In the mood for some classic rock radio hits from the 1970s? Thereโs no way you havenโt heard these three hits, especially if you were young in the 1970s. But I think they deserve to be celebrated even more, namely for how they popularized classic rock radio in the decades that followed. Letโs take a look at a few iconic classic rock radio jams from the good olโ 1970s!
โWe Will Rock Youโ by Queen (1977)
The A-side of this song, โWe Are The Championsโ, might be one of Queenโs biggest songs. But the B-side, โWe Will Rock Youโ, has to be one of the most prominent go-to songs on classic rock radio today. In fact, Iโd be bold enough to say that it seems like the B-side gets way more airplay than โWe Are The Championsโ on classic rock radio, at least in my experience.
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โMore Than A Feelingโ by Boston (1976)
Boston started with a guy with a dream (that guy being Tom Scholz) and basically no band. And with a little luck and some record label attention, Boston absolutely took over rock radio with the release of their self-titled debut album in 1976. One of the singles from that album is โMore Than A Feelingโ, and I canโt think of a song more deserving of a spot on our list of classic rock radio hits from the 1970s. When one thinks of classic rock radio, they think of this very song.
โMore Than A Feelingโ peaked at No. 5 on the coveted Billboard Hot 100 chart and did similarly well in Canada. The sign was also a No. 22 hit on the UK Singles chart.
โSweet Emotionโ by Aerosmith (1975)
โSweet Emotionโ still hits so good, decades after it first wowed listeners in 1975. And it remains a classic rock radio staple that will probably never go out of style for another 50 years. Those soaring guitars and that killer harmony just canโt be beat.
โSweet Emotionโ was, shockingly, only a modest hit for the band when it was first released. It peaked at No. 36 on the Hot 100 and No. 56 on the Canada Top Singles chart.
Photo by Richard E. Aaron/Redferns
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The Beatles at the press launch for their new album 'Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band', held at Brian Epstein's house at 24 Chapel Street, London, 19th May 1967. Left to right: George Harrison (1943 – 2001), Ringo Starr, John Lennon (1940 – 1980) and Paul McCartney. (Photo by John Downing/Daily Express/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)







