"I'll Melt With You" by Modern English is about a couple who melt together because a nuclear bomb drops.
"The Night Chicago Died" was written and recorded by the British group Paper Lace. They talk about Al Capone in the song, but got a lot of details wrong - understandable since they wrote it based on gangster movies.
Taio Cruz throws his hands up "sometimes" in "Dynamite" because the song was originally written about surrender.
The chorus in "September" by Earth, Wind & Fire is "Bada-Ya, dancing in September." Maurice White left it "Bada-Ya" instead of a real word because he never let a lyric get in the way of a groove.
A perfume called Wonderstruck was named after a line in Taylor Swift's song "Enchanted": "I'm wonderstruck, blushing all the way home."
Adam Levine of Maroon 5 made it obvious who their song "This Love" was about when he named the album "Songs About Jane."
Billie Jean, Delilah, Sara, Laura and Sharona - do you know who the girls in the songs really are?
Songs that seem to glorify violence against women are often misinterpreted - but not always.
Faith No More's bassist, Billy Gould, chats to us about his two new experimental projects, The Talking Book and House of Hayduk, and also shares some stories from the FNM days.
One of the first successful female singer-songwriters, Janis had her first hit in 1967 at age 15.
From the cowbell on "Mississippi Queen" to recording with The Who when they got the wrong Felix, stories from one of rock's master craftsmen.