Music | April 06, 2011 | 44 comments

Rolling Stone Readers Pick the Top 10 Songs of the Sixties

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EthicalVegan
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Rolling Stone Readers Pick the Top 10 Songs of the Sixties
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44 comments // Rolling Stone Readers Pick the Top 10 Songs of the Sixties

  • Johnny_Newman
    • 0
      Johnny_Newman  
    • Just like they suggest in getting hits to your blog or website... 'create a list'

      ..Everyone knows it is pretty dumb and lame...but you're looking at it aren't ya?

    • 1 year ago
  • hoosierdaddy
  • EthicalVegan
  • ArchDruid
  • EthicalVegan
  • Milieu
    • +2
      Milieu  
    • Time to trash poor ol' Milieu who was there and remembers them all, but here goes:

      #10 The Beach Boys - 'God Only Knows' - Republicans trying to be cool, and not succeeding (Raygun liked them tho)

      #9 The Jimi Hendrix Experience - 'All Along The Watchtower' – Awesome Electric, but Dylan did it better

      #8. Led Zeppelin - 'Whole Lotta Love' - - RR boys taking advantage of naïve girls

      #7. The Beatles - 'Hey Jude' – Best thing McCarney ever wrote, but without Lennon, …............

      #6The Doors - 'Light My Fire' - - Fluff compared to their good songs ( i.e. "Celebration of the Lizard")

      #5 The Who - 'My Generation' -- ego-centric soi disant ballad

      # 4. The Rolling Stones - 'Gimme Shelter' wanna be Teddy Boys playin' dress up

      # 3. The Rolling Stones – 'Satisfaction' - - see # 4

      # 2. The Beatles - 'A Day In The Life' ah, John we hardly knew ye

      # 1. Bob Dylan - 'Like A Rolling Stone' finally, we're getting somewhere Bob deserves the Nobel Prize

    • 1 year ago
  • dudefromtherock
  • NiceN
    • +2
      NiceN  
    • dudefromtherock:

      Are you kidding? Every hipster wishes they could emulate even a millionth of these 60's rock legends swag. Good music will never die, just like the Dali, Shakespeare, Genghis Khan, Zeus; legends are forever.

      Beatles recently made the most money of any artist. You smoking pot with a hot vegan? Then thank the 60s.

    • 1 year ago
  • dudefromtherock
    • -1
      dudefromtherock  
    • NiceN:

      I love the 60's as much as the next person but most of the music has been over played...it's time to move on but not forget. I'll thank myself for cannabis the 60's had nothing to do with it.

    • 1 year ago
  • NiceN
  • JanforGore
  • NC54
  • Milieu
  • EthicalVegan
  • artemis6
  • eternal_springs
  • EthicalVegan
  • mikeO
  • eternal_springs
  • EthicalVegan
  • harleyblueswoman
  • mikeO
  • idealist
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • idealist:

      Hi, idealist!

      These were the top ten from the Rolling Stone magazine's READERS. I had absolutely nothing to do with the list.

      Perhaps I have my own emotional list, but I'm not publicly sharing it.

      Hope that makes sense, now, that... no, I didn't miss any and, therefore, this is not MY personal top-ten list. I just tend to submit copied-and-pasted articles, and leave the comments to others.

    • 1 year ago
  • idealist
    • 0
      idealist  
    • EthicalVegan:

      i thought it was kinda a biased list. sorry sometimes i forget some of these head lines come with links. it just so happend i was allready listening to 60's musics when i saw the post and kinda went on a tangent,

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
  • idealist
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      1. Bob Dylan - 'Like A Rolling Stone'

      In 2004 Rolling Stone named Bob Dylan's "Like A Rolling Stone" the greatest song of all time. Seven years later our readers agree that it's at least the greatest song of the Sixties. The song – which features Al Kooper on the organ and Mike Bloomfield on the guitar – was a hit in the summer of 1965. But when Dylan played it at that year's Newport Folk Festival he was famously booed, though the debate rages to this day over what exactly upset the crowd. When he took The Band on tour in Europe and Australia the next year nobody disputes that many in the crowd were livid over Dylan "going electric." The anger in the crowd only spurned Dylan on, leading to some of the most intense performances of his career. Dylan has performed the song over 1,800 times (second only to "All Along The Watchtower"), but he still busts it out it almost every time that he takes the stage.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • EthicalVegan:

      Ohhh, Mike Bloomfield... Al Kooper....

