My Life In Songs 1954 – 2024

. Birth of New Genres

  • Progressive Rock: Often cited as the genre’s “Big Bang,” 1969 saw the release of In the Court of the Crimson King by King Crimson, which melded rock with classical and jazz structures.
  • Jazz-Rock Fusion: Miles Davis pioneered this sound with his transition into electric jazz, while Frank Zappa’s Hot Rats revolutionized rock with its complex jazz-influenced arrangements and virtuosic musicianship.
  • Protopunk: The Stooges and MC5 emerged from Detroit with an aggressive, raw sound that laid the foundation for the punk rock movement.
  • Country Rock: The Flying Burrito Brothers and Bob Dylan (with Nashville Skyline) began bridging the gap between traditional country roots and modern rock

Technological and Studio Innovations

  • The Moog Synthesizer: Robert Moog received a patent for his voltage-controlled oscillator in 1969. While Wendy Carlos had popularized it a year earlier, 1969 saw its adoption by mainstream acts like the Beatles (on Abbey Road) and its use to soundtrack the Apollo 11 moon landing, cementing its association with futuristic sounds.
  • Conceptual Production: The Beatles utilized the eight-track recorder at Abbey Road Studios to create seamless suites of music, such as the side-two medley on Abbey Road, which redefined album structure.
  • Rock Operas: The Who released Tommy, one of the first successful “rock operas,” proving that rock music could handle narrative complexity and theatrical scale

Cultural and Live Performance Shifts

  • Massive Festivals: Woodstock (August 1969) transformed the “festival” from a small gathering into a massive cultural and political event.
  • Global Fusion: The Tropicalia movement in Brazil, led by Gilberto Gil and Caetano Veloso, fused traditional bossa nova with psychedelic rock and political activism.
  • Live Albums: The Grateful Dead released Live/Dead, one of the first multi-track live recordings to successfully capture the improvisational energy of a “jam band” session. 

Although it might be assumed that Sly Stone’s Song “I Want To Take You Higher” is a drug song it is actually about taking you musically higher. Wilbert Harrison’s “Let’s Work Together” was covered by Canned Heat (1970), Bryan Ferry ((1976) and George Thorogood (1995). The Beatle’s “Come Together” had an interesting history. Timothy Leary was in need of a campaign song when running against Ronald Reagan for Governor. The song included the line ” here come old flattop” which unfortunately was lifted from Chuck Berry’s automobile song “You Can’t Catch Me” and Berry’s manager sued which was settled out of court.

I got turned on to Sha Na Na after seeing the Woodstock movie. They were so different from all the other artists on the bill. Badfinger were mentored by the Beatles and signed to the Apple label. Funny on my list the their song “Come and Get It” is followed by the aforementioned “Come Together“. King Crimson’s album “In The Court Of The Crimson King” certainly blew my young listening ears into another dimension. Take a listen to the Byrd’s “Deportee” and very sadly hear that nothing has changed in The U.S.A.

Lightnin’ Hopkins (b. 15/03/1912 d. 30.01.1982) as with many old bluesmen he had a resurgence late in his life:

  • The Context: By the late 1950s, Hopkins was largely forgotten as rock & roll took over the music scene, and he was struggling, sometimes living in poverty.
  • The Discoverer: Mack McCormick sought him out in Houston and helped present him to new audiences, leading to live performances, including his Carnegie Hall debut in 1960.
  • The Recordings: Sam Charters recorded Hopkins in his small apartment in 1959, capturing his raw, traditional country-blues style for Folkways, introducing him to a new generation of listeners.
  • The Impact: This rediscovery marked the start of a prolific period where Hopkins became a major figure in the folk-blues movement, touring internationally and achieving legendary status. 

Dutch rock band Golden Earring took the psychedelic Byrd’s song “Eight Miles High” and made it into a 19 minute epic. Allen Toussaint wrote and produced many hits for Lee Dorsey, including chart-toppers like “Working in the Coal Mine,” “Get Out of My Life, Woman,” “Ride Your Pony,” “Holy Cow” and Everything I Do Gohn’ Be Funky , resulting in numerous successful singles that defined Dorsey’s career and New Orleans R&B.

The classic Stones’ song “Gimme Shelter” includes the incredible vocals of Merry Clayton which adds the eerily ambience . The song was recorded in London at Olympic Studios in February and March 1969; the vocals were recorded in Los Angeles at Sunset Sound Recorders and Elektra Studios in October and November that same year. Nicky Hopkins played piano, Jimmy Miller played percussion, Charlie Watts played drums, Bill Wyman played bass, Jagger played harmonica and sang backup vocals with Richards and Merry Clayton. Clayton was summoned from bed around midnight by Nitzsche, Clayton – about four months pregnant – made her recording with just a few takes and then returned home to bed. Guitarist Brian Jones was absent during these sessions, Richards being credited with rhythm and lead guitars on the album sleeve. Upon returning home, Clayton suffered a miscarriage, attributed by some sources to her exertions during the recording***. Look up Clayton’s bio and you will be blowin away at how many times you have heard her voice on hit after hit.

The Electric Flag was an American blues/rock/soul band from Chicago, led by guitarist Mike Bloomfield, keyboardist Barry Goldberg (see a Goldberg John Coburn Stewart (September 5, 1939 – January 19, 2008) was an American songwriter and singer. He is known for his contributions to the American folk music movement of the 1960s while with the Kingston Trio (1961–1967) and as a popular music songwriter of the Monkees‘ No. 1 hit “Daydream Believer” and his own No. 5 hit “Gold” during a solo career spanning 40 years that included almost four dozen albums[1] and more than 600 recorded songssong listed below), and drummer Buddy Miles, and featured various other musicians such as vocalist Nick Gravenites and bassist Harvey Brooks. Bloomfield formed the Electric Flag in 1967,following his stint with the Butterfield Blues Band***. Albert King’s Killing Floor is a great remake of the original Howlin’ Wolf song (1964). Interestingly Led Zeppelin’s “Lemon Song” (1969) borrowed heavily from the Wolf’s song. So much so that  it lead to a leading to a lawsuit, and they eventually added Howlin’ Wolf (Chester Burnett) as a co-writer, acknowledging the infringement on a classic blues tune. The song began as a live cover of “Killing Floor,” incorporating lyrics from Robert Johnson’s “Traveling Riverside Blues,” and was settled out of court in 1972, resulting in credited song writing for Burnett. Zeppelin did have a bit of history for not crediting the original artists on some recordings. On January 11, 1985, Willie Dixon sued Led Zeppelin over the song “Whole Lotta Love”, on the grounds that it contained too many similarities to his own song “You Need Love” which was recorded by Muddy Waters in 1962. The lawsuit was settled out of court in Dixon’s favour. Don’t get me wrong I love Led Zeppelin and the blues genre has a history of borrowing from previous performers.

John Stewart (September 5, 1939 – January 19, 2008) is an artist more known for his song-writing. He is known for his contributions to the American folk music movement of the 1960s while with the Kingston Trio (1961–1967) and as a popular music songwriter of the Monkees‘ No. 1 hit “Daydream Believer” and his own No. 5 hit “Gold” during a solo career spanning 40 years that included almost four dozen albums and more than 600 recorded songs.

Nick Drake was a troubled genius who recorded three incredible albums. Five Leaves Left (1969), Bryter Layter (1971) and Pink Moon (1972) before dying way to young. On November 25, 1974, he died in his parents’ home from an overdose of antidepressant medication; suicide has been speculated, although some of his family and friends dispute this. He went largely unknown to the general music public but had a major boost to his back catalogue sales when in 1999, the song “Pink Moon” was used in a Volkswagen commercial, boosting Drake’s US album sales from about 6,000 copies in 1999 to 74,000 in 2000. I would encourage everyone to listen to Drake’s work.

If you know who the Swampers are then congratulations you are a music nerd like myself I was very lucky to visit the Muscle Shoals and Fame studios in Alabama whilst on the trip of a lifetime (The Last Hurrah) with Bernie, Hoff and my wife Wendy. The Swampers, also known as The Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section, are a legendary group of session musicians based in Muscle Shoals, Alabama. They gained fame for their exceptional talent and distinctive sound that shaped the landscape of popular music in the 1960s and beyond. Formed in the 1960s, the core members of the Swampers included David Hood on bass, Roger Hawkins on drums, Jimmy Johnson on guitar, and Barry Beckett on keyboards. They became renowned for their versatility, contributing to recordings across various genres including R&B, rock, soul, and country. The Swampers are best known for their work at the renowned recording studios, FAME Studios and Muscle Shoals Sound Studio. They provided the musical foundation for numerous hits by iconic artists like Aretha Franklin, Wilson Pickett, The Rolling Stones, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Paul Simon, and many more. Their ability to infuse soulful and rhythmic elements into songs became a hallmark of their sound. Their unique style and tight-knit collaboration led to the creation of unforgettable tracks that continue to resonate with audiences worldwide. The Swampers’ influence has left an indelible mark on the music industry, solidifying their place as a vital force in shaping the sound of American popular music. 

I was only 15 in 1969 and I could of sworn that Dutch band Shocking Blue were singing “I’m Your Penis” when in fact it was “I’m Your Venus” on their hit “Venus”. Maybe it had to do with their sultry lead singer Mariska Veres (see photo below)

