Welcome to MusicDayz

The world's largest online archive of date-sorted music facts, bringing day-by-day facts instantly to your fingertips.
Find out what happened on your or your friends' Birthday, Wedding Day, Anniversary or just discover fun facts in musical areas that particularly interest you.
Please take a look around.

Fact #117484

When:

Short story:

Lucky Man by Emerson, Lake and Palmer peaks at No48 on the Billboard Singles Chart in the USA.

Full article:

Greg Lake : We had just formed ELP and went right into the studio to do the first album. It was back in the days of vinyl and you needed exactly twenty-one minutes per side. On one side, we only had less than eighteen minutes and this guy from the label said, "Hey, you need another song..." and we looked at each other and then at him and said, "Well, we don't have any more songs. We recorded everything we know...". And he just said we had one more day in the studio and told us to come up with something.

So, we all sat around and looked at each other and we asked each other if we had any other songs. No one had anything, and then I mentioned that I actually had this little folk song I wrote when I was twelve years old. So, I pulled out an acoustic guitar and I played Lucky Man for them, which was actually the first song I ever wrote. Anyway, the other guys thought I was mad, because we had never done any acoustic music up to that point. But, I kept playing it and I laid down a guitar and vocal track. And then Carl put some percussion over it, and it sounded better. And then we did some more over dubs and it sounded even better. And then Keith went in and did the moog solo, which, by the way, he laid down in one take. Finally, we had the final track and it sounded OK, so we kept it. As it turned out, it was the band's biggest hit.