Popular Songs Trivia
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The first commercial CD pressed in the United States was Bruce Springsteenâs Born in the U.S.A in 1984.
Those who thought the title track was Springsteenâs way of expressing his admiration for Ronald Reaganâs administration took the album cover at face value. Those who uncoded the deeper meaning behind the track started a rumor that the cover was Springsteen secretly relieving himself on the American symbol.
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Bob Marley gave songwriting credits on âNo Woman No Cryâ to his childhood friend Vincent Ford, who ran a soup kitchen in Jamaica. Royalties from the hit song helped keep the kitchen running.
Marley grew up with Ford in the Trenchtown area of Kingston. Ford taught Marley the basics of the guitar and the two became close friends. While running a soup kitchen, Ford allowed Marley and his musicians to practice on his premises.
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Simon and Garfunkel bickered nonstop while recording âBridge over Troubled Water.â Garfunkel wanted Simon to sing it (âIâm sorry I didnât,â Simon has said), and Simon never liked Garfunkelâs closing âSail on, silver girlâ verse.
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According to Steve Cropper, Otis Redding was still pondering adding a 4th verse to âSittinâ On) The Dock of the Bayâ or lyrics to an outro. Otis just finished up the song with a whistle as a placeholder because he had nothing else left to add. Presumably, when he was to get back from his trip to Wisconsin, he and Cropper were going to finish it up. Redding died on that trip in a plane crash, a grief-filled Cropper returned to the studio to edit the song, heard the whistle outro again, and thought it fit perfect with the fade-out but needed and overdub. Thus, the call to musician Sam âBluzmanâ Taylor, who provided the end whistle in the studio version of the song.
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Michael Jackson was so absorbed in writing âBillie Jeanâ on a ride home from the studio one day that he didnât even notice his car was on fire. A passing motorcyclist alerted himâsaving the King of Pop and one of the worldâs catchiest tunes.
The song was written and composed by Jackson, the lyrics describing a woman, Billie Jean, who claims that the narrator is the father of her newborn son, which he denies. Jackson said the lyrics were based on groupies' claims about his older brothers when he toured with them as the Jackson 5.
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Paul McCartney woke up one morning with the tune to âYesterdayâ in his head but not the lyrics. The placeholder words he worked with: âScrambled eggs ⊠oh, my baby, how I love your legs âŠâ
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The BBC banned Bing Crosbyâs âIâll Be Home for Christmasâ during World War II, worried its âsickly sentimentalityâ would lower the morale of homesick troops.
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Barry Manilowâs âI Write the Songsâ was written by ⊠someone else (on-again/off-again Beach Boy Bruce Johnston, to be exact).
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Led Zeppelinâs âStairway to Heavenâ was the most-requested radio song of the â70s. Yet singer/lyricist Robert Plant once pledged $1,000 to a public radio station that promised to never play it again. (âIâve heard it before,â he later said.)
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The Caroline in Neil Diamondâs âSweet Carolineâ is none other than Caroline Kennedy, whom Neil saw in a magazine photo in the â60s. âIt was a picture of a little girl dressed to the nines in her riding gear, next to her pony,â he recalled.
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The stories about how Diamond was inspired to write Cracklinâ Rosie are apocryphal. "Crackling RosĂ©" is the name of an inexpensive sparkling wine once produced by Andres Wines of British Columbia, Canada, which was popular among the Indigenous population. One story suggests that Diamond heard a story about a native Canadian tribe while interviewing in Toronto, Canadaâthe tribe had more men than women, so the lonely men of the tribe would sit around the fire and drink their wine togetherâwhich inspired him to write the song.
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The chord that starts Jimi Hendrixâs âPurple Hazeâ is a tritoneâknown as the devilâs interval and banned from some Renaissance church music for sounding too evil.
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Number of songs Elvis Presley recorded: more than 800.
Number of songs Elvis Presley wrote solo: zero. (He earned a few cowriting credits.)
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âGirls Just Want to Have Funâ was written by ⊠a boy. Philadelphia singer Robert Hazard wrote and recorded the original version four years before Cyndi Lauper made it a hit.
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âSomewhere over the Rainbowâ (listed by American Film Institute as the greatest film song ever) is about a girl lifting herself up from rural Kansas but also about America rising up from the Great Depression under FDRâs New Deal, of which song cowriter Yip Harburg was a supporter.
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Queen and David Bowie wrote âUnder Pressureâ in one night (then got pizza).
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