nineteen and sixty-nine

  • (If Paradise Is) Half As Nice – Amen Corner
  • (Poor Mi) Israelites – Desmond Dekker and The Aces
  • 21st Century Schizoid Man – King Crimson
  • A House Is Not A Home – Mavis Staples*
  • Ain’t Gonna Bump (With No Big Fat Woman) – Joe Tex
  • Aquarius/Let The Sunshine In – The 5th Dimension
  • At The Hop – Sha Na Na
  • Atlantis – Donovan*
  • Bad Moon Rising – Creedence Clearwater Revival
  • Barabajagal – Donovan
  • Black Dog -Led Zeppelin
  • Blues on the Moon – Raful Neal
  • Can’t Find My Way Home – Blind Faith
  • Carroll County Accident – Bobby & Laurie
  • Christine’s Tune – The Flying Burrito Brothers
  • Cinnamon Girl – Neil Young & Crazy Horse
  • Cissy Strut – The Meters
  • Cleanhead Blues – Eddie “Cleanhead” Vinson
  • Cocaine Blues – Foreday Riders with Jeannie Lewis
  • Come And Get It – Badfinger
  • Come Together – The Beatles
  • Coming Into Los Angeles – Arlo Guthrie
  • Crystal Blue Persuasion – Tommy James and The Shondells
  • Crystallization – Cosmic Dealer
  • Cummins Prison – Calvin Leavy
  • Darling Be Home Soon – Joe Cocker*
  • Death of an Electric Citizen – The Edgar Broughton Band
  • Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos) – The Byrds
  • Diggy Liggy Lo – Doug* and Rusty Kershaw
  • Dizzy – Tommy Roe
  • Do the Funky Chicken – Rufus Thomas
  • Do You Know How It Feels – The Flying Burrito Brothers
  • Don’t Let Me Down – Dillard & Clark
  • Down On The Corner – Creedence Clearwater Revival
  • Easy on Your Heels – Lightnin’ Hopkins
  • Eight Miles High – Golden Earring
  • Elegy – Colosseum
  • Epitaph – King Crimson
  • Every Mother’s Son – Humble Pie
  • Everyday People – Sly & The Family Stone
  • Everything I Do Gohn’ Be Funky (From Now On) – Lee Dorsey
  • Fat Mama – Johnny Shines and Big Walter Horton
  • Fishin’ Blues – Taj Mahal*
  • Fortunate Son – Creedence Clearwater Revival
  • Fotheringay – Fairport Convention
  • Frozen Orange Juice – Peter Sarstedt
  • Funk #49 – James Gang
  • Get Back – The Beatles
  • Get In That Swing – Ian A. Anderson
  • Get Ready – Rare Earth
  • Gimme Gimme Good Lovin’ – Crazy Elephant
  • Gimme Shelter – The Rolling Stones*
  • Give Me Just a Little More Time – Chairman of The Board
  • Give Me One More Shot – JB Lenoir
  • Going Down – Moloch
  • Goodbye – Mary Hopkins
  • Goofer Dust – Big Lucky Carter
  • Green River – Creedence Clearwater Revival
  • Grits And Gravy – The Fame Gang
  • Hate To See You Go – Little Walter
  • He Made a Woman Out of Me – Bettye Lavette
  • Hey Girl – The Town Criers
  • Hey, Western Union Man – Max Merritt & The Meters**
  • Highway 61 Revisited – Johnny Winter*
  • Hot Burrito #1 – The Flying Burrito Brothers
  • Hot Fun in the Summertime – Sly and The Family Stone
  •   Hush – Joe South
  • I Got a Line on You – Spirit
  • I Scare Myself – Dan Hicks & His Hot Licks
  • I Talk to the Wind – King Crimson
  • I Want to Take You Higher – Sly and The Family Stone
  •  I Was Robbed Last Night – The Electric Flag
  • In a Moment – The Intrigues
  • In the Ghetto – Elvis Presley
  • In the Year 2525 – Zager & Evans
  • It’s My Thing (Pt. 1) – Marva Whitney
  •  It’s Your Thing – The Isley Brothers
  • Killing Floor – Albert King
  • Lady Sunshine – Tamum Shud*
  • Lay Lady Lay – Bob Dylan
  • Let’s Work Together – Wilbert Harrison
  •  Light Flight – Pentangle
  •  Listen To the Band – The Monkees
  •  Little Angel Child – Jimmy Dawkins
  • Living With a Lie – Dan Hicks &His Hot Licks
  • Man Of the World – Fleetwood Mac*
  • Maxwell Street Shuffle – Barry Goldberg
  • Melting Pot – Blue Mink
  •  Mendocino – Sir Douglas Quintet
  •  Miss Ann – Delaney & Bonnie and Friends
  • Missouri Bird – John Stewart
  • Moaning And Groaning – Johnny Young
  •  Monkey Man – Toots & The Maytals
  •  Moonshine – Free
  • Muscle Shoals Malmo Express – The Swampers
  • My Front Pages – Arlo Guthrie
  • My Sentimental Friend – Herman’s Hermits
  • Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye – Steam
  • No Special Rider – Little Brother Montgomery
  • Oh, Happy Day – The Edwin Hawkins Singers
  • Oh Well (Pt. 1) – Fleetwood MAc
  • Okie From Muskogee – Merle Haggard
  • On the Road Again – Furry Lewis
  • Peaches en Regalia – Frank Zappa
  •  Polk Salad Annie – Tony Joe White*
  • Pinball Wizard – The Who
  • Proud Mary – Creedence Clearwater Revival
  •  Rag Picker’s Blues – Mojo Buford*
  • Ramble On – Led Zeppelin
  •  Reconsider Me – Johnny Adams
  • Red Lady – Phil Cordell
  • Resurrection Shuffle – Ashton, Gardner & Dyke
  • River Man – Nick Drake
  • Run Boy, Run – Longbranch/Pennywhistle
  •  See That My Grave Is Kept Clean – Furry Lewis
  • She Brings the Rain – Can
  •  Show Me Home – Chain**
  • Shuggie’s Chittlin’ Blues – Shuggie Otis
  • Simple Song of Freedom – Tim Hardin
  •  Sin City – The Flying Burrito Brothers
  • Society Don’t Let Us Down – The Barons
  • Someday We’ll Be Together – Diana Ross & The Supremes
  • Something In the Air – Thunderclap Newman
  • Something – The Beatles
  • Space Cowboy – The Steve Miller Band
  • Space Oddity – David Bowie
  • Spinning Wheel – Phil Upchurch
  • Spirit In the Sky – Norman Greenbaum
  •  Stand! – Sly and The Family Stone
  • Streets of London – Ralph McTell
  • Suite: Judy Blue Eyes – Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young
  • Sunlight – The Youngblood’s
  • Superlungs My Supergirl – Terry Reid
  • Suspicious Minds – Elvis Presley
  • Swampers – The Swampers
  • Tecumseh Valley – Towns Van Zandt
  • The Ballad of John and Yoko – The Beatles
  • The Boxer – Simon & Garfunkel*
  • The Court of the Crimson King – King Crimson
  • The Crawl – Guitar Junior
  • The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face – Roberta Flack
  • The Hook & Sling – Eddie Bo
  • The Lemon Song – Led Zeppelin
  • The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down – The Band
  • The Stomp – Ten Years After
  • The Thrill Is Gone – B B King*
  • The Wind – The Groove
  • There’s a Break in the Road – Betty Harris
  • Think About Tomorrow Today – Masters Apprentices
  • This Girl Is a Woman Now – Gary Puckett & The Union Hap
  • This Wheel’s on Fire – Julie Driscoll with Brian Augur
  • Thoughts of Polly – Appaloosa
  • Time Has Told Me – Nick Drake
  • Tired of Waiting – Flock
  • Touch Me – The Doors
  • Up On Cripple Creek – The Band
  • Venus – Shocking Blue
  • Vietnam – Jimmy Cliff
  • Viva Tirado – El Chicano
  • Waiting For the Sun – The Doors
  • Walk A Mile in My Shoes – Joe South
  • Walk On By – Isaac Hayes
  • What Does It Take (To Win Your Love) – Jr. Walker & The Allstars
  • Wheels – The Flying Burrito Brothers
  • Where Do You Go To (My Lovely)? – Peter Sarstedt
  • Whipping Post – The Allman Brothers
  • Who Knows Where the Time Goes? – Fairport Convention
  • Whole Lotta Love – Led Zeppelin
  • Willie The Pimp – Frank Zappa
  • Witchi-Tai-To – Brewer & Shipley
  • Yester-Me, Yester-You, Yesterday – Stevie Wonder*
  • You Can’t Always Get What You Want – The Rolling Stones
  • You Should Have Listened to Al – Al Stewart
  • You’ve Made Me So Very Happy – Blood Sweat & Tears

*Seen play live ** played at http://www.wowrootsmusic.com ***Wikipedia

My Life In Songs 1954 – 2024

In 1968, music underwent a radical transformation driven by technological breakthroughs in synthesis, the shift from mono to stereo as the standard, and the birth of genres like heavy metal and progressive rock

1. Mainstream Synthesis: The “Moog” Moment

The most significant technological milestone of 1968 was the popularization of the synthesizer. 

  • Switched-On Bach: American composer Wendy Carlos released this landmark album in late 1968, featuring the music of J.S. Bach performed entirely on a Moog modular synthesizer. It became a bestseller and triggered a global craze for electronic music.
  • The Bassline Generator: Inventor Raymond Scott developed a “bassline generator” in 1968, further pushing the boundaries of automated and sequenced electronic sounds.
  • Shin-ei Uni-Vibe: This year saw the release of the Uni-Vibe pedal, designed by Fumio Mieda, which introduced phase shift and chorus effects that became synonymous with the era’s psychedelic guitar sound. 

2. Studio and Recording Innovations

Recording studios moved beyond the limitations of early 1960s tech, enabling more complex layers. 

  • 8-Track Recording: By 1968, most professional studios had upgraded to 8-track recorders, allowing for unprecedented flexibility in overdubbing.
  • Stereo as the Standard: Albums like Jimi Hendrix’s Electric Ladyland (1968) were specifically recorded for stereo reproduction, utilizing extreme panning and movement within the soundfield rather than just treating stereo as an afterthought.
  • Solid-State Tech: Studios began replacing warm, “rounded” valve-based equipment with solid-state technology, such as the FET-based Urei 1176 compressor and EMI’s first transistorized mixing console, the TG12345, installed at Abbey Road. 

3. Emergence of New Genres

The “hard” sounds of the future began to take shape through experimental albums. 

  • Heavy Metal Origins: The release of Blue Cheer’s Vincebus Eruptum and Cream’s Wheels of Fire (the first platinum-selling double record) provided the blueprint for heavy metal with their distorted, titanic riffs.
  • Progressive and Electronic Rock: Groups like Pink FloydThe Beatles (with the White Album), and The United States of America experimented with musique concrète, oscillators, and tape loops, laying the groundwork for progressive rock and electronica.
  • Black Power in Pop: James Brown’s “Say It Loud – I’m Black and I’m Proud” (August 1968) was a cultural and musical innovation, turning the pop song into a direct tool for political protest and racial pride. 

4. Radical Compositional Techniques

The avant-garde and classical worlds introduced new ways of structuring sound. 

  • Vocal Harmonics: Karlheinz Stockhausen’s Stimmung (1968) was the first major Western composition based entirely on vocal harmonics and overtones.
  • Radical Minimalism: Terry Riley’s In C and Luciano Berio’s Sinfonia premiered in late 1968, permanently transforming modern musical thought through minimalism and extended vocal techniques. 

Otis Redding’s “Sittin’ On The Dock Of The Bay” was recorded with the Stax house band Bokker T & the M.G’s. Redding die in a plane crash 3 days after the recording! The first time I heard Steepenwolf’s “Born To Be Wild” I was a fan. There is a line in the song that goes Heavy Metal Thunder whic is believed to be the first sone to you the phrase and Heavy Metal became synomous with the genre Hard Rock. The band got their name from Steppenwolf (originally Der Steppenwolf) which is the tenth novel by German-Swiss author Hermann Hesse. Originally published in Germany in 1927, it was first translated into English in 1929. The novel was named after the German name for the steppe wolf. (I have read the book and it is incredible)

Both Johnny Winter (1971) and Aretha Franklin (1986) covered the Stones “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”. The Rascals “People Got To Be Free” was written is response to Martin Luther King’s assassination (April 4th) and Robert E Kennedy’s same fate. The Crazy World of Arthur Brown’s fiery nightmare “Fire” was a result of a bad trip, who would have thought that. Interesting that Cream’s “White Room” came from a period of drug and alcohol abuse.

Chicago mayor Richard Daley ordered local radio stations not to plat the Stones “Street Fighting Man” during the National Democratic Convention. Canned Heat’s “Going Up The Country” was deemed by some to be the unofficial Woodstock anthem. CCR’s “Suzie Q” was a remake of Dale Hawkins 1957 hit.

