The List

5 Rock Songs That Started Out as Jokes (Until They Became Hits)

The intersection of comedy and music isnโ€™t always as blatantly obvious as novelty songs like โ€œKing Tutโ€ by Steve Martin or the entirety of Weird Alโ€™s discography. Sometimes, the joke is so subtle and insular that the average listener wonโ€™t even realize that the song theyโ€™re listening to was originally a gaff, throwaway, or tongue-in-cheek parody of something else.

On rare occasions, the joke flies so far over the heads of the masses, and the songs are taken so seriously, that they become major career-defining hitsโ€”including these five rock songs.

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โ€œDโ€™yer Makโ€™erโ€ by Led Zeppelinย 

Though decidedly not as ubiquitous as โ€œStairway To Heavenโ€, Led Zeppelin fans hold โ€œDโ€™yer Makโ€™erโ€ in high regard as one of the bandโ€™s more unique tracks. The dub-inspired rock songโ€™s title came from a Cockney joke in which one person says, โ€œMy wife is going on holiday.โ€ The next person replies, โ€œDid you make her?โ€ To which they reply, โ€œNo, sheโ€™s going on her own accord.โ€ The punchline comes from โ€œdid you make herโ€ sounding like โ€œJamaicaโ€ when spoken quickly with a Cockney accent.

โ€œKarma Policeโ€ by Radiohead

Radioheadโ€™s 1997 hit โ€œKarma Policeโ€ also started as an inside joke among the band members. Whenever anyone did something โ€œbadโ€ or made a mistake, an offhand remark, etcetera, the bandmates would joke that they were going to sic the karma police on someone. โ€œItโ€™s a joke,โ€ Thom Yorke later reflected. โ€œYou know, โ€˜Karma police, arrest this man.โ€™ Thatโ€™s not entirely serious. I hope people will realize that.โ€ Jonny Greenwood added that โ€œKarma Policeโ€ was โ€œobviously not overly serious as a title or a subject.โ€

โ€œSweet Child Oโ€™ Mineโ€ by Guns Nโ€™ Roses

โ€œSweet Child Oโ€™ Mineโ€ is far and away Guns Nโ€™ Rosesโ€™ biggest hit. And while this rock song didnโ€™t necessarily start out as a joke in the purest definition, it definitely got its start as an unserious jam. Slash was warming up on the guitar with a circus-like melody before a band practice when drummer Steven Adler started playing along. The jam evolved into โ€œSweet Child Oโ€™ Mineโ€, complete with vocalist Axl Roseโ€™s โ€œwhere do we go nowโ€ section, which literally came from the singer not knowing where to go next.

โ€œI Am The Walrusโ€ by The Beatles

In the late 1960s, John Lennon discovered that his high school alma mater was teaching and analyzing his lyrics as part of the class curriculum. In response, Lennon wrote โ€œI Am The Walrusโ€ with nonsensical lyrics specifically so that Quarry Bank High School for Boys wouldnโ€™t be able to figure it out. โ€œLet the f***ers work that one out,โ€ the Beatle said. The Magical Mystery Tour track might not have made a whole lot of narrative sense, but it became one of The Beatlesโ€™ most well-known psychedelic hits.

โ€œStuck In The Middle With Youโ€ by Stealers Wheel

Sometimes, a rock song will start as a joke about another artist, which was the case for โ€œStuck In The Middle With Youโ€ by Stealers Wheel. Songwriters Gerry Rafferty and Joe Egan wrote the rock โ€˜nโ€™ roll track to parodize Bob Dylan, including the singer-songwriterโ€™s habit of calling people clowns and jokers. โ€œClowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, here I am stuck in the middle with you.โ€ Even the vocal delivery was meant to evoke Dylanโ€™s loosey-goosey phrasing and approach to melody.

Photo by Dick Barnatt/Redferns