Musicians can spend lots of time in writing sessions to get ready to record a new album. It’s easy to assume that they spend a lot of time crafting their songs. But some of the biggest hit songs have come at the 11th hour, when the album was nearly finished but producers, managers, and label executives decided something was missing.
“Pour Some Sugar On Me” by Def Leppard
Def Leppard frontman Joe Elliott was playing with some riffs as the band was finishing up recording Hysteria. One riff caught the attention of producer Mutt Lange, who had wanted more songs. He praised it as “the best chorus I’ve heard for five or ten years,” and it turned into “Pour Some Sugar On Me.” “It was the quickest song we did on the album and arguably was the most important,” Elliott said.
โParanoidโ by Black Sabbath
Black Sabbath’s iconic track “Paranoid” was โan afterthought,โ according to bassist Geezer Butler. Tony Iommi has said it โwas written as filler.โ The band needed an additional three minutes of material for the album they were working on at the time, and producer Rodger Bain suggested something more โcommercial.โ The song came together fairly quickly and was recorded over just a few days.
“When Doves Cry” by Prince
During the creation of the semi-autobiographical film Purple Rain, director Albert Magnoli asked Prince for a song to fit a specific scene. He came back with two, one of which was “When Doves Cry,โ inspired by his relationship with Susan Moonsie of Vanity 6. It was the last song recorded for the album and movie.
โDancing In The Darkโ by Bruce Springsteen
While Bruce Springsteen was close to finishing Born in the U.S.A., producer Jon Landau felt the album was still lacking a single. Springsteen wrote “Dancing In The Darkโ as a response, making it the final song recorded for the album. Ironically, the song is about Springsteenโs struggles to write a hit single, and it ultimately became the biggest hit of his career.
โHarder To Breatheโ by Maroon 5
Maroon 5 grew frustrated with their record label while working on their debut, Songs About Janeโthe band felt they had enough songs, but the label wanted more. “That song comes sheerly from wanting to throw something,” frontman Adam Levine later told MTV. “It was the 11th hour, and the label wanted more songs. It was the last crack. I was just pissed.”
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(L-R) Singer/guitarist Ed O'Brien, guitarist Jonny Greenwood, lead singer Thom Yorke, bassist Colin Greenwood and drummer Phil Selway of the British rock group Radiohead, pose for a group portrait in New York, New York in March 1993. (EDITOR'S NOTE: SPECIAL FILTER WAS USED ON LENS TO CREATE THIS IMAGE) (Photo by Bob Berg/Getty Images)