The MC’5’s “Kick Out The Jams” sure caused a ruckus. I wonder why? Maybe the first line of the song – “It’s time to … kick out the jam’s motherf**cker has something to do with it.

nineteen and sixty – eight

  • 1,2,3 Red Light – 1910 Fruitgum Company
  • 54-46 (Was My Number) – Toots &The Maytals
  • 900 Miles – Terry Callier
  • A Beautiful Morning – The Rascals
  • A Man And The Blues – Buddy Guy*
  • A Sailor’s Life – Fairport Convention
  • Agent Double-O-Soul – Edwin Starr
  •  Ain’t Gonna Sell It – Sleepy John Estes
  • Ain’t Got No / I’ve Got Life – Nina Simone
  • Albatross – Fleetwood Mac*
  • Albert’s Shuffle – Mike Bloomfield, Al Kooper and Steve Stills
  • All Along The Watchtower – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
  • America – The Nice
  • Astral Weeks – Van Morrison*
  • Baby, Come Back – The Equals
  • Baby, Come On Home – Solomon Burke*
  • Ball and Chain – Big Brother and the Holding Company
  • Ball And Chain – Big Mama Thornton
  • Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down) – Terry Reid
  • Bangarang – Stranger Cole* & Lester Sterling
  • Be Proud to Be a Black Man – Bee Houston
  • Beside You – Van Morrison*
  • Big Bird – Eddie Floyd
  • Black Magic Woman – Fleetwood Mac
  • Blackberry Way – The Move
  • Born On The Bayou – Creedence Clearwater Revival
  • Born to Be Wild – Steppenwolf
  • Build Me up Buttercup – The Foundation
  • Cadillac Jack – Andre Williams
  • Careful with That Axe, Eugene – Pink Floyd*
  • Carolina In My Mind – James Taylor*
  • Casey Jones – Furry Lewis
  • Crimson & Clover – Tommy James and the Shondells
  • Cry Like a Baby – The Box Tops
  • Cyprus Avenue – Van Morrison
  • Daddy, Where Did I Come From? – The Nice
  • Delilah – Tom Jones*
  • Dharma For One – Jethro Tull*
  • Doctor Please – Blue Cheer
  • Dough Roller Blues – Mississippi Joe Callicott
  • Draft Morning – The Byrds
  • Dream A Little Dream Of Me -The Mamas & The Papas
  • Drum Song – Jackie Mittii
  • Easy, Baby – Magic Sam Feat. Eddie Shaw
  • Elenore – The Turtles
  • Eloise – Barry Ryan
  • Engagement Party – Nineteen Seventy Eight
  • Everyday People – Sly & The Family Stone
  • Fire – The Crazy World of Arthur Brown
  • Fly Me To The Moon (In Other Words) – Bobby Womack
  • For the Sake of the Song – Towns Van Zandt
  • Fried Hockey Boogie – Canned Heat*
  • Gentle On My Mind – Glen Campbell
  • Girl Watcher – The O’Kaysions
  • God Rest his Soul – Duane and Gregg Allman
  • Going Up The Country – Canned Heat
  • Going Up To The Country/Paint My Mailbox Blue – Taj Mahal
  • Goodbye Pork Pie Hat – Pentangle
  • Gris-Gris Gumbo Ya Ya – Dr. John*
  • Groovin’ Is Easy – The Electric Flag
  • Hear Me Calling – Ten Years After
  • Hello, I Love You – The Doors
  • Herbert Harper’s Free Press News – Muddy Waters
  • Here Comes The Judge – Shorty Long
  • Hey Jude – The Beatles
  • Hey Little Bird – The Barbarians
  • Hey, Western Union Man – Jerry Butler
  • Hurdy Gurdy Man – Donovan*
  • I Can’t Quit The Blues – Buddy Guy
  • I Forgot To Be Your Lover – William Bell
  • I Found a True Love – Wilson Pickett
  • I Got A Line On You – Spirit
  • I Heard It Through The Grapevine – Marvin Gaye
  • I Think It’s Going to Rain Today – Randy Newman
  • I Walk On Gilded Splinters – Dr. John
  • I Want A Little Girl – T-Bone Walker
  • I Want To Take You Higher – Sly & The Family Stone
  • I Wish It Would Rain – The Temptations
  • I’m a Midnight Mover – Wilson Pickett
  • I’m Gonna Be A Country Girl Again – Buffy Sainte-Marie*
  • I’m Not Like Everybody Else – The Chocolate Watchband
  • I’m the Urban Spaceman – The Bonzo Dog  Band
  • In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida – Iron Butterfly
  • Israelites – Desmone Dekkar & The Acces
  • Jelly Jelly – Pacific Gas & Electric
  • Jumpin’ Jack Flash – The Rolling Stones*
  • Keep on Drinking – Johnny Young
  • Kick Out the Jams – MC5
  • Killing Floor – The Electric Flag
  • Lady Madonna – The Beatles
  • Lazy Sunday – Small Faces
  • Long Walk To D.C. – The Staple Singers
  • Love Land – Charles Wright
  • Lovesick Man – Bee Houston
  • Lovin’ Tree – The Groop
  • Luxury Liner – The International Submarine Band
  • Madame George – Van Morrison
  • Magic Carpet Ride – Steppenwolf
  • Mama Tried – Merle Haggard
  • Mandrake Wine – The Groop
  • Mary Mary – The Bay City Union
  • Massachusetts – Bee Gees
  • May – Bill Deal & The Rhondels
  • Mighty Quinn – Manfred Mann
  • Mind Flowers – Ultimate Spimach
  • Monterey – Eric Burdon & The Animals
  • Mony Mony – Tommy James and the Shondells
  • Most Anything You Want – Iron Butterfly
  • Mr. Bojangles – Jerry Jeff Walker*
  • Mrs. Robinson – Simon & Garfunkel*
  • My Baby Wants to Test Me – The Electric Flag
  • My Sweet Potato – John Renbourn
  • Never Give You Up – Jerry Butler
  • No Regrets – Tom Rush
  • No Room In The Church For Liars – Sister Rosetta Tharpe
  • North Meadow – Giles, Giles & Gripp
  • On The Road Again – Canned Heat
  • Only The Strong Survive – Jerry Butler
  • Parchman Farm – Blue Cheer
  • People Got to Be Free – The Rascals
  • Pictures of Matchstick Men – Status Quo*
  • Piece of My Heart – Big Brother & The Holding Company
  • Pigfoot And A Bottle Of Beer – Champion Jack Dupree
  • Pilgrimage – Chain**
  • Prayer Meeting – Willie Mitchell
  • Pride of Man – Quicksilver Messenger Service
  • Revolution – The Beatles
  • Rock And Soul Music – Country Joe & The Fish
  • Say It Loud – I’m Black And I’m Proud (Parts 1 & 2) – James Brown
  • Simon Says – 1910 Fruitgum Company
  • Sing A Song Of Summer – John Martyn
  • Sky Pilot – Eric Burdon & The Animals
  • Slim Slow Slider – Van Morrison
  • Son Of A Preacher Man – Dusty Springfield
  • Song For Jeffrey – Jethro Tull*
  • Sophisticated Cissy – The Meters
  • Stand By Your Man – Tammy Wynette
  • Stay In My Corner – The Dells
  • Street Fighting Man – The Rolling Stones*
  • Stumble – Love Sculpture
  • Sunshine Of Your Love – Cream
  • Superbird – Country Joe & The Fish
  • Suzie Q – Creedence Clearwater Revival
  • Sympathy For The Devil – The Rolling Stones
  • The Ballad of Bonnie and Clyde – Georgie Fame & The Blues Flames
  • The Circle Game – Tom Rush
  • The Legend Of Xanadu – Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich
  • The Pusher – Steppenwolf
  • The Race of the Jim Lee and the Katy Adam – Jazz Gillum, Arbee Stidham & Memphis Slim
  • The Son of Hickory Holler’s Tramp – O.C.Smith
  • The Weight – The Band
  • There Was A Time – Gene Chandler
  • This Is the Thanks I Get – Barbara Lynn
  • This Train – Sister Rosetta Tharpe
  • Those Were The Days – Mary Hopkins
  • Time Has Come Today – The Chambers Brothers
  • Time Of The Season – The Zombies
  • Two Worlds – Sweetwater
  • Waiting For A Train – Furry Lewis
  • Waltz Of The New Moon – Incredible String Band
  • War – Edwin Starr
  • Wasn’t Born to Follow – The Byrds
  • We Got Love – The Questions
  • What A Wonderful World – Louis Armstrong
  • When She Touches Me (Nothing Else Matters) – Solomon Burke*
  • When The Train Comes Back – Chickenshack
  • While My Guitar Gently Weeps – The Beatles
  • White Room – Cream
  • Who’s Making Love – Johnnie Taylor
  • Wichita Lineman – Glen Campbell
  • Wild, Wild Woman – Johnny Young
  • Woman, Woman – Gary Puckett & The Union Gap
  • Yesterday’s Sunshine – Grapefruit
  • Young Girl – Gary Puckett & The Union Gap

*Seen play live ** Played at http://www.wowrootsmusic.com

My Life In Songs 1954 -2024

There are a number of Beatles songs listed for 1967 as would be expected.

In 1967, the music industry underwent a radical transformation characterized by studio experimentation, technological firsts, and the legitimization of rock as an art form. 

Technological & Studio Breakthroughs

  • The Wah-Wah Pedal: Introduced to the public in 1967, the Cry Baby Wah was first recorded by Jimi Hendrix on “Burning of the Midnight Lamp”. It allowed guitarists to manipulate tone in real-time, becoming a staple of psychedelic and funk music.
  • Quadraphonic Sound: Pink Floyd staged the first-ever rock concert featuring quadraphonic sound (a surround sound precursor) during their “Games for May” performance in London.
  • PCM Recording: The first Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) recorder was developed by NHK in 1967, laying the early technical groundwork for digital audio.
  • Drum Machines: The Ace Tone FR-1 Rhythm Ace was released, becoming the first electronic drum machine to enter popular music.
  • Studio as an Instrument: The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band pioneered advanced techniques like Artificial Double Tracking (ADT), varispeeding, and complex tape loops to create sounds that could not be replicated live. 

Structural & Cultural Innovations

  • The Rise of the “Concept Album”: Sgt. Pepper shifted the industry focus from individual hit singles to the album as a unified, artistic whole.
  • Large-Scale Rock Festivals: The Monterey Pop Festival in June 1967 was the first major international rock festival, setting the template for future events like Woodstock and legitimizing rock music as a cultural movement.
  • Symphonic & Progressive Rock: The Moody Blues released Days of Future Passed, which fused rock instrumentation with a full orchestra (the London Festival Orchestra), a key moment in the birth of symphonic and progressive rock.
  • Global Satellite Broadcast: The Beatles performed “All You Need Is Love” for the first global live satellite TV program, Our World, reaching an estimated 400 million viewers across 19 nations. 

