(Of course, "Hello I Love You" is hardly the greatest song the Doors ever did - if you told me that "Light My Fire" was a rip-off of some other artist, I'd get a bit more depressed)
So, I wonder which of the famous classic-rock acts haven't been accused of ripping-off another artist? Even the undisputed kings of classic-rock, The Beatles, got into trouble with "Come Together", which copied the riff and structure of Chuck Berry's "You Can't Catch Me". The towering giant Bobby Zimmerman, from memory, reworked some lines of an old folk-ballad into "A Hard Rain's A Gonna Fall" - specifically, the lines like "And what did you see, my blue eyed son? And what did you see, my darling young one?" (although I don't know if that's considered a 'rip-off' per se).
While we're on the subject of classic rock, and The Kinks, all my life I've lived under the delusion that "Sunny Afternoon" was by The Beatles. Like most songs I heard when growing up, it has always been buried away under the surface, burnt in my mind forever. It wasn't until a few minutes ago that I realized that this song from my childhood is in fact a Kinks song from Face To Face. Wow. Even now, I could so easily picture this being sung by Lennon, and finding its way on something like Revolver. I'd never have imagined that anyone other that Lennon and McCartney could come up with such a divine mood and melody..heh, I wonder what other songs I've wrongly associated over the years?!
* Bandwidth leeching, by my understanding, would be if I embedded the sound clips onto this blog. I'm not sure then what merely linking to these files is - in any case, I've decided not to risk anything.
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