The most important thing is namin’ the band

In 1983, two guys in San Francisco who delivered singing telegrams decided to form an a cappella group they called The Oral Bobs (a play on evangelist Oral Roberts’ name). One of their humorous original songs, called “Naming the Band,” has a chorus that goes like this: “We should be writing tunes and learning where to stand, /Instead we’re spending all our time doing nothing but naming the band…”

Coming up with a suitable name for your band does seem to be an important factor in your success. Is it meaningful, or indicative of the music? Or maybe it’s just silly, or outrageous, or none of the above. (I’m surprised there’s no band out there called None Of The Above. Maybe there is!)

Where do rock band names come from? In its infancy, rock and roll was played by bands and artists with simple, straightforward names that tended to fall into three general categories:

Somebody and The Somethings:  Many dozens of bands used this linguistic structure, from Bill Haley and His Comets to Little Anthony and The Imperials, from Freddie and the Dreamers to Paul Revere and The Raiders.  Among other things, this allowed the record companies to eventually spin off the leader as a solo act, like Tommy James (without The Shondells) and Diana Ross (without The Supremes).

The Numbers:  The charts were full of groups whose names identified the number of members:  The Four Seasons, We Five, The Kingston Trio, The Dave Clark Five, Sir Douglas Quintet.

The Regular Names:  Some solo artists merely used their given names — Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry.  Others concocted a stage name to mask their real name — Bob Dylan (Robert Zimmerman), Stevie Wonder (Stevland Morris), Elton John (Reginald Dwight), Sting (Gordon Sumner).

Beginning in the mid-’60s, bands started branching out by inventing more and more outlandish, bizarre names.  California bands in particular popularized this trend, using sometimes unrelated words picked seemingly at random:  Ultimate Spinach, Iron Butterfly, Moby Grape, Strawberry Alarm Clock, the Flying Burrito Brothers.  Conversely, some groups chose to use all their names as the band’s name:  Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young; Emerson, Lake and Palmer; Hall and Oates; Beck, Bogert and Appice.  Or they took the last name of one or two band members:  Santana, Van Halen, Fleetwood Mac.

By the ’80s and beyond, the rock music world was awash in creative names — some clever, some preposterous, some blatantly offensive:  Men Without Hats.  Death Cab For Cutie.  Bare Naked Ladies.  Tears for Fears.  Garbage.  Hootie and the Blowfish.  Nine Inch Nails.  10,000 Maniacs.  Toad the Wet Sprocket.  The Psychedelic Furs.  Right Said Fred.  The Dead Kennedys.  Jimmy Eat World.  A Flock of Seagulls.  The Jesus and Mary Chain.  My Chemical Romance.  Alice in Chains.  The Butthole Surfers.  The Goo Goo Dolls.  Rage Against the Machine.  Dashboard Confessional.  Today, there are even websites that use algorithms to help aspiring artists come up with memorable names.

I’ve picked 30 classic rock bands from the ’60s, ’70s and ’80s with intriguing names that have noteworthy back stories to share.

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The Who

Pete Townshend and his band had called themselves The Detours and The High Numbers for a spell in their early days.  At the time, Townshend’s hard-of-hearing grandmother was living in the Townshend household, and Pete recalls that whenever he was heading out the door to attend a concert, he’d mention the name of the band.  Invariably, his grandmother would reply, “You’re going to see the who??”  It didn’t take long for Townshend to decide that The Who would be a great name.

Lynyrd Skynyrd

Three founding members of this Southern rock band attended the same high school in Jacksonville, Florida, where the hard-nosed gym teacher, a man who strictly enforced the rules regarding hair length, was a guy named Leonard Skinner.  The fledging group had called themselves The Noble Five and then One Percent but, in a sort of mock tribute to the teacher they despised, they eventually chose to rename themselves Lynyrd Skynyrd, changing the spelling in case he objected.  To the band’s surprise, Skinner was eventually flattered by the gesture oncer they became successful, and he even appeared on stage once to introduce the band at a Jacksonville show years later.

