Free - All Right Now

Some songs refuse to die. Nearly six decades after it first blasted out of radios across the world, "All Right Now" by Free remains one of rock's most instantly recognizable moments — a song so perfectly constructed that it sounds as fresh today as it did in 1970.

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Alicia Bridges - I Love The Nightlife

In 1977, in a small Atlanta studio, two songwriters created something they never intended to be a disco classic. Alicia Bridges and her writing partner Susan Hutcheson penned a song called "Disco 'Round"—an R&B number about telling off a man and heading out to dance away the frustration. They imagined it as something soulful, maybe even something Al Green might sing.

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Norman Greenbaum - Spirit In The Sky

Norman Greenbaum never set out to become a one-hit wonder. But in 1969, the Jewish songwriter from Massachusetts created one of rock's most enduring spiritual anthems—despite never being particularly religious himself.

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Vicki Lawrence - The Night The Lights Went Out In Georgia

In 1972, songwriter Bobby Russell penned what would become one of the most famous murder ballads in popular music history. Ironically, Russell wasn't particularly fond of his own creation. The song seemed flat to him, and he lacked inspiration about its potential—so much so that he refused to even record a demo of it.

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David Soul - Don't Give Up On Us

In 1976, David Soul was at the height of his television fame as Detective Kenneth "Hutch" Hutchinson on the hit TV series Starsky & Hutch. While audiences knew him as the blonde half of the crime-fighting duo, Soul had always harbored musical ambitions from his earlier career days.

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Peter McCann - Do You Wanna Make Love

In the rich tapestry of 1970s soft rock, few songs captured the era’s romantic vulnerability quite like “Do You Wanna Make Love” by Peter McCann. Released in 1977, the gentle, heartfelt ballad became an unexpected smash, giving McCann his biggest — and only — hit, and solidifying its place as one of the decade’s most memorable one-hit wonders.

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