Category Archives: 1960s songs

The top 500 best music and songs from the 1960s. Song meanings, lyrics and interpretations from your favorite artists. The Beatles, Beach Boys, Simon and Garfunkel, Dylan. See who rates the highest!

#240 Something in the Air- Thunderclap Newman

We’ve got to get together sooner or later/
Because the revolution’s here, and you know it’s right.

What happened to all the great protest music? Thunderclap Newman was a one-hit wonder, but what a hit they had in “Something in the Air”! In 1969, there was something in the air, and they were feeling revolution. The impetus behind the protest at the time was the Vietnam war. This song is a little more insidious than other protest songs. It talks about handing out ammo to all the instigators because the revolution is here. You know it’s right, the time is now; it is in the air. The lyrics are actually quite radical.

Something in the air Meaning
Thunderclap Newman

The music is great. The verse and chorus have a great melody. Following the trend of many of the songs of the psychedelic movement, the bridge seems like it could stand alone as a different song. It doesn’t have much similarity with the rest of the song, but it works. (Also see Tuesday Afternoon, Live for Today, A Day in The Life). The bridge has piano and hand-clapping and the rest of the song has a full symphony. It is an interesting juxtaposition.

Something in the Air Lyrics

Call out the instigators,
Because there’s something in the air,
We’ve got to get together sooner or later.
Because the revolution’s here, and you know it’s right!
And you know that it’s right.

We have got to get it together,
We have got to get it together, now.

Lock up the streets and houses,
Because there’s something in the air.
We’ve got to get together sooner or later,
Because the revolution’s here, and you know it’s right!
And you know that it’s right.

We have got to get it together,
We have got to get it together now.

Hand out the arms and ammo,
We’re going to blast our way through here.
We’ve got to get together sooner or later,
Because the revolution’s here, and you know it’s right!
And you know that it’s right.

We have got to get it together,
We have got to get it together now.

Songwriters: John Keen

#238 A Summer Song- Chad and Jeremy

But don’t you know that it hurts me so/
To say goodbye to you.

Chad and Jeremy’s “Summer Song” is a beautiful song about a man reminiscing about a former summer fling. This is not the song of a bitter breakup or of a deep sorrow. The narrator feels a bittersweet pang for his youth while remembering the fun time he had with a girl one summer when he was younger. Chad and Jeremy sing of the new love of summer with its soft breezes and soft kisses and beautiful leaves.

A Summer Song Meaning
Chad and Jeremy

But then Autumn came–and with it the rain, and the end of a love. Perhaps due to school, we don’t know. The lyrics are simple and express a common motif—the transition of summer to autumn is similar to the way a new love can turn to an old love. Paul Simon was fond of this imagery: he used it in Leaves that are Green and April Come She Will.

The chord progression on “Summer Song” is simple and this is a fun song for a beginning guitar student. The magic comes from the harmonies between Chad & Jeremy and the lovely melody. They sing the song with tenderness. There is an innocence to the lyrics. This song has one of the best bridges of any song (“They say that all good things must end…”). It is a great transition and the mood is a contrast to the upbeat tone of the rest of the song. We feel as if the narrator is getting down but then springs out of the dark mood and ends with an overall positive memory.

A Summer Song Lyrics

Trees swayin’ in the summer breeze
Showin’ off their silver leaves
As we walked by

Soft kisses on a summer’s day
Laughing all our cares away
Just you and I

Sweet sleepy warmth of summer nights
Gazing at the distant lights
In the starry sky

They say that all good things must end some day
Autumn leaves must fall
But don’t you know that it hurts me so
To say goodbye to you
Wish you didn’t have to go
No, no, no, no

And when the rain
Beats against my windowpane
I’ll think of summer days again
And dream of you

They say that all good things must end some day
Autumn leaves must fall
But don’t you know that it hurts me so
To say goodbye to you
Wish you didn’t have to go
No no no no

And when the rain
Beats against my windowpane
I’ll think of summer days again
And dream of you
And dream of you

Songwriters: Clive Metcalf / David Stuart / Keith Noble

#237 White Rabbit- Jefferson Airplane

One pill makes you larger, and one pill makes you small/
And the ones that mother gives you, don’t do anything at all.

Gracie Slick wrote one of the tent-poles of psychedelic rock with Jefferson Airplane’s “White Rabbit”. The song is obviously about drug use, but also about curiosity. What is the song saying about drugs and what is the meaning of the White Rabbit? One of the main messages is that teenagers see drugs being used by their parents and see drugs being used in the fairy tales being read to them as children, so why wouldn’t they be interested in drugs?

White Rabbit Meaning
Jefferson Airplane

What else would you expect? Alice in Alice in Wonderland takes a pill to make her big or make her small. Mothers are taking Valium and alcohol; it is around us our whole lives.

White Rabbit Meaning
White rabbit from Alice in Wonderland

The production of the record is amazing. It sounds like Slick is singing down a giant hole. That fits in perfectly with the theme of the song. The rhythm section drives much of the melody. The intro bass riff is amazing. The drums sound like a marching band that the white knights on the chessboard might be marching to. But overall, this song comes down to Slick’s amazing vocal. She sings like she is delivering an urgent message…and in a sense, she is.

White Rabbit Lyrics

One pill makes you larger, and one pill makes you small
And the ones that mother gives you, don’t do anything at all

Go ask Alice, when she’s ten feet tall

And if you go chasing rabbits, and you know you’re going to fall
Tell ’em a hookah-smoking caterpillar has given you the call

He called Alice, when she was just small

When the men on the chessboard get up and tell you where to go
And you’ve just had some kind of mushroom, and your mind is moving low

Go ask Alice, I think she’ll know
When logic and proportion have fallen sloppy dead
And the White Knight is talking backwards
And the Red Queen’s off with her head
Remember what the Dormouse said
Feed your head, feed your head

Songwriters: Grace Wing Slick