Outlaw songs are at least as old as popular music itself. The image of a gallant loner battling a rigid and unyielding legal establishment has proved irresistible for generations of songwriters. In 1959, Texan Sonny Curtis wrote one of the best, "I Fought The Law." Intended as a vehicle for himself and the post-Buddy Holly Crickets, their single went precisely nowhere.That is, until it was covered -- the first hit cover was by The Bobby Fuller Four in 1965, then another major version came out 14 years later, from The Clash who revived the "oldie" into what is now a "punk anthem." From there, the covers start piling up....
but they claim that Bobby Fuller's version was the one played
Navelgazer:In a bit of a coincidence, YouTube's suggested video that autoplayed for me after The Crickets version was “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun” by songwriter Robert Hazard.It's fascinating to me how The Clash version feels like the first fully realized version of this song to me, and yet is the "punk" cover, while the Crickets and Bobby Fuller versions sound like garage demos by comparison. In a way it reminds me of "Respect" or "All Along the Watchtower," where you can clearly see the solid songwriting in the originals, but where it took Aretha Franklin and Jimi Hendrix, respectively, to make them into the songs they were supposed to be.
Gelatin:I think that's one of the reasons the song has been so widely covered. Almost anybody learning to play guitar winds up learning this one relatively early on.I love this song and just about any cover of it. I'm especially fond of it because I can play it despite my mediocre guitar skills, and its three-chords-no-waiting style still sounds good.
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Previously: a question about tracking down Goblini's version.
posted by filthy light thief at 9:06 PM on November 11, 2015 [2 favorites]