Hal Johnson doesn't just rank the 1960s; he excavates the strange, specific machinery that made the decade's music work, arguing that the era's greatest hits often relied on absurdity, one-hit wonders, and the friction between juvenile lyrics and sophisticated production. In a landscape of curated nostalgia, Johnson's approach is startlingly honest about the "dumb" lyrics that somehow fueled a cultural revolution, forcing the listener to confront why a song about littering or a truck driver's infidelity could become an anthem. This isn't a history lesson; it's a forensic analysis of why we still can't stop humming the nonsense.
The Architecture of the One-Hit Wonder
Johnson immediately dismantles the myth of the steady career, pointing out that the 1960s, much like the 1980s, were defined by fleeting moments of brilliance. He highlights Barbara George, a teenager and mother whose single "I Know" became a crossover hit before she vanished from the charts. "The '60s, like the '80s, were a time of one-hit wonders, and George will neither be the first nor the last on our list," Johnson writes. This observation reframes the decade not as a continuous flow of star power, but as a series of explosive, isolated events. The author's focus on the economic reality—"I hope that, as the writer of this track, she actually got a payout"—grounds the musical analysis in the harsh business of the music industry, a detail often glossed over in celebratory retrospectives.
This pattern repeats with The Blue Diamonds, an Indonesian duo who had a modest US hit with "Ramona." Johnson notes that their sound filled a specific "eco-niche" left open by the Everly Brothers, who were temporarily sidelined by military service and legal troubles. "Nevertheless, stateside stardom eluded them, but we'll always have 'Ramona,'" he observes. The commentary here is sharp: it recognizes that history is often shaped by who wasn't there to record the hit. Critics might argue that focusing on the "near-misses" distracts from the era's giants, but Johnson's inclusion of these tracks reveals the fragile ecosystem of the pop charts, where a single lawsuit or enlistment could alter the sonic landscape of a generation.
The Genius of the Absurd
Perhaps the most compelling section of Johnson's piece is his defense of songs that sound ridiculous on paper but work perfectly in practice. He tackles "Do You Love Me?" by The Contours, a track famously earmarked for The Temptations who were at church when the producer arrived. The lyrics are, as Johnson bluntly puts it, "not even English!" yet the song remains a masterpiece of rhythm. "The lyrics literally could not be dumber—it takes zero skill to Mash Potato or to do the Twist," he writes, before pivoting to the music's undeniable power. "And yet the music is not stupid. The music is about how important it is to dance the Twist."
This distinction between lyrical simplicity and musical complexity is the core of Johnson's argument. He suggests that the era's magic lay in the ability to turn "Work, work!" into a chant that defies logic. The author connects this to the broader cultural moment, noting how Arlo Guthrie's "Alice's Restaurant Massacree" took a "cute little anecdote (about littering) that blossoms into an anti-war song that potentially blossoms into a movement." Johnson marvels at the transformation: "What a portrait of the times!" This framing elevates the absurdity from a novelty to a historical document, showing how the decade used humor and storytelling to process the weight of war and social change. The connection to Woody Guthrie's "talking blues" adds necessary depth, contrasting the father's direct style with the son's sprawling, shaggy-dog narrative.
The lyrics literally could not be dumber... And yet the music is not stupid. The music is about how important it is to dance the Twist.
The Tension of Production and Persona
Johnson also explores the friction between the artist and the production, particularly in the case of Gene Pitney. He admits a personal aversion to the orchestral arrangements, asking, "What am I doing? I don't even like this kind of music! Who put all those strings in there?" Yet, he concedes that the "kitsch blaring behind it" is essential to the song's emotional impact. "Maybe it wouldn't even work as well without all the kitsch blaring behind it," he concludes. This admission is powerful because it challenges the listener to separate their own biases from the song's actual effect. The author argues that the "heartbreaking" quality of Pitney's voice is amplified, not diminished, by the over-the-top production.
Similarly, he addresses the "pretentious" nature of The Moody Blues, acknowledging that their recited poetry can be "unendurable" and their orchestral interludes a "vice magnified to 11." But he refuses to dismiss them entirely, noting that "when they're not making you writhe in agony, aren't the Moodys kind of…good?" This balanced critique prevents the commentary from becoming a simple list of favorites; instead, it becomes an analysis of why certain artistic choices, even the flawed ones, resonate. The author even speculates on the song's influence on Roger Waters, suggesting a lineage of lyrical introspection that stretches from the folk-rock of the late 60s to the concept albums of the 70s.
The Uncomfortable Truths of the Era
Johnson does not shy away from the darker or more controversial aspects of the decade's output. He discusses "Springtime for Hitler" from The Producers, noting that while the song might be "unlistenable-to today," it was once the "funniest three minutes in all of '60s music." He contextualizes this within a broader arc of censorship and public outrage, observing that "the arc of our courts has generally bent towards increasing laxity," yet "laxity in the court of public opinion seems to have bell-curved." This is a sophisticated take on how society's tolerance for art shifts over time. He points out that genres like punk explicitly endorsed political violence, yet the outrage over a satirical song in 1967 seems disproportionate to modern ears. "Well! Talk about bad taste!" he exclaims, capturing the spirit of the controversy without endorsing the offense.
He also touches on the class resentment in Lefty Frizzell's "Saginaw, Michigan," describing it as a "working man's rebellion fantasy" where the narrator commits fraud against a father-in-law. Johnson finds the "euphony of the repeated phrase 'Saginaw, Michigan'" to be the song's greatest gift, yet he doesn't ignore the criminality of the lyrics. "He's only defrauding his father-in-law! That's how to impress a lady!" he writes with a mix of irony and appreciation. This highlights the complex moral landscape of the era's country music, where rebellion was often coded in humor and song.
Bottom Line
Hal Johnson's greatest strength is his refusal to treat the 1960s as a monolith of perfection; instead, he celebrates the messy, contradictory, and often silly elements that made the music endure. His argument holds up because it acknowledges that great art often comes from the collision of high and low culture, serious themes and juvenile delivery. The biggest vulnerability in his approach is the sheer volume of tracks covered, which occasionally sacrifices deep historical context for rapid-fire wit, but this pacing perfectly suits a reader who wants to grasp the era's spirit without wading through a textbook. For the busy listener, this piece offers a fresh lens: the 1960s weren't just about protest and peace; they were about the power of a dumb lyric to make you dance anyway.