September 13, 1967 Joe Tex records "Skinny Legs And All."
September 5, 1967 The Beatles start recording "I Am The Walrus" for their Magical Mystery Tour album. Sound effects and sundry overdubs, including a bit from a BBC radio broadcast, are added later.
August 23, 1967 The Beatles record "Your Mother Should Know" at Chappell Recording Studios in London. It's their last session before the death of their manager, Brian Epstein, who passes away four days later.
August 17, 1967 Gary Puckett and the Union Gap records "Woman, Woman."
June 23, 1967 Aretha Franklin records "Chain Of Fools."
June 22, 1967 The Young Rascals records "How Can I Be Sure?"
June 20, 1967 The Buckinghams record "Susan" and "Hey Baby They're Playing Our Song."
June 14, 1967 The Monkees record "Daydream Believer."
June 14, 1967 At Olympic Sound Studios in London, The Beatles start working on "All You Need Is Love," written specifically for a global satellite broadcast. The simple, repetitive chorus makes it a great fit for the international audience.
June 10, 1967 The Monkees record "Pleasant Valley Sunday."
May 11, 1967 Cream records "Tales Of Brave Ulysses" and "Outside Woman Blues."
April 10, 1967 Paul McCartney attends a Beach Boys recording session in Hollywood.
April 4, 1967 The Beatles finish recording "Within You Without You," a George Harrison song where he plays sitar and is accompanied by various Indian musicians. He has the engineers add some laughter to the end of the track from a sound effects reel.
March 28, 1967 Van Morrison records "Brown Eyed Girl."
March 27, 1967 The Young Rascals record "Groovin'."
March 21, 1967 John Lennon takes his first major LSD trip and freaks out while recording backing vocals on the track "Getting Better." Producer George Martin, not realizing the effects of the drug, takes Lennon to the roof of Abbey Road Studios to get some fresh air. Paul McCartney and George Harrison, upon learning where John is, rush up to get him down. The group works on a piano track for "Lovely Rita" instead.
March 2, 1967 The Supremes record "Reflections" and "The Happening."
February 14, 1967 In New York City, Aretha Franklin r-e-c-o-r-d-s her famous cover of the Otis Redding song "Respect."
February 1, 1967 Frank Sinatra and daughter Nancy Sinatra record "Somethin' Stupid."
January 20, 1967 Arthur Conley records "Sweet Soul Music."
January 19, 1967 The Beatles start recording "A Day In The Life," leaving a placeholder in the middle section that is later filled with Paul McCartney's "Woke up, fell out of bed" part, taken from another song he was working on.
January 15, 1967 The Buckinghams record "Don't You Care."
January 11, 1967 Jimi Hendrix records "Purple Haze" at De Lane Lea Studios in London.
December 24, 1966 Tommy James & the Shondells record "I Think We're Alone Now."
December 13, 1966 Jimi Hendrix records "Foxy Lady."
December 6, 1966 No longer touring, The Beatles hunker down on their Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band album. With "Strawberry Fields Forever" in the can, they start work on "When I'm 64," a song they started playing live in rough form years earlier.
November 15, 1966 Jefferson Airplane records "Somebody To Love."
October 23, 1966 The Jimi Hendrix Experience records "Hey Joe."
August 15, 1966 Bobby Darin records "If I Were A Carpenter."
August 1, 1966 The Chambers Brothers record "Time Has Come Today" at Columbia Records' Los Angeles studios. Overdubbed with harpsichord, the single is released with a 2:37 running time and flops. A year later, an 11-minute version appears on their album The Time Has Come which becomes an FM radio favorite. In 1968, the song is once again released as a single, this time at 4:45. This version climbs to #11 in the US.
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