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4 Deep Cuts That Famous Classic Rock Stars Consider Their Best Work

Many famous music artists generally have released multiple songs that have sold extremely well and received plenty of radio airplay. That being said, commercial success or chart performance arenโ€™t always factors in how songwriters and musicians feel about the tunes that theyโ€™ve created. In fact, many classic rock stars have singled out some of their deep cuts and lesser-known songs as among their favorite tunes from their catalogs.

[RELATED: Paul McCartney Reveals His (and His Late Wifeโ€™s) Favorite Wings Deep Cuts]

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Hereโ€™s a look at four songs by legendary artists that were not hits. However, they are considered by the composers as some of their best work.

โ€œHere, There And Everywhereโ€ by The Beatles (1966)

โ€œHere, There And Everywhereโ€ is a love song that appeared on The Beatlesโ€™ classic 1966 album Revolver. The harmony-rich tune certainly is beloved by fans, although it wasnโ€™t released as a single by the Fab Four.

Paul McCartney wrote the song and sang lead on the track, although John Lennon is credited with co-writing the tune. In his 2021 book, The Lyrics: 1956 To The Present, McCartney admitted, โ€œ[I]f pushed, I would say that โ€˜Here, There And Everywhereโ€™ is my own favourite of all my songs.โ€

McCartney also noted that the song was โ€œinfluenced most immediately by The Beach Boysโ€™ โ€˜God Only Knows.โ€™โ€

In addition, Paul talked about his favorite line in the songโ€”โ€œChanging my life with a wave of her handโ€โ€”and reflected on its meaning.

โ€œI look at that line now and wonder where it came from,โ€ he wrote. โ€œWhat was it? Was I thinking of the queen waving from the royal carriage? Or just the power of the little thing. The power of doing hardly anything. She waves her hand and she changed my life. It summons up a lot. So now when I sing it, I look back at it and think, โ€˜The boyโ€™s not bad.โ€™โ€

โ€œMoonlight Mileโ€ by The Rolling Stones (1971)

โ€œMoonlight Mileโ€ is the last track on The Rolling Stonesโ€™ acclaimed 1971 album Sticky Fingers. Frontman Mick Jagger wrote the introspective ballad with help from then-Stones guitarist Mick Taylor, although the song is credited to Jagger and Keith Richards.

Jagger discussed his affinity for the tune in a May 2015 interview with the Wall Street Journal, shortly before the release of a deluxe reissue of Sticky Fingers.

Mick explained that he wrote โ€œMoonlight Mileโ€ while on tour with The Stones in Europe during the summer of 1970.

โ€œI was growing road-weary and homesick then,โ€ he recalled. โ€œIโ€™m sure the idea for the song first came to me one night while we were on a train and the moon was out. โ€ฆ The feeling I had at that moment was how difficult it was to be touring and how I wasnโ€™t looking forward to going out and doing it again. Itโ€™s a very lonely thing, and my lyrics reflected that.โ€

Jagger also noted, โ€œWhat makes โ€˜Moonlight Mileโ€™ special is that itโ€™s a song and a recording at onceโ€ฆ they all came together to produce a feeling of vulnerability and loneliness.โ€

He added, โ€œWhen I hear โ€˜Moonlight Mileโ€™ now, I really like it. I think itโ€™s a good piece of music. Itโ€™s unusual, and itโ€™s still accessible and delicate and has a climax and comes back down and ends quite well. I suppose Iโ€™ve also grown a little more accustomed to touring.โ€

โ€œRacing In The Streetโ€ by Bruce Springsteen (1978)

โ€œRacing In The Streetโ€ is a track on Bruce Springsteenโ€™s 1978 album, Darkness On The Edge Of Town. The tune was inspired by the Bossโ€™ youthful recollections of witnessing street racing in and around Asbury Park, New Jersey.

In a 2016 interview on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, Bruce chose โ€œRacing In The Streetโ€ as one of the five favorite songs heโ€™s written.

Springsteen talked about the song during a fan Q&A that aired on SiriusXM radio in November 2010, coinciding with the release of the Darkness At The Edge Of Town reissue.

โ€œโ€˜Racing In The Streetโ€™ sums up a lot for me,โ€ Springsteen said. He added that heโ€™d want his children to be able to understand the sadness that he wrote about in the song. Bruce also explained that heโ€™d hope his kids would be resilient enough to overcome such sadness, while noting that heโ€™d never want them to actually experience it.

โ€œDarling Lorraineโ€ by Paul Simon (2000)

โ€œDarling Lorraineโ€ was a track on Paul Simonโ€™s 10th solo studio album, Youโ€™re The One, which was released in 2000. The folk-rock legend also reworked the song for his 2018 album, In The Blue Light.

โ€œDarling Lorraineโ€ tells the story of the long, imperfect relationship of a couple, from their meeting until the wifeโ€™s death.

In a 2018 interview with Mojo magazine, Simon talked about the updated version of the song he recorded on In The Blue Light. The album featured sonically reimagined renditions of a selection of lesser-known tunes from his back catalog.

โ€œWe tried to make the arrangement a bit simpler so that the story would come through,โ€ he explained. โ€œI always thought โ€˜Darling Lorraineโ€™ was one of my best songs.โ€

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