Genre-Defining Debuts

  • The Jimi Hendrix Experience: Are You Experienced redefined the electric guitar through the innovative use of feedback, distortion, and studio effects.
  • The Velvet Underground & Nico: Their debut introduced “Ostrich tuning” (all strings tuned to the same note) and explored darker, avant-garde lyrical themes, later serving as a blueprint for punk and indie rock.
  • Aretha Franklin: Her move to Atlantic Records in 1967 resulted in “Respect,” which transformed soul music into a powerful vehicle for the feminist and Civil Rights movements. 

Cream’s “I Feel Fine” was the debut release by the Eric Clapton led Band. The Doors “Break On Through” was their Elektra debut. Jefferson Airplanes “Sombody To Love” was written by guitarist Darby Slick (brother in-lwas of Grace) and recorded by his group Great Society (the title was then “Someone to Love“).When Grace left to take over the vocals for Jefferson Airplane she recorded the song with the slight title change. The Doors “Light My Fire” also became a hit for Jose Feliciano in 1968.

Have you ever pondered what Procol Harum’s “Whiter Shade of Pale” aluddes to. There are all sorts of theories out there. The literal explanationas provided by lyricist Keith Reid is as follows: “I overheard someone say at a party, “You’ve turned a whiter shade of pale,” to a woman at a party, meaning her face lost all color, becoming ghostly white, perhaps from shock or illness”.

The Box Tops were lead by a sixteen year old Alex Chilton (Memphis) who sounded like a much older Black Soul Singer. Their hit song “The Letter” was recorded by Joe Cocker in 1970. Chilton went on to front the very influential Big Star.

The Boogie/Blues band Canned Heat were named after a Tommy Johnson (1896 – 1956) song. Canned heat was a dangerous, jellied cooking fuel (like Sterno) that desperate people, especially during the Depression, drank for intoxication by straining it through a cloth (like a sock) to extract the alcohol (methyl alcohol/ethanol) and then mixing it with juice, a practice that often led to blindness or death.

Louisiana’s John Fred & His Playboys had a hit with “Judy in Disguise” which was a parody of the Beatles “Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds”.

I still remember to this day first seeing Sly and The Family Stone on the Woodstock movie. Oh boy I thought what incredible music and “Dance To The Music” is indelibly printed on my brain. The Small Faces was formed by Steve Marriott and Ronnie Lane and they wrote their first hit “Itchycoo Park” They were later known as the Faces, Rod Stewart’s backing band.

Nineteen and Sixty – Seven

  • 007 (Shanty Town) – Desmond Dekker
  • (Sittin’ On) The Dock of The Bay – Otis Redding
  • (You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman – Aretha Franklin
  • (Your Love Keeps Lifting Me) Higher & Higher – Jackie Wilson
  • A Day in the Life – The Beatles
  • A Whiter Shade of Pale – Procol Harum
  • Ain’t No Mountain High Enough (Duet with Tammi Terrell) – Marvin Gaye
  • Alabama Song – The Doors
  • Alice’s Restaurant Massacree – Arlo Guthrie
  • All Strung Out Over You – The Chambers Brothers
  • All You Need Is Love – The Beatles
  • Alone Again Or – Love
  • Apples, Peaches, Pumpkin Pie – Jay & The Techniques
  • Are You Gonna’ Be There – The Chocolate Watchband
  • B.B. King Medley: Sweet Little Angel/It’s My Own Fault – B B King*
  • Baby, Now That I’ve Found You – The Foundations
  • Beg, Borrow and Steal – Ohio Express
  • Bend It – Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich
  • Big Time Operator – Jeff St John & The Id*
  • Blue Jay Way – The Beatles
  • Boogaloo Down Broadway – The Fantastic Johnny C
  • Born Under a Bad Sign – Albert King
  • Break On Through – The Doors
  • Broadway Walk – Bobby Womack
  • Brown Eyed Girl – Van Morrison*
  • Burning of the Midnight Lamp – Jimi Hendrix
  • By The Time I Get to Phoenix – Glen Campbell
  • Chain Of Fools – Aretha Franklin
  • Conquistador – Procol Harum
  • Cool Jerk – The Capitals
  • Corn Cob Blues – John Hartford
  • Country Boy and Bleecker Street – HP Lovecraft
  • Dance to the Music – Sly and The Family Stone
  • Dear Mr. Fantasy – Traffic
  • Death Sound Blues -Country Joe & The Fish
  • Dedicated To the One I Love – The Mamas & The Papas
  • Don’t Pity Me – Curly Moore
  • Double Trouble – John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers
  • Droppin’ Out – Paul Butterfield Band
  • Drunkards Sorrow Waltz – The Balfa Brothers
  • Easy Rider – Big Brother & The Holding Company
  • Everlovin’ Man (Live) – The Loved Ones
  • Excerpt from a Teenage Opera – Keith West
  • Expressway to Your Heart – Te Soul Survivors
  • Fare Thee Well Blues- Joe Callicot
  • Fire – The Crazy World of Arthur Brown
  • Flowers In the Rain – The Move
  • Get Together – The Youngbloods
  • Get Your Head Happy – Champion Jack Dupree and Tony McPhee
  • Gimme Little Sign – Brenton Wood
  • Gimme Some Lovin’ – The Spencer Davis Group
  • Git Out – Mitty Collier
  • Groovin’ – The Young Rascals
  • Happy Together – The Turtles
  • Harry Rag – 69ers*
  • Heatwave – Somebody’s Image
  • Heroin – The Velvet Underground
  • Hey Joe – Jimi Hendrix
  • Hole In My Shoe – Traffic
  • Hot Tamales, Pt 1- The Prime Mates
  • I Am the Walrus – The Beatles
  • I Can See for Miles – The Who*
  • I Feel Free – Cream
  • I Found Love – Wilson Pickett
  • I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You) – Aretha Franklin
  • I Say a Little Prayer – Aretha Franklin
  • I Second That Emotion – Smokey Robinson
  • I Shall Not Care – Pearls Before Swine
  • I Think We’re Alone Now – Tommy James and The Shondells
  • I Want a Little Sugar in My Bowl – Nina Simone
  • I Want to Know – Ten Years After
  • I’d Rather Go Blind – Etta James
  • I’m A Man – The Spencer Davis Group
  • I’m Waiting for The Man – The Velvet Underground
  • Incense and Peppermints – Strawberry Alarm Clock
  • Interstellar Overdrive – Pink Floyd
  • Itchycoo Park – The Small Faces
  • Jailhouse Rock – Elvis Presley
  • Judy in Disguise (with Glasses) – John Fred & His Playboys
  • Keep On Dancing – The Gentrys
  • Kind of a Drag – The Buckinghams
  • Knock On Wood – Eddie Floyd
  • Let It Out (Let It All Hang Out) – The Hombres
  • Light My Fire – The Doors
  • Little Wing – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
  • Love Me Two Times – The Doors
  • Magical Mystery Tour – The Beatles
  • Mellow Yellow – Donovan*
  • Mini-Skirt Minnie – Sir Mack Rice
  • More Love – The Miracles
  • Mr. Blues – Hank Crawford
  • On The Road Again – Canned Heat*
  • Oogum Boogum Song – Brenton Wood
  • Painting Box – The Incredible String Band
  • Paper Sun – Traffic
  • Penny Lane – The Beatles
  • Piece of My Heart – Erma Franklin
  • Porterville – The Golliwogs
  • Postcard from Jamaica – Sopwith Camel
  • Puppet On a String – Sandie Shaw
  • Purple Haze – The Jimi Hendrix Experience
  • Ram Jam – Jackie Mitto
  • Randy Scouse Git – The Monkees
  • Reach Out I’ll Be There – The Four Tops
  • Respect – Aretha Franklin
  • Rollin’ And Tumblin’ – Canned Heat
  • Ruby Tuesday – The Rolling Stones*
  • San Franciscan Nights – Eric Burdon & The Animals
  • Seven and Seven Is – Love
  • She’s Not There – Vanilla Fudge
  • Slide Machine – The 13th Floor Elevators
  • Snowy Wood – John Mayeel &The Bluesbreakers
  • So Long, Marianne – Leonard Cohen*
  • Some Velvet Morning – Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazlewood
  • Somebody Loan Me a Dime – Fenton Robinson
  • Somebody to Love – Jefferson Airplane
  • Sometimes You Have to Cry – Sam Baker
  • Soul Finger – The Bar-Keys
  • Soul Man – Sam & Dave
  • Stag-O-Lee – Wilson Pickett
  • Strange Brew – Cream
  • Strawberry Fields Forever – The Beatles
  • Summer Wine – Nancy Sinatra & Lee Hazelwood
  • Sunshine Of Your Love – Cream
  • Sunshine Superman – Donovan
  • Suzanne – Leonard Cohen
  • Sweet Soul Music – Arthur Conley
  • Talking Dust Bowl Blues – Ramblin’ Jack Elliott*
  • Tell Mama – Etta James
  • The Changeling – The Doors
  • The Days of Pearly Spencer – David McWilliams
  • The End – The Doors
  • The Fish’ Cheer/l-Feel-Like-l’m-Fixin’-To-Die Rag – County Joe & the Fish
  • The Fool on The Hill – The Beatles
  • The Letter Song – The Vibrants
  • The Letter – The Box Tops
  • The Tears of a Clown – Smokey Robinson
  • The Time Machine – HP Lovecraft
  • These Days – Nico
  • Tighten Up – Archie Bell and The Drells
  • Time Will Come – Tol-Puddle Martyrs
  • Tin Soldier – The Small Faces
  • Train for Tomorrow – The Electric Prunes
  • Transparent Day – The West Coast Pop Art Experimental Band
  • Two Bugs and A Roach – Earl Hooker
  • Un autre soir d’ennui (Another Lonely Night) – Belton Richard
  • Up – Up and Away – The 5th Dimension
  • Venus In Furs – The Velvet Underground & Nico
  • Waterloo Sunset – The Kinks
  • What A Wonderful World – Louis Armstrong
  • What Will I Tell the Children – Juke Boy Bonner
  • When The Music’s Over – The Doors
  • White Rabbit – Jefferson Airplane
  • With A Little Help from My Friends – The Beatles
  • You Keep Me Hangin’ On – Vanilla Fudge
  • Your Mother Should Know – The Beatles Your Precious Love – Marvin Gaye & Tam
  • * Seen Play Live – Also seen a version of The Doors in 2005 with Ian Astbury on vocals.

My Life In Songs 1954 – 2024

Boy, the lists are getting longer with each passing year. Music is becoming really important to me as I get older. I think you may have realised by now that I cross over to many genres. You miss out on a lot of great music if you stick to the one style of music.

Studio & Recording Advancements

  • Automatic Double Tracking (ADT): Developed at Abbey Road by Ken Townsend for The Beatles, this allowed vocals to be “doubled” automatically, saving singers from manual re-recording.
  • Tape Loops & Varispeed: Artists began using manipulated tape loops and varying tape speeds (varispeed) to create “otherworldly” textures, most notably on “Tomorrow Never Knows”.
  • Backmasking: 1966 saw the first significant use of reversed vocals and instruments (backward tapes) in pop music, specifically in The Beatles’ “Rain”.
  • Close Miking: Engineers began placing microphones closer to instruments (such as drums and acoustic guitars) to achieve a more “intimate” and punchy sound. 