Talking Heads

When TV news producers edit together the various clips they need to tell their on-air stories, they have a term they use to refer to ‘head-and-shoulders” shots of people talking but not doing anything:  “talking heads.”  Bass player Tina Weymouth recalls sitting around skimming through an article in TV Guide in 1976 that explored the TV producer’s job.  “I saw that ‘talking head’ basically means, ‘all content, no action,’ and we thought that described us perfectly at the time.  It just fit, so we went with that.”

Grateful Dead

Rising from the ashes of two groups — Mother McCree’s Jug Champions and The Warlocks — came San Francisco’s most celebrated band, The Grateful Dead.  There are conflicting stories about the derivation of the name.  Bass player Phil Lesh says leader Jerry Garcia randomly opened a book and saw the word “grateful” in the text of the left-hand page, and the word “dead” lined up next to it in the text of the right-hand page.  Others maintain it was a phrase from 19th Century literature, referring to “the soul of a deceased person showing gratitude to someone who, in an act of charity, arranged their funeral.”

Jethro Tull

A ragged band known as The Blades were still learning their chops in 1968 when their manager got them booked in clubs in and around London.  Sometimes the club owners didn’t like their act and refused to invite them back, so the manager simply changed their name and got them re-booked under the new name, much to the club owners’ chagrin when the same musicians showed up.  One week, the manager’s assistant, a history buff, suggested they call themselves Jethro Tull, who was an 18th Century British agriculturalist and inventor of the seed drill, a device which vastly improved efficiency in farming.  This time, as it happened, the club owners liked the act and gave them a regular gig, and the name stuck.  Through the years, many fans were under the mistaken impression that Jethro Tull, not Ian Anderson, was the name of their flute-playing frontman.

Earth Wind & Fire

Chess Records session drummer Maurice White was a big devotee of astrology.  His first band, a Chicago-based group called The Salty Peppers, broke up in 1970, and he moved to L.A. to start over.  White’s astrological sign was Sagittarius, which has the “primary element” of Earth and the “seasonal elements” of Air and Fire.  So when he established his new group, he settled on Earth, Wind (Air) & Fire, and the lyrics of many of the songs in EW&F’s catalog reflect his interest in the environment and world peace.

Led Zeppelin

In 1966, a recording session took place involving drummer Keith Moon of The Who, keyboard session man John Paul Jones, and Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page, then sharing guitar duties in The Yardbirds.  They recorded “Beck’s Bolero,” among other blues tracks, and someone suggested they ought to form a band.  Moon dismissed the idea, saying he thought they wouldn’t be well received.  “We’d go over like a lead balloon,” he said.  “Hey, we could call ourselves Lead Balloon.”  Two years later, when Page had formed a new group from the ashes of The Yardbirds, he remembered Moon’s comment and decided on Lead Zeppelin, “the perfect combination of heavy and light, combustibility and grace.”  Manager Peter Grant encouraged Page to make it “Led” instead of “Lead” so people wouldn’t mispronounce it (as in “I’ll lead the way”).

Buffalo Springfield

In the mid-20th Century, the Buffalo Steamroller Company merged with the Kelly-Springfield Road Roller Company to become the leading manufacturers of road building equipment. In 1966, guitarists Stephen Stills and Neil Young had just formed a new group but hadn’t come up with a name yet. They walked outside their manager’s Los Angeles office and spied one of the company’s steamrollers parked at a construction site. They saw the nameplate and loved the sound of the two words together, instantly settling on it as their new band’s name.

U2

In 1978, Steve Averill, a punk rocker with The Radiators and a friend of bass player Adam Clayton, offered up six suggestions for the name of the new group Clayton had formed with drummer Larry Mullen Jr., guitarist David “The Edge” Evans and Paul “Bono” Hewson.  The band members settled on U2 “because we disliked it the least of the six names offered,” said Clayton.  “It’s ambiguous and wide open to interpretation, which appealed to us.”

