![]() ![]() The song later became their second UK #1 and first top 10 hit in the US.ġ968: The Crazy World of Arthur Brown’s only entry on the US singles charts, “Fire,” entered the Billboard Hot 100, where it later peaked at #2. Written for Franklin by Carole King, Gerry Goffin, and producer Jerry Wexler, it reached #8 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became one of Franklin’s signature songs.ġ968: “I’ve Gotta Get a Message to You” The Bee Gees was released. While it remains uncertain which “4th Street” the title refers to, many of the Greenwich Village’s folk crowd, who had been friends of Dylan’s, took offense and assumed the song carried personal references.ġ967: “(You Make Me Feel Like) A Natural Woman” by Aretha Franklin was released as a single from her twelfth studio album, Lady Soul. It became Cookes’ biggest hit, selling 2.5 million copies and reaching #1 on both Billboard’s R&B and Hot 100 charts.ġ964: After its release in the UK in late July, The Zombies’ debut single, “She’s Not There,” was issued in the US on Parrot Records.ġ965: Bob Dylan released “Positively 4th Street.” The record became Dylan’s second top 10 single by the end of October, reaching #7 on Billboard Hot 100, in addition to topping the chart in Canada and peaking at #8 in the UK. Share the post "Today in Rock & Roll History: September 7th"ġ957: Sam Cooke’s debut single, “You Send Me,” was released by Keen Records.
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