Genre Evolution & Instrumental Shifts

  • Birth of Psychedelic Rock: Landmark tracks like The Yardbirds’ “Shapes of Things” and The Byrds’ “Eight Miles High” pioneered distorted guitar tones and modal improvisation.
  • Raga Rock: The integration of Indian classical music became a trend, with The Rolling Stones featuring the sitar on a #1 hit (“Paint It Black”) and The Beatles exploring Hindustani structures on “Love You To”.
  • Symphonic Pop & High Production: Brian Wilson’s production on The Beach Boys’ Pet Sounds set a new standard for complex arrangements, utilizing orchestral instruments and unusual sound effects in a pop context.
  • Concept & Double Albums: The Mothers of Invention released Freak Out!, one of the first double albums and an early example of a rock concept album. 

Technological & Industry Changes

  • Portable Radios & Amplification: The rise of solid-state technology made portable transistor radios common. Larger PA systems and higher-wattage amplifiers were introduced to handle growing concert crowds.
  • The Synthesizer: While invented earlier, the Buchla modular synthesizer began commercial sales in 1966, providing a new palette for electronic music.
  • FM Rock Radio: New York’s WOR-FM became the first station to adopt a rock format, leading a shift away from strictly Top 40 AM radio toward “freeform” broadcasting.
  • The Radiorecorder: The precursor to the “boombox” was invented by Philips in 1966. 

Just as drugs was going hand in hand with the music scene Paul Revere and the Raiders released the anti-drug song “Kicks”. Sam and Dave’s hit “Hold On I’m Coming” was banned by some radio sations because of its supposed sex references. The same for Ray Charles’ song “Let’s Get Stoned” for drug reasons. Has there ever been a more pleading love song than Percy Sledge”s “When A Man Loves A Woman”. Sledge was a hospital orderly and part-time singer when the song became the first #1 Southern Soul hit.

Let me know in the comments what the initials in the Joe Tex Song “S.Y.S.L.J.F.M. (The Letter Song) stand for . The Grateful Dead were originally called the Warlocks (Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir).

The Song 96 Tears band name ? & The Mysterians is not a typo! It only took one song, the organ-driven number one smash “96 Tears,” to make ? ((Rudy Martínez) & the Mysterians into garage rock legends. Eccentric frontman Question Mark (actually spelled “?,” once he had his name legally changed) cultivated an aura of mystery by never appearing in public without a pair of wraparound sunglasses; he frequently claimed he had been born on Mars and lived among the dinosaurs in a past life, and that voices from the future had revealed he would be performing “96 Tears” in the year 10,000. On a more earthly level, the Mysterians’ sound helped lay down an important part of the garage rock blueprint, namely the low-budget sci-fi feel of the Farfisa and Vox organs (most assumed that “96 Tears” had featured the former, but ? later remembered using the latter). What was more, they were one of the first Latino rock groups to have a major hit, and ?‘s sneering attitude made him one of the prime suspects in the evolution of garage rock into early punk.** The keyboard player Frankie Rodríguez was only 14 years of age!

The Beach Boys “Good Vibrations” was their first stab at the every increasingly popular Psych Rock. “Crosscut Saw” was the first major label Stax hit for the legendary Bluesman Albert King. Stax did not give him any royalties for 8 years so he left them. The song has became a classic and has been recorded by artists such as  Eric Clapton, who popularized it further in rock. Other notable artists covering the track include Stevie Ray VaughanR.L. BurnsideLonnie BrooksOtis RushEarl Hooker, and modern blues guitarists like Tab Benoit and Robben Ford.

‘Gimme Some Lovin” Spencer Davis Group was written by the 17 year-old Steve Winwood. Buffalo Springfield’s “For What It’s Worth” was their third single and was written by Steve Stills.

nineteen and sixty-six

  • (We Ain’t Got) Nothin’ Yet – The Blues Magoos
    19th Nervous Breakdown – The Rolling Stones*
    96 Tears – ? & The Mysterians
    All Or Nothing – Small Faces
    All Your Love – John Mayall*
    Allergic To Work – Crosscut Saw
    Barefootin’ – Robert Parker*
    Batman Theme – Link Wray & The RayMen
    Bend It – Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich
    Black is Black – Los Bravos
    But It’s Alright – JJ. Jackson
    California Dreaming – The Mamas & The Papas
    Can’t Satisfy -The Impressions
    Cool Jerk – The Capitols
    Crosscut Saw – Albert King
    Day Tripper – The Beatles
    Daydream – The Lovin’ Spoonful
    Devil with a Blue Dress On -Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels
    Diddy Wah Diddy – Captain Beefheart & His Magic Band
    Don’t Ease Me In – Grateful Dead Double
  • Crossing Time – John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers & Eric Clapton
    Dry Your Eyes – Brenda & The Tabulations
    East-West – Paul Butterfield Blues Band
    Eight Miles High – The Byrds
    Eleanor Rigby – The Beatles
    Five O’Clock World – The Vogues
    Friday on My Mind – The Easybeats
    Funky Broadway Part – Dyke and the Blazers
    Get Ready – The Temptations
    Getaway – Georgie Fame
    Gimme Some Lovin’ – The Spencer Davis Group
    God Only Knows – The Beach Boys
    Good Lovin’ – The Young Rascals
    Good Vibrations – The Beach Boys
    Green Green Grass of Home – Tom Jones*
    He’ll Be Back – The Players
    Hey Leroy, Your Mama’s Callin’ You – Jimmy Castor
    High Flyin’ Bird – Richie Havens
    Hitch Hiker – Bobby & Laurie*
    Hold on I’m Comin’ – Sam & Dave
    Holy Cow – Lee Dorsey
    How Can We Hang on To a Dream – Tim Hardin
    I Can’t Quit You Baby – Otis Rush
    I Feel Free – Cream
    I Fooled You This Time – Gene Chandler
    I Had Too Much to Dream – The Electric Prunes 
    I’ll Be Lovin’ You Forever – The 5th Dimension
    I’II Make You Happy – The Easybeats
    I’m A Believer – The Monkees
    I’m A Boy – The Who*
    In The Midnight Hour – Wilson Pickett
    It’s A Man’s Man’s Man’s World – James Brown
    I’ve Got the Blues – Billy Thorpe & The Aztecs*
    Just A Little Misunderstanding – The Contours
    Just Like a Woman – Bob Dylan*
    Keep On Running – The Spencer Davis Group
    Kicks – Paul Revere & The Raiders
    Knock on Wood – Eddie Floyd
    Land Of 1000 Dances – Wilson Pickett
    Let’s Go Get Stoned – Ray Charles*
    Li’l Red Riding Hood – Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs
    Little Girl – Syndicate of Sound
    Pretty Flamingo – Manfred Mann
    Mercy, Mercy, Mercy – Cannonball Adderley
    Mercy, Mercy – Don Covay & The Goodtimers
    Monday, Monday – The Mamas & The Papas
    Morningtown Ride – The Seekers
    Ninety-Nine and One-Half – Wilson Pickett
     No Milk Today – Herman’s Hermits
    No- No- No- No- No -Billy Boy Arnold
    Omar Khayyam – The Rubaiyats
    Out of Time – Chris Farlowe
    Paint It, Black – The Rolling Stones
    Papa’s Got a Brand-New Bag – James Brown
    Paperback Writer – The Beatles
    Pass The Hatchet – Roger & the Gypsies
    Pay Day – Mississippi John Hurt
    Pretty Flamingo – Manfred Mann
    Psychotic Reaction – The Count Five
    Pushin’ Too Hard – The Seeds
    Reach Out I’ll Be There – The Four Tops
    Right Track – Billy Butler
    River Deep Mountain High – Ike & Tina Turner
    S.Y.S.LJ.F.M.(The Letter Song) – Joe Tex
    Sally Free and Easy – Bert Jansch
    Season Of the Witch – Donovan*
    Semi-Detached, Suburban Mr. James – Manfred Mann
    Shapes Of Things – The Yardbirds
    She Comes in Colors – Love
    Sitting In the Rain – John Mayall &The Bluesbreakers
    Sloop John B – The Beach Boys
    Somebody Help Me – The Spencer Davis Group
    Someone To Love – The Great! Society
    Spann’s Boogie – Otis Spann
    Stop Stop Stop – The Hollies
    Stop! In The Name of Love – The Supremes
    Talk Talk – The Music Machine
    Tell It Like It Is – Aaron Neville*
    The Jerk – The ID Featuring Jeff St. John*
    The La La Man – Oliver Morgan
    The Mojo Boogie – J. B. Lenoir
    The Sound of Silence – Simon & Garfunkel
    The Sun Ain’t Gonna Shine Anymore – The Walker Brothers
    Then You Can Tell Me Goodbye – The Casinos
    They’re Coming to Take Me Away – Napoleon XIV
    This Old Heart of Mine – The Isley Brothers
    Time Has Come Today – The Chambers Brothers
     Try A Little Tenderness – Otis Redding
    Visions Of Johanna – Bob Dylan
    Wedding Ring – The Easybeats
    What Becomes of The Brokenhearted – Jimmy Ruffin
    When a Man Loves a Woman – Percy Sledge
    Wild Thing – The Troggs
    With A Girl Like You – The Troggs
    Working in the Coal Mine – Lee Dorsey
    Wouldn’t It Be Nice – The Beach Boys
    You Don’t Have to Say You Love Me – Dusty Springfield
    You’re Gonna Miss Me – The 13th Floor Elevators
  • *Seen perform live
  • ** Alll Music Guide https://www.allmusic.com
     
     

? & The Mysterians

My Life In Songs – 1954 – 2024

So here we are in 1963. I turn 9 years old and the music is amazing. Of course I didn’t hear all the songs listed below in that same year. The beauty of being a music lover is always discovering both new and old songs.

If you talk to any musician that plays the Hammond they will invariably mention Jimmy Smith as an influence. His Bobliness makes an appearance. Phil Ochs was one of the stand-outs of the early sixties folk scene of Greenwich Village. I never say Johnny Copeland play but I have seen his fabulous daughter Shemekia play up a storm.

(Booker T. Washington)”Bukka” White (November 12, 1906 – February 26, 1977) was an American Delta blues guitarist and singer who was a tremendous influence on his cousin Mr. B.B.King. Eric Bibb released the album Booker’s Guitar in 2010 “The genesis of this deeply moving album was in an almost chance encounter at a London hotel, where Eric Bibb had just played a set. He was approached by a fan with a beat-up guitar case, which turned out to contain a 1930s National steel guitar that had been owned and played by legendary Delta blues legend Bukka White. Bibb was inspired to write a half-spoken, half-sung ode to White, which he then recorded in London using that guitar“***.

