Most bizarre circumstances for making a hit record
Posted: Oct 01, 2025 2:52 pm
My wife and I play Heardle every day, an intro quiz (keeping the marriage alive, folks). There are versions for decades, genres, all manner of themes. It's great.
https://heardledecades.com/
Today on (of course) 80s Heardle to our shame we both failed to guess Baby I Love You by the Ramones (1980) in the allotted 17 seconds
We both were singing along to the intro but couldn't connect with the song itself. I found myself, of course, wondering how this version had come about, not really in the Ramones oeuvre, so duly off to Wikipedia I went.
The original was by The Ronettes in 1963 and produced by Phil Spector. I was dimly aware that he had something of a reputation, but I really wasn't prepared for what I read next, at least according to Wikipedia. In 1979:
In an incident at Spector's house, the producer held the Ramones hostage at gunpoint and made them listen to him play "Baby, I Love You" until 4:30 in the morning. Spector insisted that the Ramones recorded a cover of the song and got Joey Ramone to sing it with some session musicians, as none of the other members of the Ramones would play on it. Joey has said that "it didn't sound anything like the Ramones" and he hated the song.
In the UK it got to number 8, the band's biggest hit.
Can anyone top that?
https://heardledecades.com/
Today on (of course) 80s Heardle to our shame we both failed to guess Baby I Love You by the Ramones (1980) in the allotted 17 seconds
We both were singing along to the intro but couldn't connect with the song itself. I found myself, of course, wondering how this version had come about, not really in the Ramones oeuvre, so duly off to Wikipedia I went.
The original was by The Ronettes in 1963 and produced by Phil Spector. I was dimly aware that he had something of a reputation, but I really wasn't prepared for what I read next, at least according to Wikipedia. In 1979:
In an incident at Spector's house, the producer held the Ramones hostage at gunpoint and made them listen to him play "Baby, I Love You" until 4:30 in the morning. Spector insisted that the Ramones recorded a cover of the song and got Joey Ramone to sing it with some session musicians, as none of the other members of the Ramones would play on it. Joey has said that "it didn't sound anything like the Ramones" and he hated the song.
In the UK it got to number 8, the band's biggest hit.
Can anyone top that?