The Doors

Jim Morrison was a film student at UCLA who loved esoteric poetry and challenging literary works.  He and his band members were denizens of Venice Beach, where psychedelic drug use was rampant, so it’s not surprising Morrison became obsessed with a book by celebrated British author Aldous Huxley called “The Doors of Perception.”  It explores how users of psychotropic substances describe their trips as moving from one consciousness to another, passing through doorways like Alice in Wonderland stepping through the looking glass.  The band loved that image and chose the book title as their name after shortening it to simply The Doors.

Pink Floyd

Two Piedmont bluesmen from the Carolinas — Floyd Council and Pinkney “Pink” Anderson — were among the blues artists in Syd Barrett’s record collection.  He and his band had been known as The Tea Set for a year or two, but when they tried to book a gig in London and learned that another band called Tea Set regularly played there, they had to come up with a new name in a hurry.  Barrett combined the first names of the two blues musicians he admired, and the band became Pink Floyd.

Steely Dan

Counterculture author William Burroughs wrote a bizarre novel called “Naked Lunch,” which included a reference to a Japanese dildo which went by the brand name “The Steely Dan II.”  Donald Fagen and Walter Becker, songwriters whose lyrics touched on the macabre and deviant, were looking to form a band, since no one else wanted to record their songs.  They decided the name Steely Dan would fit them perfectly, and they often chuckled subversively that they went on to become hugely popular despite the fact they were named after an Asian sexual device.

Supertramp

“The Autobiography of a Supertramp” was a well-regarded book by Welsh poet/writer W.H. Davies, who had lived a vagabond existence in England, Canada and the U.S. in the late 1800s and wrote about his curious life.  Some fifty years later, a British progressive rock band that had been known as Daddy needed to make a change because of a similarly named group, Daddy Longlegs.  Composers Roger Hodgson and Rick Davies both liked the tattered but noble image of a “supertramp” from the book, and Supertramp they became.

The Rolling Stones

Originally steeped in the blues, the band featuring Mick Jagger, Brian Jones and Keith Richards was first called The Blue Boys.  When they signed a record deal with Decca Records, the management didn’t care for their name and, in a phone call with Jones, asked them to change it.  Jones looked around his flat and his eyes fell on an old Muddy Waters album that included a favorite blues track called “Rollin’ Stone.”  He immediately said, “Right, then, we’ll be The Rollin’ Stones.”  They put the “g” back on “rollin'” and have gathered no moss ever since.  (According to publisher Jann Wenner, Rolling Stone magazine was named after both the song and the band.)

Duran Duran

Fans of the late ’60s science fiction cult film “Barbarella” will instantly recognize Duran Duran as a derivation of the film’s character Dr. Durand-Durand, who invented the positronic ray, which could supposedly end humanity if it fell into the wrong hands.   When John Taylor and Nick Rhodes were first forming a group, they used to play in a popular London club called Barbarella’s.  Once they watched the movie, they agreed they should name their band after the key figure in the film.

Badfinger

When the Beatles were writing and first recording “With a Little Help From My Friends,” its working title was “Bad Finger Boogie,” because John Lennon had injured a forefinger and was playing piano with only three digits.  When the time came to rename The Iveys, one of the first groups signed to The Beatles’ Apple Records label, Badfinger was suggested, based on that previous working song title.  (George Harrison later said he thought the band had been named after a stripper they had admired in Hamburg named Helga Fabdinger…)

R.E.M.

Four struggling musicians met in 1980 in Athens, Georgia, home to the University of Georgia.  Singer Michael Stipe met guitarist Peter Buck in a record store and discovered they shared an interest in punk and proto-punk artists like Patti Smith and The Velvet Underground.  They formed a band with two other UGA students but remained nameless until after their first gig, after which they kicked around repugnant names like “Cans of Piss” and “Negro Wives” before settling on R.E.M. (which stands for Rapid Eye Movement), a random phrase Stipe saw in the newspaper that particular day.

