1969
Yearly GPA: 1.615
By the end of 1969, we have a good picture of what the sixties consisted of. Like water, music found its own level, a level visibly superior to that of the fifties that preceded it, but still a level in which much mediocrity could still thrive. The reason this year didn't score higher, frankly, was timing. Most of the best songs on this list charted for a week or so and vanished, while the crap stuck around for months on end. Still, even a middling year from the 60s is better than any year from the 50s, and now we get to see what the 70s have in store for us.
Tommy James & The Shondelles - Crimson and Clover
Number 1 song from February 1st-14th, 1969 (2 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: C
Not something I'm going to listen to again and again, but this is a surprisingly good song, with an easy vibe and excellent singing. It does go on forever, but it's plainly intended to.
Sly & The Family Stone - Everyday People
Number 1 song from February 15th-March 14th, 1969 (4 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: C
An iconic song, if a bit slow. This song supposedly invented slap bass as a technique, and represents a much more mainstream, less-funk oriented turn for The Family Stone. I'm not a massive fan, but I can't point to anything wrong with it.
Tommy Roe - Dizzy
Number 1 song from March 15th-April 11th, 1969 (4 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: D
This song changes key eleven times. I counted. Slower than molasses in January, this song just meanders along until the audience is as dizzy as the title character. No thank you.
The 5th Dimension - Aquarius/Let the Sunshine In
Number 1 song from April 12th-May 23rd, 1969 (6 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: D
One of the most quintessential songs of the sixties, this medley comes to us courtesy of the musical "Hair". I've not seen it, so perhaps it works better in context there, but this song is just a mess, sixties at its purest form in all the wrong ways. Shallow hippie astrology crap mixed with boring, off-kilter singing and music. It does improve when we get to the second half of the melody, but we're grading harshly here, and the first half of the song is enough to give it a pass.
The Beatles - Get Back
Number 1 song from May 24th-June 27th, 1969 (5 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: C
A very tightly-crafted, somewhat funky (for the Beatles) little number, the story goes that McCartney composed this one as a reference to Yoko Ono. Whether that's true or not, I can't possibly speculate, but the song is one of the Beatles' most well-documented compositions, showcasing the methods they used to create the greatest albums of their careers, including the one this came from, Let it Be.
Henry Mancini - Love Theme from Romeo & Juliet
Number 1 song from June 28th-July 11th, 1969 (2 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: F
I always thought Henry Mancini was a mattress salesman. Regardless, this instrumental and choral ballad from the 1968 version of Romeo & Juliet (one of the better film adaptations) somehow forced its way onto the pop charts despite being made of suck. Listen to this song if you wish to fall asleep. Otherwise move right along.
Zagar and Evans - In the year 2525
Number 1 song from July 12th-August 22nd, 1969 (6 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: D
The sixties were a millenarian era, when you stop and think about it, and this song exemplifies that trend better than most. It's one of the most dated apocalyptic songs I've ever heard, as its fundamental message is one of ludditism and human extinction by means of science and technology. If the lyrics to this song had been taken from a Jack London story, I would not be surprised. Musically, it sounds like a bad mariachi band playing an accompaniment of poorly-understood hippie philosophy. It might have captured the tenor of the times, but I'll remind you all, Neil Armstrong landed on the moon while this song was at number 1. Throw out your machines indeed.
The Rolling Stones - Honky Tonk Women
Number 1 song from August 23rd-September 19th, 1969 (4 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: C
A light little song that represents the Stones' foray into country music, electrified and rocked up. I wouldn't call it the best song of any particular category, but it's a neat little ditty that reminds me, weirdly enough, of some of ACDC's work. Not bad at all.
The Archies - Sugar Sugar
Number 1 song from September 20th-August 17th, 1969 (4 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: C
Yes, I know the pedigree of this song, but honestly, listen to it again, it's just a good song, regardless of who sang it. One of the better bubblegum offerings of the late sixties. Not gonna win any awards, but a really solid song. The story goes that they had to sell DJs on this song by refusing to tell them who had sung it until after they'd already heard the song. I'm not exactly surprised.
The Temptations - I Can't Get Next to You
Number 1 song from October 18th-30th, 1969 (2 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: C
You can hear the beginnings of both funk and disco in this song, if you squint your ears that is. This is a borderline case, to be honest, as I don't really care for this song, but there's nothing really
wrong with it enough to warrant demoting it to a D. The Temptations get a break.
Elvis Presley - Suspicious Minds
Number 1 song from November 1st-7th, 1969 (1 week)
Havoc's Grade: C
I gotta be honest, I didn't expect to like this song at all. But to be frank, this is one of Elvis' better number one hits. Maybe it's the soulfulness of his singing, maybe the restrained production that highlights his voice very well, maybe the simple emotionality of the song shines through, who knows. The ending coda, complete with fake-fadeout, goes on waaaaaaay too long, but even so, if more of Elvis' songs sounded like this, I might have been a fan.
The Fifth Dimension - Wedding Bell Blues
Number 1 song from November 8th-28th, 1969 (3 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: D
This is a strange song. Frankly, I just don't like the way it lilts about without any conception of where it's going. It sounds like someone tried to cross a Christmas song with big-band-style lounge music. I just have no use for it whatsoever.
