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How the Beatles’ Shortest Song Accidently Ended Up on ‘Abbey Road’
At 23 seconds long, “Her Majesty” is the shortest tune in the Beatles catalog. Written by Paul McCartney, the song was intended to fit between “Mean Mr. Mustard” and “Polythene Pam” in the Abbey Road medley.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 26, 20252 min read


‘A Horse with No Name’ Explained
America was part of the ’70s laid-back West Coast sound that included the Eagles and Linda Ronstadt. Written by Bunnell, “A Horse with No Name” was released in 1972 and became a №1 hit. In the Wall Street Journal, Bunnell explained how the folk-rock tune, originally called “Desert Song,” was written while living in London.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 25, 20252 min read


Sam the Sham Lures 'Li'l Red Riding Hood' into the Top 10
“Lil’ Red Riding Hood” was the second Top 10 hit for Sam the Sham & the Pharaohs, their follow-up to “Wooly Bully.” The 1966 novelty tune, written by Ron Blackwell, reached No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100. “Lil’ Red Riding Hood” is a takeoff on the Charles Perrault fairy tale. Sam, the wolf in sheep’s clothing, doesn’t think Red Riding Hood should “go walkin’ in these spooky ol’ woods alone.”

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 21, 20252 min read


Pacific Gas & Electric’s High-Voltage ‘Are You Ready?’ Brought Gospel to Rock
Pacific Gas & Electric formed in Los Angeles in 1967 and was named after the West Coast power company, which forced the band to change its name to PG&E in 1971. The New York Times at the time called them “among the best and most underexposed talent in the country.”
PG&E’s acclaimed performance at the 1968 Miami Pop Festival earned them a contract with Columbia Records.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 19, 20252 min read


Percy Sledge Made a Tragic Mistake with 'When a Man Loves a Woman'
In early 1966, Sledge recorded “When a Man Loves a Woman” with some of the area’s finest musicians: Junior Lowe (bass), Spooner Oldham (organ), Roger Hawkins (drums), and Jimmy Johnson (lead guitar). The band was borrowed from Rick Hall’s FAME Studios, where the Muscle Shoals Sound was born.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 18, 20253 min read


The Traveling Wilburys: How the Journey Began
Some groups work together for years, honing and refining their sound until they develop a formula that yields a hit record.
Then there are the Traveling Wilburys, a happy accident that brought together five superstars in April 1988: George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Jeff Lynne, Tom Petty, and Roy Orbison. The Wilburys produced two albums; the first, Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1, led off with their biggest hit, “Handle with Care.”

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 17, 20253 min read


When a Ladies’ Room Attendant Inspired Donna Summer’s ‘She Works Hard for the Money’
“She Works Hard for the Money” is the title track of Donna Summer’s 1983 album. Released as the lead single, it was a №1 R&B hit that year. Summer wrote the song with producer Michael Omartian. Its inspiration came after the February 1983 Grammy Awards ceremony when Summer attended a party at Chasen’s restaurant in West Hollywood. Summer and manager Susan Muneo encountered an exhausted restroom attendant named Onetta Johnson.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 16, 20252 min read


‘We Didn’t Think It Was Anything Anyone Would Buy’: The Newbeats’ ‘Bread and Butter’
“Bread and Butter” was a №2 hit in 1964 for the Newbeats: lead singer Larry Henley and brothers Dean and Mark Mathis. The group formed in Shreveport, LA, and was signed by Hickory Records on the strength of a demo of “Bread and Butter.”

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 15, 20252 min read


How ‘Rock Lobster’ Clawed John Lennon Back to the Recording Studio
Wilson’s high-pitched sound effects were inspired by Yoko Ono. “All of us really loved her, so it was definitely an inspiration when Cindy did her vocal part and some of the background parts,” Pierson told A.V. Club.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 14, 20252 min read


David Cassidy Never Wanted the Partridge Family's “Doesn’t Somebody Want to be Wanted”
“Probably the thing that they had to twist my arm the hardest to do,” Cassidy told Lost 45s, “was ‘Doesn’t Somebody Want to Be Wanted.’

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 13, 20252 min read


Christmas Songs That Rock
Elton John incorporated elements of Phil Spector’s Wall of Sound production techniques in recording “Step Into Christmas.” “We wanted to make an homage to Phil Spector,” John told the Sunday Post. “Part of what made Phil Spector records were the rooms, the musicians and the ambience.”

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 10, 20256 min read


Is “White Christmas” by the Drifters the Greatest Christmas Song?
The Drifters would place nine records in the R&B Top 10, including the greatest holiday song ever put on vinyl: “White Christmas.”

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 10, 20253 min read


The Drifters Were Fired — then Reborn — at the Apollo Theater
Things came to a head when one of the Drifters, who had been drinking, argued and cursed at Dr. Jive and Apollo owner Frank Schiffman. Treadwell fired the entire group backstage and offered four of the Five Crowns the opportunity to become the new lineup of the Drifters.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 9, 20252 min read


Think You Know Rock & Roll? Take This Rock Quiz!
1. Roger McGuinn got a Dylan lyric wrong in
A. “My Back Pages”
B. “You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere”
C. “Mr. Tambourine Man”

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 8, 20251 min read


‘Two Big Cap Guns, Plus a Toupee!’ The Characters of The Band’s ‘The Weight’ Explained
The Hawks left Hawkins in 1964 and started working as Bob Dylan’s backing band a year later. After he suffered a motorcycle accident in 1966, Dylan invited the Hawks to join him in Woodstock.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 7, 20253 min read


‘My Old School’ Taught Steely Dan a Lesson
The song only reached №63 but is a fan favorite. Its lyrics describe their arrest, along with Fagen’s girlfriend, Dorothy White, in a marijuana raid.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 7, 20252 min read


‘Expressway to Your Heart’ Led Instead to a Dead End
“One night, one of the guys jumped off the stage and opened up the cash register and started throwing money all around the place. That made the papers. After that, a couple of the cash registers would be stacked with ones. We did that in that one club, then in another club we’d tear out the ceiling tiles.”

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 6, 20255 min read


The Left Banke’s ‘Walk Away Renée’ Was Set in . . . Brooklyn?
“Renée was Mike Brown’s big love, and Tommy liked her a lot too,” said Cameron. “Tall, blonde and quiet. Mike was like a little kid around her. He’d bring her up to the studio to hear his latest songs, and then we’d all come out and sing. She’d just sit there and listen and smile a lot.”

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 6, 20254 min read


‘Surfin’ Bird’ by the Trashmen: ‘It Just Sticks in Your Mind’
On November 13, 1963, the Trashmen released the surf rock classic “Surfin’ Bird.” Despite its sound, the band recorded the song 2,000 miles away from the sun, sand, and surf of Southern California.

edgarstreetbooks
Dec 6, 20255 min read

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