The Kinks

The London-based group that started as the Bo-Weevils and the Ravens eventually became The Kinks, but there are conflicting views about that.  One version says the band liked the idea of a name that brought them “fame though outrage, something newsy and naughty, on the borderline of acceptability.”  Others said, “The way you look, the clothes you wear, you ought be called The Kinks.”  Either way, despite their half-dozen hits in the ’60s and early ’70s, they never came close to the success of their British peers, even though they lasted well into the ’90s.  Lots and lots of great music, though, for those who want to explore…

Grand Funk Railroad

Mark Farmer and Don Brewer spent time with a ’60s Michigan regional band called Terry Knight & the Pack, and Knight ended up managing Farner, Brewer and Mel Schacher in a new power trio in early 1969.  The Grand TRUNK Railroad Line, a subsidiary of a Canadian railroad that had been a crucial link since the late 1800s between Ontario and Chicago, ran right through Flint, where the group was based.  Knight thought, “Hey, how about you call yourselves Grand FUNK Railroad?”  They loved it, although it was eventually shortened to Grand Funk.

KISS

In 1972, Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley were in a New York City-based band called Wicked Lester which was going nowhere.  They heard a club band called Lips whose drummer, Peter Criss, was also a pretty decent singer, so they recruited him for their as-yet-unnamed group, focusing on a harder rock sound.  Once lead guitarist Ace Frehley joined, they started experimenting with costumes and makeup for their stage act.  Criss said, “Hey, Lips was a pretty good name, but how about Kiss instead?”  They chose to use all capital letters, which prompted some to speculate that it was an acronym for devil worship (perhaps for Kids In Satan’s Service)…

Simply Red

Lead singer and front man Mick Hucknall sported a head of long, unkempt red hair, which made him the undisputed visual focal point of his group.  Originally a Manchester punk band known as The Frantic Elevators, they disbanded in 1984, and Hucknall started anew with a fresh lineup, performing British soul music.  They adopted the name Red (Hucknall’s nickname, of course), but one night, when a club promoter asked them their name, Hucknall responded, “Red.  Simply Red.”  They were then promoted and announced on stage as “Simply Red.”  They liked the error and kept it.

Foreigner

In 1976 in New York City, three British musicians — guitarist/songwriter Mick Jones, multi-instrumentalist Ian McDonald and drummer Dennis Elliott — combined forces with three Americans — singer Lou Gramm, keyboardist Al Greenwood and bassist Ed Gagliardi.  They called themselves Trigger until they discovered another band with the same name.  Eventually, Jones came to the realization that “no matter what country we play in, we’re foreigners,” so the band adopted the name Foreigner.

Three Dog Night

One day in 1968, singer Danny Hutton’s girlfriend was reading an article about the Australian outback, and how aborigines there would hunker down in a hole in the ground on cold nights, cuddling up with their dogs for warmth.  Most times, one dog, or maybe two, would be sufficient, but on rare occasions, they would suffer through a brutally cold evening, which was referred to as a “three-dog night.”  The pop group, which featured three lead vocalists, decided it was a great name for their lineup.

Electric Light Orchestra

A “light orchestra,” popular in classical music circles in England in the ’60s, was a scaled down symphony orchestra, limited to as few as 10-12 instruments (mostly violins, cellos and woodwinds).  Roy Wood, leader of The Move, wanted to merge classical instruments with rock and roll, “picking up where The Beatles left off.”  New recruit Jeff Lynne, who shared Wood’s interest in the potential of a classical/rock merger, helped create an electrified “light orchestra” sound, ultimately realizing that that was the most appropriate name for the group (although it was often abbreviated as ELO).

The Velvet Underground

Lou Reed and John Cale met in New York in 1964 and formed The Primitives, which evolved into The Warlocks, and then The Falling Spikes.  Around that time, Reed read the controversial counter-culture classic “The Velvet Underground,” by Michael Leigh, about the secret sexual subculture of the Sixties, and concluded it was exactly the name they needed for their fledgling band of societal misfits.

