
By John Smistad

“Dominique” (1963)
“Dominique” is not merely an unlikely hit song. It touches upon the impossible. That’s because it was sung by a Belgian Dominican Convent nun for Heaven’s sake! Sister Luc Gabrielle (aka “The Singing Nun”) perched this peppy French-language performance atop the US charts for a full month in 1963. Gabrielle became the first musician in American chart history to have a #1 song and a #1 album (“Sister Smile”) at the same time.
“The Ballad of the Green Berets” (1966)
In mid-1960s America, opposition to the war in Vietnam was growing both in voice and vehemence. Enter United States Army Special Forces Staff Sergeant Barry Sadler. His Top 10 hit “The Ballad of the Green Berets” was a reminder to a divided country that ultimately, we’re all in this together.
“This Guy’s in Love with You” (1968)
Herb Alpert & the Tijuana Brass helped define popular music in the 1960s. The band scored a string of lively Latino-style instrumental hits over the decade, each featuring the distinctive stylings of master trumpeter Alpert. The prodigious musician, composer, and producer could also sing (a little). His vocal performance on the 1968 hit “This Guy’s in Love with You” oozes with vulnerability.
MacArthur Park (1968)
Richard Harris is one of the finest stage and screen actors. Yet the fabled Irishman doesn’t exactly bowl anyone over with his vocal range in the 1968 smash “MacArthur Park.” Still, his strained efforts to hit all the notes serve as a perfect interpretation for this off-beat chronicle of love as cake “melting in the rain.”
“Hey Jude” (1968)
The Beatles’ epic “Hey Jude” was #1 for nine consecutive weeks in 1968. However, the fact that this song was played in all its glorious 7 minutes 11 seconds on commercial AM radio, instead of two standard-length tunes and a couple of commercials, was pretty stunning.
“Oh, Happy Day” (1969)
Some songs become popular simply because of their capacity to move the listener. “Get Together” and “The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face” are some examples. So too is the 1969 hit “Oh Happy Day” from the Edwin Hawkins Singers. If one isn’t touched (even a little) by this rousing gospel choir recorded in a California church, it’s time for a pulse check.
“After the Lovin’” (1976)
It’s nothing short of startling that anyone named “Engelbert Humperdinck” would have a hit song — of any variety. But this sensual sex symbol did just that with his 1976 Top Ten ballad “After the Lovin’.” Now ain’t that a kick in the “Humperdinck”?
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This post was previously published on CultureSonar.
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Photo credit: The Edwin Hawkins Singers (public domain via Wikimedia)




