The List

3 Rock Songs From 1972 That Every 70s Kid Still Knows by Heart Today

The 1970s remain one of the best eras in rock music. Included in the decade are these three iconic rock songs from 1972, songs that are so good, itโ€™s likely that every 70s kid can still sing them word for word today.

โ€œWitchy Womanโ€ by The Eagles

Of course, any music fan knows โ€œTake It Easyโ€, the debut single by the Eagles. But that song was followed up by โ€œWitchy Womanโ€, another classic.ย 

Videos by American Songwriter

On their freshman Eagles album, โ€œWitchy Womanโ€ is written by band members Don Henley and Bernie Leadon. The song begins with, โ€œRaven hair and ruby lips / Sparks fly from her fingertips / Echoed voices in the night / She’s a restless spirit on an endless flight / Woo hoo witchy woman, / See how high she flies / Woo hoo witchy woman. She got the moon in her eye.โ€

Leadon is formerly of the group The Flying Burrito, which is when he began the song. He and Henley finished it after he became part of the Eagles.

โ€œI Saw The Lightโ€ by Todd Rundgren

Todd Rundgren includes โ€œI Saw The Lightโ€ on Something/Anything?,ย  his third studio album.ย  The song says, โ€œThen you gazed up at me / And the answer was plain to see / โ€˜Cause I saw the light / In your eyes, in your eyes.โ€

One of Rundgrenโ€™s biggest hits, he later admitted he didnโ€™t really like โ€œI Saw The Lightโ€. 

“I wrote this song in 15 minutes from start to finish,โ€ Rundgren reveals. โ€œIt was one of the reasons that caused me to change my style of writing. It doesn’t matter how clever a song is – if it’s written in 15 minutes, it is such a string of clichรฉs that it just doesn’t have lasting impact for me. And for me, the greatest disappointment in the world is not being able to listen to my own music and enjoy it.”

โ€œDoctor, My Eyesโ€ by Jackson Browne

Jackson Browneโ€™s first single and first big hit at radio is โ€œDoctor, My Eyesโ€. The song, written by Browne, is on his eponymous debut album.

โ€œDoctor, My Eyesโ€ says, โ€œDoctor, my eyes have seen the years / And the slow parade of fears without crying / Now I want to understand / I have done all that I could / To see the evil and the good without hiding / You must help me if you can.โ€

Browne had real-life vision problems, which is what inspired him to write “Doctor, My Eyes”. After this song, it took Browne ten years until he had another Top 10 at radio, with “Somebody’s Baby”.

Photo by Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns