Remember what summertime was like in the 1970s? No internet, no phones, just endless beach time and plenty of killer music. Baby boomers likely remember summer in the 1970s well, but if you canโt quite recall what it was like, these three songs will instantly transport you back to that time. Letโs dive into a few iconic summer soundtrack hits from the 1970s, shall we?
โMargaritavilleโ by Jimmy Buffett from โChanges In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudesโ (1977)
Nobody knew how to encapsulate the sheer essence of chillinโ quite like Jimmy Buffett. There has been no one quite like him since, either. And back in the late 1970s, many a summertime vacationer got to enjoy the spoils of tropical rock at its best with Buffettโs legendary album, Changes In Latitudes, Changes In Attitudes. โMargaritavilleโ is easily the biggest song from that album, and it peaked at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song also topped the Adult Contemporary chart in 1977 as well.
Videos by American Songwriter
โMy Sharonaโ by The Knack from โGet The Knackโ (1979)
They might have been something of a one-hit wonder, but Iโm not surprised that The Knackโs biggest claim to fame was โMy Sharonaโ. Released in June 1979, this power pop new wave jam was an absolute smash hit across the board. It was, without a doubt, the song of the summer. โMy Sharonaโ peaked at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and No. 6 on the UK Singles chart. Sadly, The Knack would never make it to the Top 10 in the US again.
โPlay That Funky Musicโ by Wild Cherry from โWild Cherryโ (1976)
Another surprising one-hit wonder makes it to our list of 1970s summer songs that baby boomers still remember. โPlay That Funky Musicโ by Wild Cherry is an insanely catchy funk rock jam from 1976, and it was inescapable on the radio that year. Especially during the summertime. โPlay That Funky Musicโ peaked at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and No. 7 on the UK Singles chart, and reached the Top 10 in several other countries. Wild Cherry struggled to reach the Top 40 in the US again, and they would end up disbanding just a few years later.
(Photo by Michael Putland/Getty Images)
