100 SONGS THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING. This post: I WILL ALWAYS LOVE YOU. Continues tomorrow.
Caffè Lattè pays tribute to 100 songs that innovated, changed the rules, defied convention and had a significant impact on the evolution of pop and rock music, presented in chronological order…
Check out the playlist on Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1j1WNc1Txp4Loh4txnqu7S?si=01aa2a187ada4e3d
100 SONGS THAT CHANGED EVERYTHING
1992
💥93 I Will Always Love You
Whitney Houston
Despite becoming one of the best-selling and longest running #1 singles of all-time, “I Will Always Love You” might never have made history. Dolly Parton’s original self-penned version had been released in 1974. In America, the song topped the Country Chart. A new version was recorded by Parton and used in the 1982 film ‘The Best Little Whorehouse In Texas’. That re-recording returned Parton to the top of the Billboard Country Chart. The wider audience, however, remained oblivious to the song. Until 1992, when the ballad was reshaped into a vocal tour de force. Whitney Houston was cast in ‘The Bodyguard’, her film debut. Initially, the plan was for her to record a version of Jimmy Ruffin’s “What Becomes Of The Broken-Hearted?”. Her co-star Kevin Costner suggested the Parton ballad. By 1993, Houston had established a sizeable fan base, having accumulated a consistent string of chart smash hits including “Saving All My Love For You”, “How Will I Know”, “I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)” and “So Emotional”. She had wowed the public with her breathtaking vocal skill, but her rendition of “I Will Always Love You” surpassed all expectations. Here was a singer with pedigree: daughter of Cissy Houston, cousin of Dionne Warwick and goddaughter of Darlene Love (not Aretha Franklin as had been previously reported). Houston attacked the song from an R&B angle and delivered an unbeatable recording. This would remain her signature song and a career-defining moment. Applying all of her vocal prowess, she created a new yardstick for aspiring singers. The disc broke chart records and reached #1 in America, the UK, Europe, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan and parts of South America.
1992- Killing In The Name
1991- Smells Like teen Spirit
Let’s Talk About Sex
Enter Sandman
1989- Epic
Fight The Power
Say No Go
1988- Fuck Tha Police
Where Is My Mind?
1987- Pump Up The Volume
1986- Walk This Way
1985- That’s What Friends Are For
1984- Do They Know It’s Christmas?
The Unforgettable Fire
When Doves Cry
Like A Virgin
1983- Blue Monday
1982- Buffalo Gals
The Message
Planet Rock
1981- Radio Free Europe
Ghost Town
1980- Rapture
Vienna
Back In Black
Love Will Tear Us Apart
1979- London Calling
Rapper’s Delight
Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough
Good Times
1978- Wuthering Heights
1977- Stayin’ Alive
Heroes
I Feel Love
1976- Dancing Queen
Anarchy In The U.K.
Blitzkrieg Bop
1975- Gloria
Bohemian Rhapsody
Love To Love You Baby
Autobahn
No Woman, No Cry Live
1973- Personality Crisis
Living For the City
Time
Soul Makossa
1972- I Am Woman
1971- American Pie
Imagine
Theme From ‘Shaft’
What’s Going On
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
1969- Whole Lotta Love
1968- Helter Skelter
Voodoo Child (Slight Return)
Folsom Prison Blues Live
1967- Sunshine Of Your Love
A Day In The Life
Respect
Light My Fire
Venus In Furs
Strawberry Fields Forever
1966- Good Vibrations
Tomorrow Never Knows
Eight Miles High
1965- The Sounds Of Silence
My Generation
Papa’s Got A Brand New Bag
(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction
I’ve Been Loving You Too Long (To Stop Now)
1964- You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’
You Really Got Me
The House Of The Rising Sun
Where Did Our Love Go
1963- I Want To Hold Your Hand
Blowin’ In The Wind
Be My Baby
1962- Misirlou
1961- Crazy
1960- The Twist
Cathy’s Clown
1959- There Goes My Baby
What’d I Say
(Parts 1 & 2)
1957- Great Balls Of Fire
Jailhouse Rock
You Send Me
That’ll Be The Day
1955- Tutti Frutti
Maybellene
1955- Rock Around The Clock
1954- That’s All Right Mama
1951- Rocket 88
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