Roll Over Beethoven

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“Roll Over Beethoven”
Chess single
Single by Chuck Berry
B-side Drifting Heart‎
Released May, 1956
Format 7"
Genre Rock
Length 2:04
Label Chess #1626
Writer(s) Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry singles chronology
"No Money Down"
(1955)
"Roll Over Beethoven"
(1956)
"Too Much Monkey Business"
(1956)

"Roll Over Beethoven" is a 1956 hit single by Chuck Berry originally released on Chess Records, with "Drifting Heart" as the b-side. The lyrics of the song mention rock and roll and the desire for rhythm and blues to replace classical music. The song has been covered by many other artists and Rolling Stone ranked it #97 on their list the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

Contents

[edit] Inspiration and lyrics

According to Rolling Stone[1] and Cub Koda of the All Music Guide (AMG),[2] Berry wrote the song in response to his sister Lucy always using the family piano to play classical music when Berry wanted to play contemporary popular music.

In addition to classical composers Beethoven and Tchaikovsky, the lyrics mention or allude to several popular artists. "Early in the morning" is the title of a Louis Jordan song and "Blue Suede Shoes" refers to Carl Perkins's song. Finally, "Hey diddle diddle" comes from the nursery rhyme, "The Cat and the Fiddle". Although the lyrics mention rocking and rolling, the music that the classics are supposed to step aside for is always referred to as "rhythm and blues". Arthur Alexander appropriated the lyric "a shot of rhythm and blues" for the title of his later song.

As for the rest of the lyrics, a "rhythm review" describes the old style R&B show with many featured artists appearing on one bill in front of a big band. One phrase that has troubled some cover artists not familiar with the southern idiom for "a little bit more" is "move on up just a trifle further". Neither the Beatles nor the Electric Light Orchestra manage to sing the phrase correctly, despite having done two versions apiece.

Like The Tennessee Waltz, "Roll Over Beethoven" is a self-referential metasong, i.e. a song about the song itself.

[edit] Release

Berry's version was originally released as a single by Chess Records in May of 1956 with "Drifting Heart" as the B-side.[3] "Roll Over Beethoven" and 3 other Berry songs appear on the Rock, Rock, Rock album, ostensibly a soundtrack to the film of the same name, but only 4 of the 12 songs on the album appeared in the film.

There have been many subsequent releases on compilation albums.

[edit] Critical acclaim

In 2003, Berry's single was one of 50 recordings chosen that year by the Library of Congress to be added to the National Recording Registry. In 2004, "Roll Over Beethoven" was ranked number 97 on Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 500 greatest songs of all time. In the accompanying review, they wrote that it "became the ultimate rock & roll call to arms, declaring a new era."[4] Koda calls it a "masterpiece" that helped to define the rock and roll genre.[2]

[edit] Cover versions

It is one of the most widely covered songs in popular music—"a staple of rock & roll bands" according to Koda[2]—with notable versions by Jerry Lee Lewis, The Beatles and the Electric Light Orchestra. Other covers were performed by Mountain, Status Quo, The Rolling Stones, The Byrds, The 13th Floor Elevators, The Sonics, Gene Vincent, Uriah Heep on Uriah Heep Live and the Australian band Buster Brown on their 1974 album Something to Say. In 1992, the English Heavy Metal band, Iron Maiden covered it as a B-side to its "From Here to Eternity" single.

[edit] The Beatles

"Roll Over Beethoven" was a favorite of John Lennon, Paul McCartney and George Harrison even before they had chosen "The Beatles" as their name, and they continued to play it live right into their American tours of 1964. Their version of "Roll Over Beethoven" was recorded on 30 July 1963 for their second British LP, With the Beatles, and features George Harrison on vocals and guitar.[5] In the United States, it was released 10 April 1964 as the opening track of The Beatles' Second Album.[6]

In 1964, the Beatles released a live version of "Roll Over Beethoven" on Live at the BBC. This live version was recorded on 28 February 1964 and broadcast on 30 March 1964 as part of a BBC series starring the Beatles called From Us To You.[7]