      Ended up working for Al for a brief time, just around the time he decided to produce for Lynyrd Skynyrd. I remember the original band's arrival up in the Hollywood Hills, and how very much I liked each of the guys.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      2. The Beatles - 'A Day In The Life'

      "A Day In The Life" is one of the last Beatles songs that John Lennon and Paul McCartney truly wrote as a team. It's seen by many critics and fans as their single finest piece of work. "It was a peak," Lennon told Rolling Stone in 1970, speaking about the Sgt. Pepper period. "Paul and I were definitely working together, especially on 'A Day In The Life' ... The way we wrote a lot of the time: you’d write the good bit, the part that was easy, like 'I read the news today' or whatever it was, then when you got stuck or whenever it got hard, instead of carrying on, you just drop it; then we would meet each other, and I would sing half, and he would be inspired to write the next bit and vice versa. He was a bit shy about it because I think he thought it’s already a good song." In recent years Paul McCartney has begun singing the song in concert, and the original lyrics to the song sold for $1.2 million.

    • 1 year ago
  • PzLuvHappeniz
  • EthicalVegan
  • EthicalVegan
    • +1
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      3. The Rolling Stones - 'Satisfaction'

      "Satisfaction" turned The Rolling Stones into superstars after it came out in the summer of 1965, but Keith Richards wasn't originally wasn't very fond of the track – even though he wrote the famous riff. "He didn't want it to come out as a single," Jagger told Rolling Stone in 1995. "It’s a signature tune, really, rather than a great, classic painting, 'cause it’s only like one thing – a kind of signature that everyone knows. It has a very catchy title. It has a very catchy guitar riff. It has a great guitar sound, which was original at that time. And it captures a spirit of the times, which is very important in those kind of songs."

    • 1 year ago
  • PressCore
  • EthicalVegan
  • PressCore
    • 0
      PressCore  
    • EthicalVegan:

      Ditto. I live in a very quiet neighborhood in Onondaga county, New York. It
      has the best of both worlds. The bus stops 100 yards from door of my home.
      Yet Ive sighted at least 10 species of mammals cohabiting the neighborhood
      existing w/o any suburban sprawl to mess it up. That includes white tailed deer.
      These days my sound system features a stereo pair of Klipschorns with a Bose
      stereo center speaker for 180 degrees of panoramic music. I don't dare turn
      those guys up to any measurable volume so as to avoid the oldsters getting
      whigged out, and flipping their lids. It would violate the noise ordinance here.

      ( Paul Klipsch got the patent on his horn loaded corner horn speakers
      standing almost 6 feet tall circa 1950. During that era sound was so primitive
      stereo hadn't been invented, and the amplifiers were as monaural like the
      speakers. Pretty flat and drab sounding. But in the midst of such routine
      mediocrity, Klipsch speakers were the only ones in the world that acted
      according to the Doppler principle that Einstein developed from the original
      scientist who formulated the theory. Klipsch developed his patents in
      collaboration with the Bell Laboratories in 1943 which was funded by a
      Department of Defense grant. 1943 was the peak year of WW2.The
      Government had to rev people up with War Bonds bought in movie
      theatres to finance it during the national emergency when everything
      was rationed for civilians. As you can guess they wanted the Klipsch/Bell
      collaboration to turn out a sonic weapon.

      Fortunately all I know of his research is in a consumer application. That car
      radio you were mentioning would probably max out at 3 watts of transistor
      power to blast the speakers to distortion at full juice. But the K-horns are so
      " insanely efficient " as one Indiana Klipsch engineer told me, they could
      be powered to full 20 Hz-20,000 Hz frequency response and near concert
      level of sound pressure with only 3/4 watt. That's the equivalent of a 1960
      hand held transistor radio. I'd have to transport them to the peak of one of
      the Colorado Rocky Mountains to hear the Stones song and flashback to
      1966 in peace. Military fancied Paul Klipsch' invention could bring down
      the Walls of Jerico like something out of an Indiana Jones movie. They
      weren't that far off. " Just cause he doesn't smoke the same cigarettes
      as me " Rocky Mountain High ? Oh, Yeah !. As a man named Ripley once
      said: Believe it or not.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • +2
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      4. The Rolling Stones - 'Gimme Shelter'

      The Rolling Stones perfectly captured the turbulent end of the Sixties with "Gimme Shelter." "It’s a very rough, very violent era," Jagger told Rolling Stone in 1995. "The Vietnam War. Violence on the screens, pillage and burning. ['Gimme Shelter'] is a kind of end-of-the-world song, really. It’s apocalypse; the whole record’s like that." The best part of the song may be singer Merry Clayton's haunting background vocals. A few years later she sang back-up on "Sweet Home Alabama."