The Doobie Brothers

Nothing mysterious here:  This bar band from San Jose, California, played to some rough biker crowds who were partial to marijuana, and the band enjoyed it as well, so why not name themselves after the slang term for a cannabis cigarette?  It’s amusing to note that many otherwise conservative folks who have enjoyed The Doobies’ music over the years may not even realize what “doobie” means.

Blue Öyster Cult

This Long Island heavy metal band was conceived as “the American version of Black Sabbath.”  Originally called “Soft White Underbelly,” the group’s manager Sandy Pearlman suggested a different name, a term from the brand of science-fiction poetry he had been writing.  The phrase described a group of aliens who had assembled to secretly guide Earth’s history.  The umlaut (two dots) above the capital O was added “just because it was unusual.”  Years later, Pearlman said in an interview that he came up with the phrase “Blue Oyster Cult” as an anagram for Cully Stout Beer, although exhaustive Google searches for such a brand have come up empty.

Creedence Clearwater Revival

The Blue Velvets were a Bay Area band playing rock ‘n roll covers in 1964-65.  Once they signed to Fantasy Records, the owner insisted they call themselves The Golliwogs, after a controversial fictional character with unfortunate racial overtones.  Draft notices issued to John Fogerty and Stu Cook put the band’s dreams on hiatus for a year or so, and when they reunited in 1968, the label’s new owner wanted another name change.   Everyone came up with multiple ideas but settled on Fogerty’s suggestion that combined three words:  Creedence (from Tom Fogerty’s friend Credence Newball), Clearwater (from the slogan for Olympia Beer, whose promotion proclaimed “It’s the water”), and Revival (for the band’s renewed commitment after the dormant period).  “It was a weirder name than Jefferson Airplane or Buffalo Springfield, that’s for sure,” said Cook.

Blondie

Guitarist Chris Stein and blonde-haired singer Debbie Harry formed a band in 1974 with drummer Billy O’Connor and bassist Fred Smith, at first known as Angel and The Snake.  When Harry was walking by a construction site in Manhattan one afternoon, several hardhats taunted her with whistles and catcalls, and one guy yelled out, “Hey Blondie!”  When a passing truck driver yelled the same thing the next day, the group took it as a sign that it was the right name for their band.

The Lovin’ Spoonful

Some thought this pop band’s name came from the illegal drug trade, where a “lovin’ spoonful” described the way a dose of heroin or cocaine was prepared.  But leader John Sebastian has always maintained that the phrase refers to the amount of an average man’s emission during sex.  The same meaning, by the way, is behind the name of the ’70s British band 10cc.

I remember every word that you said

My friends on Facebook know I enjoy posting a “daily lyrical puzzler” every morning, just as a fun diversion from all the BS and nonsense that’s often posted on that social media platform.

Here at Hack’s Back Pages, I have occasionally expanded on that idea and generated a Lyrics Quiz, using various themes and eras, just so readers can test their ability at recognizing the words to popular classic rock/pop songs. Remembering lyrics comes as second nature to me, but many people tell me they struggle not only to recognize the songs but also to come up with the titles and/or the artists.

This week, on Lyrics Quiz #15, I have selected 15 Top Ten singles, one each from the 15 years in the 1965-1979 period. If you’re of my generation, you’ll probably find this reasonably easy; younger readers may not know some of my selections. But once you see the answers and listen to the Spotify playlist at the end, I’m confident you’ll find them very familiar indeed.

Give it a try!

