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The year 1962 – short summary
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Rules:
AND lists like this are supposed to be fun! Don’t take it too seriously.
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Here we go…
Recorded by The Contours for Motown’s Gordy Records label & released as a single June 29, 1962. Written and produced by Motown CEO Berry Gordy, Jr., “Do You Love Me?” was the Contours’ only Top 40 single on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States. Notably, the record achieved this feat twice, once in 1962 and again in 1988. A main point of the song is to name the Mashed Potato, The Twist, and many other fad dances of the 1960s.
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You broke my heart
‘Cause I couldn’t dance
You didn’t even want me around
And now I’m back
To let you know
I can really shake ’em down
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Written by Bob Dylan and he recorded it with an electric band on November 14, 1962 during the sessions for The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, but it was not used on that album, which, aside from “Corrina, Corrina”, was entirely acoustic. Instead the song, backed with “Corrina, Corrina” (a different take than the Freewheelin’ one), a traditional blues song, appeared as Dylan’s first single, released in the U.S. on 14 December 1962 as Columbia 4-42656. According to legend, Dylan wrote the song in a cab on the way to the Columbia Studios for the recording session.
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I got mixed up confusion
Man, it’s a-killin’ me
Well, there’s too many people
And they’re all too hard to please
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Written by Dickey Lee and Steve Duffy and became the third C&W number 1 hit for George Jones, spending six weeks at No. 1 in the spring/summer of 1962.
Released September 1962 (recorded June 18, 1962).
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Just because I ask a friend about her
Just because I spoke her name somewhere
Just because I rang her number by mistake today
She thinks I still care
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An instrumental R&B hit recorded in 1962 by Booker T. & the M.G.s. The tune is a 12-bar blues with a rippling Hammond M3 organ line.
Released as a single in September 1962.
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A song written by American blues artist John Lee Hooker and recorded in 1961 & released as a single May 1962. Music critic Charles Shaar Murray calls it “the greatest pop song he ever wrote”. “Boom Boom” was both an American R&B and Pop chart success in 1962 as well as placing in the UK Singles Chart in 1992. It is one of Hooker’s most identifiable and enduring songs and “among the tunes that every band on the [early 1960s UK] R&B circuit simply had to play”.
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Boom, boom, boom, boom
I’m gonna shoot you right down
Right off your feet
Take you home with me
Put you in my house
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His first single on Stax (released October 1962), with “Hey Hey Baby” on the B-side. After a series of unsuccessful songs, “These Arms of Mine” became Redding’s first successful single and sold around 800,000 copies. The song was later included in Redding’s debut album, Pain in My Heart.
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These arms of mine they are lonely
Lonely and feeling blue, these arms of mine
They are yearning, yearning from wanting you
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Originally a 1953 single by Hank Williams with His Drifting Cowboys.
Ray Charles released his version on the album “Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music Volume Two” (October 1962).
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Take these chains from my heart and set me free
Take these chains from my heart and set me free
You’ve grown cold and no longer care for me
All my faith in you is gone but the heartaches linger on
Take these chains from my heart and set me free
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Released on May 8, 1962 by RCA Victor.
Produced by Hugo & Luigi and arranged and conducted by René Hall, the song was the B-side to “Bring It on Home to Me”. The song peaked at number four on Billboard’s Hot R&B Sides chart, and also charted at number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100.
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We’re having a party
dancing to the music
played by the DJ
on the radio
the cokes are in the icebox
the popcorn’s on the table
me and my baby, we’re out here on the floor
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A 1945 song, with music by Jule Styne and lyrics by Sammy Cahn.
Dexter Gordon released his version on the album “Go!” – his the tenth studio album recorded on August 27, 1962 & released later in 1962.
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A 1961 song written by Phil Medley and Bert Berns (later credited as “Bert Russell”). The song was originally titled “Shake It Up, Baby” and recorded by the Top Notes. It first became a chart hit as a cover single (released June 16, 1962) by the Isley Brothers.
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Well, shake it up, baby, now
(Shake it up, baby)
Twist and shout
(Twist and shout)
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Released on the album “Jazz Samba” – a bossa nova album, released on the Verve label on April 20, 1962.
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“Night Train” is a twelve-bar blues instrumental standard first recorded by Jimmy Forrest in 1951.
James Brown recorded “Night Train” with his band in 1962, and it was released as a single in March 1962. His performance replaced the original lyrics of the song with a shouted list of cities on his East Coast touring itinerary (and hosts to black radio stations he hoped would play his music) along with many repetitions of the song’s name.
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All aboard for night train
Miami, Florida
Atlanta, Georgia
Raleigh, North Carolina
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Spotify:
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Sources: Wikipedia, Allmusic.com
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