    • 1 year ago
  • PressCore
    • +2
      PressCore  
    • EthicalVegan:

      One of my all time favorites too. The lead in on the electric guitar is just
      as vibrant today, 40 years later, as it was " back in the day. " And the
      world today is just as violent, stupid, horrendously irrational, and draino
      insano as it was back then. But then the stage doesn't change, only the
      players make their exits to make way for new entrants.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • +1
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      5. The Who - 'My Generation'

      Everything about the Who's "My Generation" works perfectly – from Roger Daltrey's snarling, stuttering delivery to John Entwistle's thunderous bass solos to Keith Moon's reckless drumming that often ended with the whole kit destroyed. Most of all, however, it's Pete Townshend's lyrics that propel the song. Has anybody ever expressed a rock & roll sentiment more eloquently than "I hope I die before I get old"? The song has been a staple of their live set since Townshend wrote it in 1966, and somehow Roger Daltrey manage to not sound totally ridiculous while recently singing the famous line at age 67.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • +2
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      6. The Doors - 'Light My Fire'

      This 1967 single – written by guitarist Robbie Krieger – launched The Doors' entire career. Originally five minutes long, it was cut down to three for the radio by removing the organ and guitar solos. The song's success got them an invite to perform on the Ed Sullivan Show, under the condition that Morrison not sing the line "girl, we couldn't get much higher." He did anyway, and they were never invited back onto the show. The Doors had many other hits during their brief career, but "Light My Fire" remains their most famous composition.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      7. The Beatles - 'Hey Jude'

      Written by Paul McCartney for John Lennon's son Julian as he dealt with the pain of his parents' divorce, "Hey Jude" spent nine weeks at Number One – making it the most successful single of the Beatles' entire career. It was also their longest, clocking in at over seven minutes. John had a different take on the song's meaning. "I always heard it as a song to me," he said. "If you think about it... Yoko's just come into the picture. He's saying. 'Hey, Jude — Hey, John.' I know I'm sounding like one of those fans who reads things into it, but you can hear it as a song to me ... Subconsciously, he was saying, 'Go ahead, leave me.' On a conscious level, he didn't want me to go ahead." McCartney says that's rubbish, and that the song began as "Hey Jules" unitl he changed it to "Hey Jude" simply because it was easier to sing.

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      8. Led Zeppelin - 'Whole Lotta Love'

      Originally conceived as a tribute to blues legend Willie Dixon and his 1962 classic "You Need Love," "Whole Lotta Love" became Led Zeppelin's first (and last) top 10 hit in America. Since then it's been played about a trillion times on classic rock radio, and there's always at least one guy at Robert Plant solo gigs screaming in vain for it at the top of his lungs after every song. Its massive popularity led to Willie Dixon suing the band over it in the mid-Eighties. He now receives co-writing credit on the song. "Page's riff was Page's riff," Robert Plant said. "I just thought, 'Well, what am I going to sing?'

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      9. The Jimi Hendrix Experience - 'All Along The Watchtower'

      Jimi Hendrix's cover of Bob Dylan's "All Along The Watchtower" forever changed how everybody hears the song - even Dylan himself. "He had such talent, he could find things inside a song and vigorously develop them," Dylan said a 1995 interview. "He found things that other people wouldn't think of finding in there. He probably improved upon it by the spaces he was using. I took license with the song from his version, actually, and continue to do it to this day."

    • 1 year ago
  • EthicalVegan
    • 0
      EthicalVegan  
    • .

      10. The Beach Boys - 'God Only Knows'

      Last weekend we asked our readers to vote for their favorite song of the Sixties. We have counted the votes and the results are in. As usual, if you're unhappy about the results, you only have yourselves to blame. We're just the vote counters.

      Coming in at Number 10 is "God Only Knows" by The Beach Boys. Recorded during the Pet Sounds sessions in 1966, the beautiful love song was actually considered controversial when it came out because the word "god" was in the title. Brian Wilson originally planned to sing lead on the track, but he gave it to his brother Carl. Many fans consider the song the high-water mark of the Beach Boys' long career - including Paul McCartney. "Very emotional, always a bit of a choker for me," the Beatle once said. "It just hits home."

      By Andy Greene

    • 1 year ago
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