The Beatles - Come Together
Number 1 song from November 29th-December 5th, 1969 (1 week)
Havoc's Grade: B
What a wonderful bass beat this song has. Come Together is one of the Beatles' best songs, a cryptic staccato blues-heavy piece that for once, doesn't sound confused so much as artistic. Musically-speaking, this is one of the most inspired pieces that the Beatles ever came up with, a total rejection of the I Wanna Hold Your Hand Boy-band days. Tragically, this came at the very end of the Beatles' run.
Steam - Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye
Number 1 song from December 6th-19th, 1969 (2 weeks)
Havoc's Grade: D
When Bananarama's cover has more style than your version, you may be in trouble. There is no reason to listen to this song for longer than the five second sample played at sports games.
Peter, Paul, & Mary - Leavin' on a Jet Plane
Number 1 song from December 20th-26th, 1969 (1 week)
Havoc's Grade: B
I don't give a damn what people want to say, Peter Paul & Mary
were the sixties as far as I'm concerned. The harmonies they produced in songs as simple as this one or Puff The Magic Dragon, were like nothing else. Simplistic it might be, but this is an incredibly emotional song, and while I recognize why some don't like it, I will not call it anything but excellent.
The Supremes - Someday We'll Be Together
Number 1 song from December 27th, 1969-January 2nd, 1970 (1 week)
Havoc's Grade: D
Instrumentally, this song is fine, but Diana Ross' efforts to sound silky just come across as utterly fake. It's like she's only taking a peripheral interest in the song her backup singers are singing. Ephemeral and pointless, this song was the one to play out the 1960s. Fitting? You be the judge.
Supplemental Songs
Let it not be said that the sixties went out with a whimper however. The supplemental list for 1969 is one of the strongest I've ever seen, and includes several stone classics:
The Foundations - Build me up Buttercup
1969 Billboard Top 100 position: 9
Havoc's Grade: B
This one just got unlucky. Scheduling mismatches kept it unjustly from the number 1 list. But that said, Build me up Buttercup is the best song the Foundations ever sang, a wonderful piece of late sixties harmonizing. I can't call it the best song ever or anything, but it's a personal favorite motown classic, and I'll defend its merits to any and sundry.
Credence Clearwater Revival - Proud Mary
1969 Billboard Top 100 position: 19
Havoc's Grade: B
Asshole though he may have been, John Fogerty was a musical genius, and this song, better known to most as 'Rollin' on a River', is one of his best. I far prefer it to the Tina Turner version for instance. Supposedly, it was written when Fogerty was discharged from the Army at the height of Vietnam, representing his joy at having been liberated.
Neil Diamond - Sweet Caroline
1969 Billboard Top 100 position: 22
Havoc's Grade: B
Shut the hell up, I don't want to hear it. I love this song, and will not hear otherwise. Yeah, it's fashionable to dig at Neil Diamond because he was a cheesy crooner, but I'm not here to be a hipster and tell you all the same things you'll hear at a hundred music snob blogs across the world. Neil Diamond has some excellent songs, and I do not give a damn who thinks otherwise. And while this is not his best (yeah, you heard me), it's a fun, happy song, one that was written about the Kennedys during the age of Camelot. Mythological? Yes. But this is music, not history, and there's a reason this song was brought back out after the Boston Marathon bombings.
Credence Clearwater Revival - Bad Moon Rising
1969 Billboard Top 100 position: 24
Havoc's Grade: B
If you absolutely must write apocalyptic music, then write it like
this. Bad Moon Rising is justly one of CCR's most famous songs, a rapturesque judgement day ditty infused with swamp rock and given a fun sound that makes judgment day out to be the thing the bible claims it to be, a day of wrath and fear and paradoxically of joy and anticipation. I don't care for apocalyptics, but this is one of the best examples thereof ever to be written.
Johnny Cash - A Boy Named Sue
1969 Billboard Top 100 position: 36
Havoc's Grade: B
One of the most classic Cash songs, like nothing else I've ever seen. It actually came closer to the number 1 list than I expected, but I understand why it never broke through. Still a stone classic, one of the best tales ever told by the man in black, and a particular favorite of his prison concerts.
Jay & The Americans - This Magic Moment
1969 Billboard Top 100 position: 56
Havoc's Grade: B
I almost gave this damn thing an A, I like it so much. A cover of the classic Drifters song from 1960, this song has been the staple of indie films ever since The Americans reworked it into a more crooner-style, bringing out the strange, ethereal qualities of the lyrics and music. Fifties music simply does not stand on its own anymore, by and large, and you need to modernize it for the songs to become listenable again. This is how you do just that.
Other noted songs from 1969:
Three Dog Night - One
Sly & The Family Stone - Hot Fun in the Summertime
Stevie Wonder - My Cherie Amour
Elvis Presley - In the Ghetto
Oliver - Good Morning Starshine
Blood, Sweat, & Tears - You've Made Me So Very Happy
Bob Dylan - Lay Lady Lay
Cass Elliot - Its Getting Better
BJ Thomas - Hooked on a Feeling
Gaze upon my works, ye mighty, and despair...
Havoc: "So basically if you side against him, he summons Cthulu."
Hotfoot: "Yes, which is reasonable."