The great Sonny Boy Williamson II “Help Me” is such as intense pleading song about obviously getting help from a lover. Why is he named the second Sonny Boy Williamson . Because there was another of the same name. John Lee Curtis “Sonny Boy” Williamson (March 30, 1914 – June 1, 1948) was an American blues harmonica player and singer-songwriter. He is often regarded as the pioneer of the blues harp as a solo instrument. He played on hundreds of recordings by many pre–World War II blues artists. Under his own name, he was one of the most recorded blues musicians of the 1930s and 1940s. Williamson’s harmonica style was a great influence on postwar performers. Later in his career, he was a mentor to many up-and-coming blues musicians who moved to Chicago, including Muddy Waters. In an attempt to capitalize on Williamson’s fame, Aleck “Rice” Miller began recording and performing as Sonny Boy Williamson II in the early 1940s, and later, to distinguish the two, John Lee Williamson came to be known as Sonny Boy Williamson I or “the original Sonny Boy”****. How confusing it that Sonny Boy the second was born earlier that Sonny Boy the first. Both of them died very early.

Those four Liverpudlians now enter the charts. The Beatles were a huge influence on my music life and I followed them relentlessly. They revolutionized songwriting and recording techniques, elevating the album to an art form, popularizing new genres like folk rock and psychedelic rock, and profoundly influencing pop culture and fashion. They moved beyond simple pop songs to incorporate complex arrangements, classical music, and non-Western sounds, pushing rock and pop into new creative territories. And I went along for the ride with them. The great singer-songwriter Glen Cardier released his album “Wild at Heart” in 2019. It included the song “Are You Beatles, Are You Stones“, in my formative years I was definitely Beatles! Interesting to note that the release of “Please Please Me” on the first American release misspelled their name as The Beattles!

The New Orleans Gospel icon Mahalia Jackson’s song “If I Can Help Somebody” is listed. I never saw Mahalia sing (more the pity) however I did have an epiphany when I was privileged to see Leonard Cohen play at the Mahalia Jackson theatre in New Orleans (28/03/2013).

Ellis Marsalis (born in New Orleans) Ellis Louis Marsalis Jr. (November 14, 1934 – April 1, 2020) was an American jazz pianist and educator. Active since the late 1940s, Marsalis came to greater attention in the 1980s and 1990s as the patriarch of the Marsalis musical family, when sons Branford and Wynton became popular jazz musicians“****.

There seems to be a lot of songs about Surfin’ and not just by The Beach Boys! Jan and Dean’s hit sounds a lot like a Beach Boys song. Maybe because Brian Wilson wrote it and also did the harmonies. The Penguins “Memories Of El Monte” was a retro Doo Woop song co-written by Frank Zappa. “On Broadway” by the Drifters became a major hit for George Benson in 1978.

Inez and Charlie Foxx’s “Mockingbird” has been covered by Aretha Franklin, Barry Goldberg and Carly Simon & James Taylor. “Surfer Bird” by The Trashmen (what a great band name) has been covered by The Ramones and The Cramps. Betty Everett’s “You’re No Good” has been covered by among others Linda Ronstadt and Elvis Costello

nineteen and sixty three

  • A Breathtaking Guy – The Supremes
  • Atlantis – The Shadows
  • Back At the Chicken Shack – Jimmy Smith
  • Banjo In the Hollow – The Dillards
  • Be My Baby – The Ronettes
  • Blowin’ In the Wind – Bob Dylan*
  • Blue Bayou – Roy Orbinson
  • Can I Get a Witness – Marvin Gaye
  • Come And Get These Memories – Martha & the Vandells
  • Cry Baby – Garnet Mimms & the Enchanters
  • Da Doo Ron Ron – The Crystals
  • Davey Moore – Phil Ochs
  • Devil With the Blue Dress – Shorty Long
  • Do-Wah Diddy – The Exciters
  • Down on Bending Knees – Johnny Copeland
  • Drunken Leroy Blues – Bukka White
  • Easier Said Than Done – The Essex
  • El Watusi – Ray Barretto
  • Everytime I See You – The Heartbreakers
  • Fiberglass Jungle – The Crossfires
  • Fingertips – Stevie Wonder*
  • From Me to You – The Beatles**
  • Good Luck Charm – Elvis Presley
  • Groovy Baby – Billy Abbott and the Jewels
  • Hanky Panky – Tommy James and the Shondells
  • Harlem Shuffle – Bob &Earl
  • Hello Stranger – Barbara Lewis
  • Help Me – Sonny Boy Williamson II
  • Here I Stand – The Rip Chords
  • He’s so Fine – The Chiffons
  • Hi-Heel Sneakers – Tommy Tucker
  • Hot Pastrami – The Dartells
  • Hot Tamales – Bobby Hatfield
  • How’s Your Bird? – Baby Ray and the Ferns
  • If I Can Help Somebody – Mahalia Jackson
  • If You Need Me – Solomon Burke*
  • I’m Gonna Build Me a Web – K.C.Douglas
  • I’m Leaving It Up to You – Dale & Grace
  • It’s All Right – The Impressions
  • It’s Gonna Work Out Fine – Ike and Tina Turner
  • It’s Too Late – Wilson Pickett
  • Java – Al Hirt
  • Just One Look – Doris Troy
  • Little Latin Lupe Lu – The Righteous Brothers
  • Lost and Lookin’ – Sam Cooke
  • Louie Louie – The Kingsmen
  • Magnolia Triangle – Ellis Marsalis*
  • Mean Woman Blues – Roy Orbinson
  • Memories Of El Monte – The Penguins
  • Mockingbird – Inez and Charlie Foxx
  • My Babe – The Righteous Brothers
  • My Boyfriend’s Back – The Angels
  • Night Train – The Oscar Peterson Trio
  • No Title Yet Blues – Clarence White
  • Not Me – The Orlons
  • On Broadway – The Drifters
  • Packing Up – The Famous Ward Singers
  • Pain in My Heart – Otis Redding
  • Penetration – The Pyramids
  • Please Please Me – The Beatles
  • Pride and Joy – Marvin Gaye
  • Prisoner Of Love – James Brown
  • Ring of Fire – Johnny Cash
  • Ruler of My Heart – Irma Thomas*
  • She Loves You – The Beatles
  • So Far Away – Hank Jacobs
  • So Much in Love – The Tymes
  • Streamline ‘Frisco Limited – Reverand Robert Wilkins
  • Streamline Special – Bukka White
  • Sugar and Spice – The Searchers
  • Summer Holiday – Cliff Richards & the Shadows
  • Surf City – Jan & Dean
  • Surfer Girl – The Beach Boys
  • Surfin’ Bird – The Trashmen
  • Surfin’ U.S.A. – The Beach Boys
  • Sweets for My Sweet – The Drifters
  • Take Five – Quincey Jones
  • The Big Surfer – Brian Lord & the Midnighters
  • The Cruncher – The Rotations
  • The Martian Hop – The Ran-Dells
  • The Monkey Time – Major Lance
  • The Nitty Gritty – Shirley Ellis
  • Then He Kissed Me – The Crystals
  • Those Lonely, Lonely Feelings – Johnny “Guitar” Watson
  • Um, Um, Um, Um, Um, Um – Major Lance
  • Walking the Dog – Rufus Thomas
  • Watermelon Man – Quincy Jones
  • Wham! – Lonnie Mack*
  • What Kind of Fool (Do You Think I Am) – The Tams
  • Who Do You Love – Ronnie Hawkins
  • Wipe Out – The Sufaris
  • Yeah Yeah – Georgie Fame
  • You’re No Good – Betty Everett
  • *Seen perform live
  • **The only Beatle I have seen perform live was Ringo (front row at Festival Hall)
  • ***All Music
  • ****Wikipedia

My Life In Songs – 1954 – 2024

So here we are 1962. My lists are tending to get longer the further I get into my seventy years of music.

John Lee Hooker (Boom Boom), now that’s how to boogie. In 1995, John Lee Hooker’s “Boom Boom” was included in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame‘s list of “The Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll. The Animals did a version of Boom Boom in 1964. Chubby Checker sure had a lot of songs with Twistin’ in the title.

We get the debut single from the one and only Otis Redding. Stevie Wonder in his early career was known as Little Stevie Wonder. The Beatles recorded a version of the Isley Brothers ‘Twist and Shout” in 1964. “You’ll Lose a Good Thing” by New Orlean’s Barbara Lynn included Mac Rebbeneck aka Dr. John on piano. The song was recorded at the famous Cosimo Matassa’s J & M Studios. Although no longer a studio (it is a laundromat) there is a plaque on the building recognising its significance to New Orleans. Little Eva’s “Locomotion” has been recorded by many artists over the years but my favourite cover is by Grand Funk Railroad in 1974. Booker T’s classic 12 bar blues “Green Onions” is a classic instrumental. If you get a chance to visit the Stax Records museum in Memphis you can stare at the Hammond used in the recording. “Stubborn Kind of Fellow” was Marvin Gaye’s first hit for the Motown label (although not his first recording). Now you might say to me why the novelty song “Monster Mash” by Boris Pickett? I did tell you in an earlier post that I am a sucker for a novelty song. “Song to Woody” by Bob Dylan is of course a homage to the great Woody Guthrie