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1965: “Well, I told you once and I told you twice, /But you never listen to my advice…”

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1966: “Stopped into a church I passed along the way, /Well, I got down on my knees and I pretend to pray…”

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1967: “I was born in Little Rock, had a childhood sweetheart, we were always hand in hand…”

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1968: “Yeah, I gotta go make it happen, take the world in a love embrace…”

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1969: “You love me, you hate me, you know me and then, you can’t figure out the bag I’m in…”

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1970: “It ain’t nothing but a heartbreaker, /It’s got one friend, that’s the undertaker…”

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1971: “Long ago and oh so far away, I fell in love with you before the second show…”

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1972: “And there’s a girl in this harbor town, and she works layin’ whiskey down…”

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1973: “When are you gonna come down? When are you going to land?…”

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1974: “Jimi gave us rainbows, and Janis took a piece of our hearts, and Otis brought us all to the dock of a bay…”

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1975: “She gets up and pours herself a strong one, and stares out at the stars up in the sky…”

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1976: “Billy Mack is a detective down in Texas, /You know, he knows just exactly what the facts is…”

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1977: “Going through security, I held her for so long, /She finally looked at me in love, and she was gone…”

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1978: “My Maserati does 185, /I lost my license, now I don’t drive…”

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1979: “When the morning cries and you don’t know why, it’s hard to bear, with no one beside you, you’re goin’ nowhere…”

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(Scroll down for answers)

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Answers:

1965: “The Last Time,” The Rolling Stones

It’s a misconception that “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” was The Stones’ first US hit single. Mick and Keith and the boys had two prior Top Ten hits here — “Time Is On My Side” (in ’64) and “The Last Time,” which reached #9 in early 1965. It was largely based on a gospel song called “This May Be the Last Time,” recorded by The Staple Singers in the ’50s, although the guitar riff and some of the lyrics were developed by The Stones.

1966: “California Dreamin’,” The Mamas and The Papas

During a cold winter in New York City in 1964, John Phillips wrote this legendary song for his California-born wife Michelle, who was homesick for the warmer climate of her home town. Within two years, The Mamas and The Papas had relocated to L.A., signed with Dunhill Records, and recorded their first album, which included not only the #4 chart rendition of “California Dreamin'” but their first #1, “Monday, Monday,” and the foursome became among the hottest acts of the ’60s.

1967: “I Was Made to Love Her,” Stevie Wonder

Wonder was only 17 when he co-wrote and recorded this magnificent slice of Motown, which reached #2 in the summer of ’67. It’s a thrilling arrangement and production, featuring James Jamerson’s indelible bass line and Wonder’s distinctive harmonica and vocals. His mother, Lula Mae Hardaway, helped write it, helping with the passionate lyrics of young love. I consider the track one of the very best songs in his enviable catalog of great R&B music.

1968: “Born To Be Wild,” Steppenwolf

Some people cite the line “I like smoke and lightning, heavy metal thunder” from this iconic song as the first use of the term “heavy metal,” presaging the actual genre by a few years. “Born To Be Wild” was written by Dennis Edmonton, who was inspired by a billboard showing motorcycles racing down the highway. It has been often used as a biker anthem, making a dramatic appearance in the counterculture film “Easy Rider.” It reached #2 in the summer of 1968.

1969: “Everyday People,” Sly and The Family Stone

This tune by Sly Stone was an overt plea for peace and equality among the races, and it sat perched at #1 for four weeks in February-March of 1969. Sly & The Family Stone was the first bi-racial co-ed band in pop history, and Stone used that status to write several songs that promoted racial harmony during a time marked by considerable black-white strife. The fact that it was written as an easygoing, singalong pop song gave it near-universal appeal.

1970: “War,” Edwin Starr

The powerhouse songwriting team of Norman Whitfield and Barrett Strong came up with this powerful anti-war anthem for The Temptations to sing, who recorded it, but Motown chief Berry Gordy chose not to release it as a single lest they alienate some of the group’s more conservative fan base. Whitfield and Strong re-recorded it in a more intense James Brown-type arrangement with lesser Motown artist Edwin Starr at the microphone, and it rocketed to #1.

1971: “Superstar,” The Carpenters

Delaney and Bonnie Bramlett collaborated with Leon Russell to write this ode to rock groupies.  Singer Rita Coolidge, who suggested that the groupie scene would make a provocative subject for a song lyric, sang the song as part of the 1970 “Mad Dogs and Englishmen” tour she did with Russell and Joe Cocker’s band.  The following year, Karen Carpenter wrapped her sultry voice around the song for The Carpenters’ third LP, and the song reached #2 in the autumn of 1971. 

