You (1963)

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By:
The Beatles.

The Beatles are perhaps the most critically acclaimed and commercially successful popular music bands in history. Their highly influential music and style revolutionized the music industry in the 1960s, and they continue to be held in high regard for their artistic achievements and role in the history of popular music.

"She Loves You"
was recorded on July 1, 1963, with Paul McCartney (born James Paul McCartney June 18, 1942) on vocal and bass, John Lennon (born John Winston Lennon October 9, 1940, died December 8, 1980) on vocal and rhythm guitar, George Harrison (born February 24, 1943, died November 29, 2001) on harmony vocal and lead guitar and Ringo Starr (born Richard Starkey July 7, 1940) on drums.

Oddly, Electrola Gesellschaft, the German division of EMI (the parent of The Beatles' British record label, Parlophone Records), felt the only way to sell Beatles records in Germany was to rerecord them in German.  The Beatles hated the idea, but were forced to comply, recording "Sie Liebt Dich" on January 29, 1964, along with a few other German versions of their songs, at the Pathe Marconi Studios in Paris.

In October 2005, Uncut Magazine ranked "She Loves You" at #3 on their list of songs that changed the world, behind Elvis Presley's "Heartbreak Hotel" and Bob Dylan's "Like a Rolling Stone".

Chart position:
#1 (US).

"She Loves You"
was #1 for two weeks in March 1964. It was preceded at #1 by "I Want to Hold Your Hand" (Beatles) and succeeded by "Can't Buy Me Love" (Beatles).

During the week of April 4, 1964, they occupied the Top 5 in the US (#1: "Can't Buy Me Love", #2: "Twist and Shout", #3: "She Loves You", #4: "I Want to Hold Your Hand" and #5: "Please Please Me",) the only group in the history of music to achieve that.  They also had 7 other charting songs (#31: "I Saw Her Standing There", #41: "From Me to You", #46: "Do You Want to Know A Secret?", #58: "All My Loving", #65: "You Can't Do That", and #68: "Roll Over Beethoven",) totaling 12 songs on the charts that week, a feat never matched before or since.

Written by:
John Lennon and Paul McCartney.

Lennon and McCartney are two of the most popular composers and singers of popular music. Paul McCartney is listed in the Guinness World Records as the most successful composer in popular music history, with a record twenty-nine US number one singles (twenty of them with The Beatles, the rest with his group Wings and as a solo artist). McCartney has written/co-written credit on over 50 top ten hits, more than any other songwriter.

The duo wrote "She Loves You" in the Beatles' hotel room after a concert at the Majestic Ballroom in Newcastle, England while on tour with Roy Orbison and Gerry and the Pacemakers.  It was inspired by Bobby Rydell's "Forget Him" as an answer song. 

The "Yeah, yeah, yeah's" were added just before the song was completed, becoming the subject of controversy.  McCartney's father objected, suggesting they change it to the better sounding (in his opinion) "yes, yes, yes."

During recording, George Martin, The Beatles' producer, didn't agree with Lennon and McCartney about the ending chord.  Martin felt that a G major 6th was "too jazzy".  They agreed to try something else once, and all three agreed it wasn't as good.  Martin later said, "I told them it was corny.  I told them Glenn Miller was doing it twenty years ago. But they said, 'So what?' That was what they wanted."

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