Nineteen and Sixty – Two

  • (You’re My) Dream Come True – The Temptations
    409 – The Beach Boys
    All These Things – Art Neville
    Alligator Man – Jimmy C. Newman
    Any Day Now – Chuck Jackson
    Beechwood 4-5789 – The Marvelettes
    Big Boss Man – Frank Frost
    Big Girls Don’t Cry – Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons
    Boom Boom – John Lee Hooker
    Boss – The Rumblers
    Bring It Home to Me – Sam Cooke
    Bustin’ Surfboards – The Tornadoes
    Cinnamon Cinder – The Pastel Six
    Do You Love Me – The Contours
    Do You Want to Dance – Cliff Richard & The Shadows
    Do-Re-Mi – Lee Dorsey
    Down In the Valley – Solomon Burke*
    Dream Baby (How Long Must I Dream) – Roy Orbison
    Funny How Time Slips Away – Willie Nelson*
    Green Onions – Booker T.* & The MGs
    Having a Party – Sam Cooke
    He Hit Me (And I Felt Like a Kiss) – The Crystals
    Help Me – Sonny Boy Williamson
    He’s a Rebel – The Crystals
    Hitch Hike – Marvin Gaye
    Howlin’ For My Darling – Howlin’ Wolf
  • Humpty Dumpty Heart – Jim Cava
    I Ain’t Got No Home – Ramblin’ Jack Elliott*
    I Call It Pretty Music but The Old People Call It the Blues Pt 1 – Stevie Wonder*
    I Can’t Stop Loving You – Ray Charles*
    I Need Your Loving – Don Gardner
    I Sold My Heart to the Junkman – Patti Labelle And the Bluebelles
    I’ll Try Something New -The Miracles
    It’s Raining – Irma Thomas*
    I’ve Made Nights by Myself – Albert King
    Keep on Naggin’ – Jimmy Anderson
    La La La La La – Stevie Wonder
    Land of 1000 Dances – Chris Kenner
    Let Me In – The Sensations
    Let’s Dance – Chris Montez
    Let’s Go (Pony) – The Routers
    Lipstick Traces (On A Cigarette) – Benny Spellman
    Loop De Loop – Johnny Thunder
    Mama Didn’t Lie – Jan Bradley
    Mashed Potato Time – Dee Dee Sharp
    Monster Mash – Bobby “Boris” Pickett & The Crypt-Kickers
    Moon River (From “Breakfast at Tiffany’s”) – Danny Williams
    Mumblin’ Blues – Sylvester Buckley
    My Man He’s a Lovin’ Man – Bettye LaVette
    Night Train – James Brown
    Oh, My Angel – Bertha Tillman
    Only One – Scotty Wayne
    Only the Lonely (Know the Way I Feel) – Roy Orbison
    Palisades Park – Freddy Cannon
    Papa-Oom-Mow-Mow – The Rivingtons
    Party Lights – Claudine Clark
    Pipeline – The Chantays
    Playboy – The Marvelettes
    Queen of My Heart – René And Ray
    Remember the Night – The Atlantics
    Return to Sender – Elvis Presley
    Shake For Me – Howlin’ Wolf
    Shake Sherry – The Contours
    Sheila – Tommy Roe
    Sherry – Frankie Valli and the Four Seasons
    Shout Bamalama – Otis Redding
    Slow Twistin’ – Chubby Checker
    Soldier Boy – The Shirelles
    Something’s Got a Hold on Me – Etta James
    Song to Woody – Bob Dylan*
    Soul Twist – King Curtis And the Noble Knights
    Spoonful – Howlin’ Wolf
    Stubborn Kind of Fellow – Marvin Gaye
    Surfin’ Safari – The Beach Boys
    Take It Off – The Genteels
    Tell Him – The Exciters
    Tell Him – The Drew-Vels
    Telstar – The Tornados
    The Back Door – Badeaux & Louisiana Aces & D.L. Menard
    The Loco-Motion – Little Eva
    The Lonely Bull (El Solo Toro) – Herb Alpert & The Tijuana Brass*
    The One Who Really Loves You – Mary Wells
    The Red Rooster – Howlin’ Wolf
    The Syracuse – Felix Cavaliere & The Escorts
    The Town I Live In – McKinley Mitchell
    The Wah Watusi – The Orlons
    These Arms of Mine – Otis Redding
    Too Many Cooks – Buddy Guy*
    Twist and Shout – The Isley Brothers
  • Twistin’ The Night Away – Sam Cooke
    Two Lovers – Mary Wells
    Up On the Roof – The Drifters
    Venus in Blue Jeans – Jimmy Clanton
    Village of Love – Nathaniel Mayer & The Fabulous Twilight
    Walk On with The Duke – Gene Chandler
    Watermelon Man – Mongo Santamaria
    What’s a Matter Baby – Timi Yuro
    Wiggle Wobble – Les Cooper
    Working for the Man – Roy Orbison
    Yes Indeed – Pete Fountain
    You Beat Me to The Punch – Mary Wells
    You Better Move On – Arthur Alexander
    You’ll Lose a Good Thing – Barbara Lynn
    You’ll Never Cherish a Love So True (Till You Lose It) – Johnny O’Keefe*
    You’ve Really Got a Hold on Me – The Miracles
  • * Seen perform live I have seen Booker T. backed by the Drive By Truckers
     
     

My Life In Songs 1954-2024

A good year for some classic blues and rock ‘n’ roll songs, and another Aussie (Johnny O’Keefe) makes the list with his song “The Wild One (Real Wild One)”. Now, before yáll go, wasn’t that an Iggy Pop song? The answer is yes, but it was a cover. Also staying with Johnny O’Keefe, I saw him at the Sunbury Music Festival (1973). I thought his style of rock music would be out of place. He wandered out on stage in a white suit, and I waited for the boos. I was blowin’away with his performance. After only one song, he had the pot heads and the piss heads in the palm of his hands.

It is interesting to note that several songs on the ’58 list were first heard by me on records by other bands as I began exploring music in the ’60s. I first heard “Dizzy Miss Lizzy” and “Money” sung by the Beatles; the Rolling Stones also did a cover of “Dizzy Miss Lizzie”. I first heard “Summertime Blues” sung by the Who at Woodstock. Also listed are some groundbreaking instrumentals by artists such as Duane Eddy, Link Wray, the Shadows, and Little Walter.

The song “I’m Battie Over Hattie”, sung by the out there Esquerita, who often wore heavy makeup, sunglasses, and two wigs, piling his pompadour high on his head. Little Richard ( also on this list) was greatly influenced by Esquerita (photo below).

The Big Bopper, Ritchie Valens, Buddy Holly and pilot Roger Peterson all died in a plane crash on February 3rd 1959. The event is infamously known as “The Day the Music Died,” a name popularised by Don McLean’s song “American Pie”.  

A couple of interesting notes: The Beach Boys song “Surfin’ U.S.A. (1962). Listen to the song and you will hear Chuck Berry’s ‘Sweet Little Sixteen”, so much so that Chuck eventually collected a writer’s credit and royalties! How politically incorrect in today’s world is The Pips singing “Ching Chong”? Jimi Hendrix recorded Chuck Berry’s “Johnny B.Goode in 1972. The Zanies Novelty Hit “The Blob” was from the movie of the same name

“Stagger Lee” by Lloyd Price dates back a long way. Variously known as “Stack O’Lee”, “Stack O’Lee Blues” and sung by so many old-time Blues singers. The earliest recorded version of the song I have is “Stack O’Lee Blues” by Ma Rainey (1926). The “Twist” by Hank Ballard and the Midnighters was, of course, made famous by Chubby Checker in 1961.

Ninteen and fifty – eight

  • All American Boy – Bill Parsons
    All I Have to Do Is Dream – The Everly Brothers
    Big Man – The Four Preps
    Bluebirds Over the Mountain – Ershel Hickey
    Candles – The Crests
    Cha Dooky-Doo -Art Neville *
    Chantilly Lace – The Big Bopper
    Chisholm Trail – Cisco Houston
    Cigarettes and Coffee Blues – Lefty Frizzell
    Come On, Let’s Go – Ritchie Valens
    Didn’t It Rain – Evelyn Freeman
    Dizzy Miss Lizzy – Larry Williams
    Do You Wanna Dance? – Bobby Freeman
    Donna – Ritchie Valens
    Don’t You Just Know It – Huey ‘Piano’ Smith
    Don’t Your House Look Lonesome – Cat-Iron
    Down by the Riverside – Sister Rosetta Tharpe
    Drip Drop – The Drifters
    Early in the Morning – The Ding Dongs
    Endless Sleep – Jody Reynolds
    Everything’s Gonna Be All Right – Magic Sam
    Evil – Howlin’ Wolf
    Fever – Peggy Lee
    For Your Love – Ed Townsend
    For Your Precious Love – The Impressions
    Forty Days – Ronnie Hawkins
    Gee Whiz – Bob & Earl
    Good Golly Miss Molly – Little Richard
    Got A Job – The Miracles
    Heartbreak Hotel – Elvis Presley
    He’s Gone – The Chantels
    High Blood Pressure – Huey ‘Piano’ Smith
    Hollywood Party – Dick Bush
    Honky Tonk – Dinah Washington
    How Many More Years – Howlin’ Wolf
    I Cried A Tear – LaVern Baker
    I Wonder Why – Dion & The Belmonts
    I’m A Mojo Man – Lonesome Sundown
    I’m Battie Over Hattie – Esquerita
    Itchy Twitchy Feeling – Bobby Hendricks
    Johnny B. Goode – Chuck Berry
    Juke – Little Walter
    Jungle Rock – Jim Bobo
    Junker Blues – Champion Jack Dupree
    Just a Dream – Jimmy Clanton
    Just Walkin’ In The Rain – The Prisonaires
    Justine – Don & Dewey
    Koko Joe – Don & Dewey
    La Bamba – Ritchie Valens
    Little Star – The Elegants
    Lonely Teardrops – Jackie Wilson
    Lovers Never Say Goodbye – The Flamingos
    Matilda – Cookie And The Cupcakes
    Memphis Boogie – Jesse Fuller
    Moanin’ At Midnight – Howlin’ Wolf
    Money – The Miracles
    Moonlight Bay – Clyde McPhatter & The Drifters
    My Starter Won’t Start – Lightnin’ Slim
    Nee Nee Na Na Na Na Nu Nu – Dicky Doo And The Don’Ts
    Need You – Donnie Owens
    One Night – Elvis Presley
    One Summer Night – The Danleers
    Ooh! My Soul – Little Richard
    Over And Over – Bobby Day
    Peggy Sue – Buddy Holly
    Poor Boy – The Royaltones
    Pretty Girls Everywhere -Eugene Church
     Rama Lama Ding Dong – The Edsels
    Ramrod – Duane Eddy
    Rave On – Buddy Holly
    Rebel Rouser – Duane Eddy
    Reelin’ And Rockin’ – Chuck Berry
    Rock And Roll Is Here To Stay – Danny & the Juniors
    Rockhouse – Big Maybelle
    Rockin’ Robin – Bobby Day
    Rumble – Link Wray & The RayMen
    Short Fat Fannie – Larry Williams
    Since I Don’t Have You – The Skyliners
    Sit and Cry (The Blues) – Buddy Guy*
    Smokestack Lightnin’ – Howlin’ Wolf
    So Blue – The Jades
    Splish Splash – Bobby Darin
    Summertime Blues – Eddie Cochran
    Sweet Little Sixteen – Chuck Berry
    Symbol of Heaven – Little Julian Herrera & Johnny Otis
    Tears On My Pillow – Little Anthony & The Imperials
    Tequila – The Champs
    The Blob – The Zanies
    The Twist – Hank Ballard & The Midnighters
    The Walk – Jimmy McCracklin
    The Wild One – Johnny O’Keefe*
    To Know Him Is to Love Him – The Teddy Bears
    Train To Nowhere – The Champs
    True, Fine Mama – Little Richard
    Try Me – James Brown
    Two People In the World – Little Anthony & The Imperials
    Under the Stars of Love – The Shadows
    Walkin’ With Mr Lee – Lee Allen
    We Belong Together – Robert & Johnny
    Western Movies – The Olympics
    What Am I Living For – Chuck Willis
    What’d I Say, Pt . 1 & 2 – Ray Charles
    Willie and the Hand Jive – Johnny Otis
    Yakety Yak – The Coasters
    You Cheated – The Shields
    You’re So Fine – Little Walter
  • *Seen perform live

My Life In Songs 1954 – 2024

Blues, Doo-Wop, Soul, Pop, R ‘n’ B, Country, Surf Music, Gospel, Be-Bop and for the first time in my lists we get some skiffle. The first Aussie performer is noted (Slim Dusty). The first time I heard a version of C .C. Rider was by Aussie band Billy Thorpe and the Aztecs (1972ish), little did I know it went back To Ma Rainey (1925) when she recorded “See See Rider”. Bo Diddley’s “Mona” first came to my attention with the Rolling Stones 1964 cover. These “first heard” recollections will be a recurring theme i.e. a 6o’s bands recording old Blues, Soul and R’n’B numbers and in later years I would go on to research the origins of songs. In most cases I would say that the originals are better than the covers. As Big Mama Thornton (or was it Sonny Boy Williamson) once said “those white boys want to play the blues so bad and they do”. “Suzie Q” came to my attention when recorded by Creedence in 1968. I absolutely love “I’m a King Bee” by Slim Harpo which is another song recorded by the Stones. Elvis has many listings through the years, my first purchased Elvis recording was an E.P. that included “Cant Help Falling in Love” (1961). “At the Hop” came to my attention when I went to see “Woodstock” which was released here in Australia in Sept. 1970. The band Sha Na Na rocked that song. At Forest Hills High School in Queens, Paul Simon and Art Garfunkel used the stage names Tom and Jerry and recorded the hit “Hey Schoolgirl”. I’d like a dollar for every time school girl is used in a song!

