The Kingsmen: Louie Louie
This was written by Richard Berry who recorded it in 1955. It was based on El Loco Cha Cha performed by the Latin R&B group Ricky Rillera and the Rhythm Rockers. It … Continue readingThe Kingsmen: Louie Louie
A compendium of musical delights by Alan and Margaret Ashworth
This was written by Richard Berry who recorded it in 1955. It was based on El Loco Cha Cha performed by the Latin R&B group Ricky Rillera and the Rhythm Rockers. It … Continue readingThe Kingsmen: Louie Louie
Unusually, this 1968 American record was a flop in the US, struggling to No 127 there, but it did well in Britain, reaching No 13. It was written by Kenny Young, … Continue readingReparata & The Delrons: Captain Of Your Ship
This beautiful song was written by Samuel ‘Buck’ Ram and released by The Platters in 1955. Ram produced it and when Mercury planned to issue it on their purple ‘race … Continue readingThe Platters: Only You
Otis wrote this when he was vocalist/driver for Pat Teacake’s Band. A producer heard him singing it and signed him to Stax Records. It was his first single for the … Continue readingOtis Redding: These Arms of Mine
This was the wonderful Billy Fury’s last Top 30 hit, reaching No 25 in 1965. It was written by George Fischoff and Tony Powers.
The Chiffons reached No 5 in the US and 29 in the UK in 1963 with this great Goffin and King song. In 1980, King covered it herself and went … Continue readingThe Chiffons: One Fine Day
This was their first single, written by Pete Townshend and released in 1965. It reached No 8 in Britain and 93 in the US. Here is the single: Here is … Continue readingThe Who: Can’t Explain
Written by Twinkle, real name Lynn Ripley, Terry was her first single and only Top Ten hit. It was released in 1964 and promptly banned by the BBC and ITV … Continue readingTwinkle: Terry
Spector wrote this with Jerry Leiber and recorded it as a demo. I’m not sure what year. It was eventually released in 2006 on The Phil Spector Collectionalbum. The song was … Continue readingPhil Spector: Spanish Harlem
I have said somewhere on this site that pop music ends for me in about 1972, but this number from the 1983 album An Innocent Man feels as if it is straight … Continue readingBilly Joel: For the Longest Time