1972: “Brandy (You’re a Fine Girl),” Looking Glass

Elliot Lurie, guitarist/vocalist of the Jersey-based band Looking Glass, wrote this tale of a hard-working barmaid who fought off the advances of many men because she still pined for a man from her past who couldn’t commit because “my life, my lover, my lady is the sea.” It became an enormous hit in the summer/fall of ’72, and years later, it enjoyed new life when it was used in the soundtracks of “Charlie’s Angels” (2000) and “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 (2017).”

1973: “Goodbye Yellow Brick Road,” Elton John

Said lyricist Bernie Taupin about this classic, “The lyrics are saying that sometimes I want to leave Oz and get back to the farm. I wasn’t turning my back on success or saying I didn’t want it. I think I was just hoping that maybe there was a happy medium, a way to exist successfully in a more tranquil setting.” It’s one of Elton & Bernie’s favorite songs in their entire catalog, and as the title track of their solid double album, it reached the Top five in eight countries, including #2 in the US.  

1974: “Rock and Roll Heaven,” The Righteous Brothers

Bill Medley and Bobby Hatfield struck gold in the mid-’60s with the Phil Spector-produced hits “You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feeling” and “(You’re My) Soul and Inspiration,” then broke up for a spell before reuniting in 1974. They scored a big single with “Rock and Roll Heaven,” a song by Alan O’Day that paid tribute to some of the rock stars who had left us by that point (Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Otis Redding, Jim Morrison, Jim Croce, Bobby Darin). The song reached #3 on US charts.

1975: “Lyin’ Eyes,” The Eagles

Glenn Frey and Don Henley were in a Hollywood bar one night, watching beautiful young women cozying up to older wealthy men, and Frey noted, “She can’t even hide those lyin’ eyes.” It became a huge Eagles hit about those who cheat on their romantic partners as they lied to them, their conquests and themselves. As the second single from their chart-topping LP “One Of These Nights,” it reached #2 on US charts.

1976: “Take the Money and Run,” Steve Miller Band

There have been many dozens, maybe hundreds, of examples in classic rock songs of horrible attempts at writing rhyming lyrics. I submit that this line by Steve Miller on one of the singles from his “Fly Like an Eagle” LP, is among the most cringeworthy. Rhyming “Texas” with “facts is” fails on two different levels (shouldn’t it be “facts are”? Yes, it should). But correct grammar has never been rock and roll’s strong suit, and the song reached #11.

1977: “Just a Song Before I Go,” Crosby, Stills and Nash

Graham Nash had been staying with a friend in Hawaii, and as he was preparing to leave for the airport, his friend bet him that he couldn’t write a song in the short time he had left. In 20 minutes, Nash came up with this ditty about a musician leaving loved ones behind to go out on a concert tour, but it’s written so that it could be about anyone who must depart unwillingly.  It was a return to the Top Ten for the original trio, reaching #7 as the single from their celebrated reunion LP, “CSN.”

1978: “Life’s Been Good,” Joe Walsh

By this point in his career, Walsh had made Cleveland’s The James Gang a national act, forged a successful solo career and become a member of the high-flying Eagles. Along the way, he developed a notorious reputation as a major partier and a trasher of hotel rooms, which he good-naturedly wrote about in this big hit from his solo LP “But Seriously Folks…” The track rose to #12 on US charts.

1979: “Tragedy,” The Bee Gees

The Brothers Gibb sang together for multiple decades and albums, but they combined forces as songwriters only occasionally, most notably on this sizzling #1 tune for their “Spirits Having Flown” LP, the follow-up to the stratospheric success of their “Saturday Night Fever” material.  The description of a romantic breakup as a “tragedy” is perhaps exaggerated, but the listening public didn’t mind, as it became the vocal group’s fifth of six consecutive chart-toppers in the late Seventies.

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