Ninteen and Fifty – Seven

  • 26 Miles (Santa Catalina) – The Four Preps
    A Pub with No Beer – Slim Dusty
    All of Your Love – Magic Sam
    All Shook Up – Elvis Presley ( see notes below 1)
    At The Hop – Danny & the Juniors
    Be-Bop Baby – Ricky Nelson
    Bertha Lou- Johnny Faire
    Black Slacks – Joe Bennett & The Sparkletones
    Bony Moronie – Larry Williams
    Book Of Love – The Monotones
    Buzz-Buzz-Buzz – The Hollywood Flames
    Bye Bye Love – The Everly Brothers
    CC Rider – Chuck Willis
    Chickee Wah Wah – Bobby Marchan (see notes below 2)
    Click-Clack – Dicky Doo and the Don’ts
    Dedicated To The One I Love – The “5” Royales
    Deserie – The Charts
    Diana – Paul Anka
    Don’t Let Go – Roy Hamilton
    Down in the Alley – The Clovers
    (Every Time I Hear) That Mellow Saxophone – Roy Montrell
    Fabulous – Charlie Gracie
    Farther Up The Road – Bobby “Blue” Bland *
    Fattening Frogs For Snakes – Sonny Boy Williamson
    Florence – The Paragons
    Flyin’ Saucers Rockin’ Roll – Billy Lee Riley
    Frog Hop – Earl Hooker
    Gangster of Love – Johnny “Guitar” Watson
    Get A Job -The Silhouettes
    Got My Mojo Working – Muddy Waters
    He’s Gone – The Chantels
    Hey School Girl – Tom & Jerry (Simon & Garfunkel)
    Honest I Do – Jimmy Reed
    Honky Tonk (Part 1) – Bill Doggett
    Hoodoo Blues – Lightnin’ Slim
    I’m A King Bee -Slim Harpo
    I’m Gonna Be a Wheel Someday – Bobby Mitchell And The Toppers
    I’m Walking – Fats Domino (3. See notes below)
    Is Your Love for Real? – Hank Ballard & The Midnighters
    It Hurts Me Too -Elmore James
    It’s You, Baby – Sunnyland Slim
    Jailhouse Rock – Elvis Presley
    Jim Dandy – LaVern Baker
    Jungle Hop – Don & Dewey
    Keep A Knockin’ – Little Richard
    Leavin’ It All Up To You – Don & Dewey
    Let’s Have a Party – Wanda Jackson
    Let’s Make It – James Brown
    Little Bitty Pretty One – Thurston Harris
    Little Darlin’ – The Gladiolas
    Louie Louie – Richard Berry
    Love Bandit (Gangster of Love) – Johnny ‘Guitar’ Watson
    Love Me With A Feeling – Magic Sam
    The Maybe – The Chantels
    Mess Around – Ray Charles *
    Messed Up – Harold Burrage
    Mona – Bo Diddley
    Mr. Lee – The Bobbettes
    New Orleans Blues – Chris Barber’s Jazz Band
    New Orleans Hop Scop Blues – Dave Van Ronk
    No Seas Cruel – Baldemar Huerta & Los Romanceros
    Not Fade Away – Buddy Holly and The Crickets
  • Over The Mountain, Across The Sea – Johnnie & Joe
    Party Doll – Buddy Knox
    Peanuts – Little Joe & the Thrillers
    Peggy Sue – Buddy Holly and The Crickets
    Raunchy – Ernie Freeman
    Red Hot – Billy Lee Riley
    Reet Petite – Jackie Wilson
    Rip It Up – Little Richard
    Rock And Roll Music – Chuck Berry
    Rock Island Line -Lonnie Donegan’s Skiffle Group
    Rockin’ Pneumonia And The Boogie Woogie Flu – Huey “Piano” Smith
    ‘Round Midnight – Miles Davis
    School Day – Chuck Berry
    Searchin’ -The Coasters
    Sick and Tired – Chris Kenner
    Sitting in The Balcony – Eddie Cochran
    Susie-Q – Dale Hawkins
    Take My Hand, Precious Lord – Mahalia Jackson
    Talking Columbia Blues – Jack Elliott
    That’ll Be Day – Buddy Holly and The Crickets
    The Monkey – Dave Bartholomew
    The Stroll – The Diamonds
    The Sun Is Shining – Jimmy Reed
    Think – The “5” Royales
    This Is the Nite – The Valiants
    Too Much – Elvis Presley
    Wake up Little Susie – The Everly Brothers
    Walkin’ After Midnight – Patsy Cline
    Walkin’ With Mr. Lee – Lee Allen
    Walking to New Orleans – Fats Domino
    Whispering Bells – The Dell Vikings
    Whole Lotta Shakin Goin On – Big Maybelle
    Whole Lotta Shakin’ Goin’ On – Jerry Lee Lewis
    Words Of Love – Buddy Holly and the Crickets
    You Know You Don’t Want Me – Mojo Watson
    You Send Me – Sam Cooke
    Young Blood – The Coasters
     
     
  1. I never got to see Elvis perform but I have been to Graceland
  2. Chickee Wah Wah is also a great music club in New Orleans
  3. Never got to see the Fat Man but I have been to his house in New Orleans

*Seen perform live

My Life in Songs 1954 – 2024

Here we are for the year 1956. We have Blues, R’n’B, Rock ‘n’ Roll, Pop and Doo Wop. I am sure you will know many of the artists listed but I am also pretty sure that some of the artists will be new to you. Why not check them out. Also, you will see a few “novelty” songs creeping in. I’m a sucker for a novelty song. I have an asterisk next to artists I have seen play live. Little Richard should have been noted as we had tickets in the 70’s to see him play at Festival Hall. Unfortunately, he rediscovered religion in Sydney and cancelled all subsequent shows! I’d still love to see your comments on who you think I should have added.

Nineteen and Fifty – Six

  • A Casual Look – The Six Teens
  • A Thousand Miles Away – The Heartbeats
  • Ain’t Got No Home – Clarence “Frogman” Henry*
  • Bacon Fat – Andre Williams
  • Bad Boy – The Jive Bombers
  • Be-Bop-A-Lula – Gene Vincent & His Blue Caps
  • Black Denim Trousers and Motorcycle Boots – The Cheers
  • Blast Off to Love – Douglas “Jocko” Henderson
  • Blue Monday – Fats Domino
  • Blue Suede Shoes – Carl Perkins
  • Blue Suede Shoes – Elvis
  • Blueberry  Hill – Fats Domino
  • Brown Eyed Handsome Man – Chuck Berry
  • Can This Be Mine – Freddie Hall
  • Casey Jones – Pete Seeger
  • Chonnie-On-Chon – James Brown
  • Confidential – Sonny Knight
  • Cops And Robbers – Bo Diddley
  • Corrine Corrina – Big Joe Turner
  • Dixie Fried – Carl Perkins
  • Don’t Be Cruel – Elvis
  • Down in Mexico – The Coasters
  • Dust My Blues – Elnore James
  • Eddie My Love – The Teen Queens
  • Elvis Perez – Lalo Guerrero & El Mariachi De Meno Villa
  • Every Time I Hear That Mellow Saxophone – Roy Montrell
  • Fever – Little Willie John
  • Flying Saucer (Part 1) – Buchanan & Goodman
  • Give it up – Poka Dot Slim
  • Goodnight My Love – Jesse Belvin
  • Havana Moon – Chuck Berry
  • Have a Good Time – Shakey Horton
  • Heartbreak Hotel – Elvis
  • Hey! Hey! Hey! Hey! – Johnny Otis
  • Honey Love – The Drifters
  • Honky Tonk (Part 1) – Billy Doggett
  • I Asked for Water – Howlin’ Wolf
  • I Can’t Quit You Baby – Otis Rush
  • I Put a Spell on You – Screamin ’Jay Hawkins
  • I Walk the Line – Johnny Cash
  • I’m Bad – Bo Diddley
  • I’m Leaving You – Otis Rush
  • In the Still of the Night – The Five Satins
  • Jivin’ Around – Ernie Freeman
  • Let The Good Times Roll – Shirley & Lee
  • Lonely Avenue – Ray Charles*
  • Lonely Lonely Nights – The Hearts
  • Long Tall Sally – Little Richard
  • Love Is Strange – Mickey & Sylvia
  • Love Me Tender – Elvis
  • Mardi Gras Mambo – The Hawketts
  • Meet Me Halfway – Arbee Stidham
  • Milk Cow Blues Boogie – Elvis
  • Miss O’Malley’s Rally – George “Harmonica” Smith
  • Nite Owl – Tony Allen & the Champs
  • No Money Down – Chuck Berry
  • O Solow – Dizzy Gillespie
  • Oh, Baby Babe – Johnny Burnette
  • Oh, What A Night – The Dells
  • Ooby Dooby – Roy Orbinson
  • Party Doll – Buddy Knox
  • Pink Cadillac – Sammy Masters
  • Please, Please, Please – James Brown
  • Pledging My Love – Johnny Ace
  • Purty Little Dollie – Clarence Garlow
  • Rip It Up – Little Richard
  • Rockin’ At Cosimo’s – Lee Allen
  • Roll Over Beethoven – Chuck Berry
  • Rubber Biscuit – The Chips
  • Sh-Boom -The Chords
  • She’s Fine, She’s Mine – Bo Diddley
  • Skinny Jim – Eddie Cochran
  • Slippin’ and Slidin’ -Little Richard
  • Smokestack Lightnin’ – Howlin’ Wolf
  • Smokey Joe’s Café – The Robins
  • Speedoo – The Cadillacs
  • Spiritual Trilogy: Oh Freedom / Come and Go –  Odetta
  • Stranded In the Jungle – The Cadets
  • Summertime – Billy Stewart
  • Tear It Up – Johnny Burnette
  • The Closer You Are – Channels
  • The Fool – Sanford Clark
  • The Girl Can’t Help It – Little Richard
  • The Train Kept a Rollin’ – Johnny Burnette
  • The Wind – The Diablos
  • Three Hours Past Midnight – Johnny “Guitar” Watson
  • Too Much – Bernard Harrison
  • Too Much Monkey Business – Chucky Berry
  • Transfusion – Nervous Norvus
  • Whatcha Gonna Do? – The Drifters
  • When You Dance – The Turbans
  • Who Do You Love – Bo Diddley
  • Why Do Fools Fall in Love – Frankie Lymon
  • Witchcraft – The Spiders
  • W-P-L-J – The 4 Deuces
  • You Can’t Catch Me – Chuck Berry
  • You Eat Too Much – Harold Burrage

  • *Artists I have seen live