
"I Fought The Law" was a hit for The Bobby Fuller Four in 1965. The Clash released their version in 1979, changing the lyrics "I left my baby" to "I killed my baby."

The thunderclap sound heard in the Bee Gees song "Tragedy" was made by Barry Gibb with his mouth.

"Jessie's Girl" was the #1 song in America when MTV went on the air. They put it in hot rotation right away, making the song even more popular.

The philosophical Kansas song "Dust In The Wind" is inspired by a line of Native American poetry: "For all we are is dust in the wind."

Post Malone came up with "White Iverson" after getting braids in his hair and thinking they looked like basketball legend Allen Iverson's signature cornrows.

k.d. lang is a credited writer on the Rolling Stones song "Anybody Seen My Baby?" because it sounds so much like her hit "Constant Craving."
Michael tells the story of "Send Me On My Way," and explains why some of the words in the song don't have a literal meaning.
The 10 biggest "retirement tours" that didn't take.
The king of Christian worship music explains talks about writing songs for troubled times.
Bowie's "activist" days of 1964 led to Ziggy Stardust.
A band so baffling, even their names were contrived. Check your score in the Ramones version of Fact or Fiction.
On "Life Is A Highway," his burgeoning solo career, and the Rascal Flatts song he most connects with.