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twist and shout
Twist and Shout was originally played by the Isley Brothers in 1962 and did become quite popular. The Beatles made the song famous in 1963.
twist and shout by the beatles
The chorus for the 1964 Beatles hit 'Twist and Shout' goes as follows: Well shake it up, baby, now (shake it up, baby), twist and shout (twist and shout). Come on come on come on come on baby now (come on baby) come on and work it on out (work it on out).
Danke Schoen and Shake It Up Baby (Twist and Shout).
Twist And Shout
The words "shake it up" are in the Beatles tune, "Twist and Shout".
Yes they did , a lot of their earlier albums was other band material for example the Beatles song "Twist and Shout" was not Beatles material ... Hoped that helped :)
It was the now-defunct Twist and Shout club in Bethesda, Maryland.
what song did the bealtes open up with in shea stadium They opened with an abbreviated version of "Twist and Shout" and went right into "She's a Woman."
Ferris Bueller was lip singing to the recording of the Beatles song The track is the Beatles, but the horn section was added over the track, without permission... the Beatles almost never allow people to change the arrangement of their songs. I think it works well but the Beatles were pissed!
The song "Twist and Shout" has an interesting story, in that the band who originally recorded it are seldom remembered, while not one, but two bands afterward were credited in history.Long before "Twist and Shout" appeared in Ferris Bueller's Day Off, before it was made famous by The Beatles in 1963, and even before The Isley Brothers in 1962, it was recorded by a band called The Top Notes, a new and rising Philadelphia R & B band in 1961 on Atlantic Records.This was produced at the time by up-coming staff producer Phil Spector, who was previously known prior as a singer with the group "The Teddy Bears" and their smash hit of 1958 "To Know Him Is To Love Him". However, when songwriter Bert Berns (aka Bert Russell) heard the final mix from The Top Notes, he told Spector that he had "messed up the song" and predicted a quick demise for the single.The Beatles were mostly inspired by the Isley Brothers cover done a year later in 1962 (which was produced by Bert Berns himself as revenge to Spector's butchered version). Despite the three iterations, it is interesting to hear how the original differs from the Isley Brothers and then the famous Beatles version in the genesis, evolution and final iteration which gained worldwide fame.