This version of "Roll Over Beethoven" was used in the film Superman III directed by Richard Lester who also directed two films for the Beatles, Help! and A Hard Day's Night

[edit] Electric Light Orchestra

“Roll Over Beethoven”
“Roll Over Beethoven” cover
Single by Electric Light Orchestra
from the album
ELO 2
B-side "Queen of the Hours"
Released 1973
Format 7"
Recorded 1972 Air Studios
Genre Rock music, Art rock
Length 8:09 (album), 4:32 (single)
Label Harvest Records
Writer(s) Chuck Berry, Ludwig van Beethoven
Producer Jeff Lynne
Electric Light Orchestra singles chronology
"10538 Overture"
(1972)
"Roll Over Beethoven"
(1973)
"Showdown"
(1973)
Flashback track listing
"Mr. Radio"
(4)
"Roll Over Beethoven"
(5)
"Mama"
(6)

"Roll Over Beethoven" was the second single released by the Electric Light Orchestra and became their second consecutive top ten hit in the UK, as well as a hit in the United States when an edited version of the track was taken from the album ELO 2 in 1973. ELO's elaborate eight minute reworking of the track included an opening musical quote from Beethoven's Fifth Symphony and clever interpolations of material from the symphony's first movement into Berry's song; the band closed all their concerts using this number, their signature song.


[edit] Meat Loaf

Meat Loaf has performed many rock covers for his concerts throughout his career including Chuck Berry songs. His covers of Roll Over Beethoven have been in his "Rock Medleys" with Elvis, Chuck Berry, and Little Richard favorites. Though a cover was never officially released into the medley, being edited out of the CD recording of the tour, it has been on one of Meat Loaf's Objects in the Rear View Mirror singles, recorded for VH-1 in the early 90's according to the CD jacket.

[edit] Iron Maiden

Iron Maiden included a cover of the Berry song on the b-side their single "From Here to Eternity", called "Roll Over Vic Vella". The song features different lyrics (written by Steve Harris) about the band's long-time tour manager, Vic Vella.

[edit] Cultural references

  • In 1973, new owners of New York City classical music station WNCN announced a change of format to rock and roll by interrupting a performance of the Mozart Requiem with ELO's version of "Roll Over Beethoven". The station's classical audience was so outraged they successfully petitioned the FCC to force a return to the previous format.[8]
  • In 1979, a highly truncated version of ELO's version of "Roll Over Beethoven" was the theme song for short-lived NBC-TV fraternity situation comedy, Brothers and Sisters.
  • Superman III — "Roll Over Beethoven" by The Beatles and "Earth Angel" by The Penguins can be heard at Clark's high school reunion. Like the use of "Rock Around the Clock" in the first film, the use of these 1950s-era recordings appear out-of-date as Clark's high school days would have corresponded with the late 1960s-early 1970s.
  • "Roll over Beethoven" is the very first line in Common Rotation's song "Post Modern".

[edit] External link

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Rolling Stone Review of "Roll Over Beethoven". Retrieved on 2007-03-01.
  2. ^ a b c "AMG Review of Chuck Berry's "Roll Over Beethoven". Retrieved on 2007-03-01.
  3. ^ Dietmar Rudolph. A Collector's Guide to the Music of Chuck Berry: The Chess Era (1955-1966). Retrieved on 2007-03-01.
  4. ^ The Rolling Stone 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
  5. ^ Mark Lewisohn (1988). The Beatles Recording Sessions. New York: Harmony Books, 34, 37. ISBN 0-517-57066-1. 
  6. ^ Mark Lewisohn (1988). The Beatles Recording Sessions, 201. 
  7. ^ (1994) Album notes for Live at the BBC by The Beatles [booklet]. London: Apple Records (31796).
  8. ^ A Sad Week for Radio. Stereophile Magazine (1998-12-06). Retrieved on 2007-03-01.