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The Favorite Songs of Many Famous Folks

JFK, Marilyn Monroe, FDR, Barack Obama, Mark Ronson, Roger Ebert, Al Capone, Andy Warhol, Bill Gates, Stephen Hawkings & others on their favorite song

Marilyn Monroe. Her favorite song was Judy Garland’s version of “Who Cares” by George & Ira Gershwin, which she would listen to at high voiumes over and over.

Almost everyone has a favorite song. Often they’re songs that give them strength and hope and help them endure hard times. Sometimes they’re ones attached to the most momentous chapters of their lives, joyful or tragic. People define themselves by favorite songs. It shows us how much power songs have in everyone’s lives. So we delved into the various sources that exists to discover the favorite songs by luminaries across the decades. What follows is an aggregate of these which we’ve discovered in the last month.

Most of these are easily verifiable, but there are a few of the older ones which have only one source, and might be faulty. If so, apologies. Feel free to inform us of any erronenousness.

Do you have a favorite song? If you would like to share with us for the follow-up piece to this, Favorite Songs of Readers, we invite you to send them. Also, let us know if we can use your name, and also, if you don’t mind, your profession and where you live.

Send them please to paul@editorial.americansongwriter.com.

Marilyn Monroe 
โ€œWho Cares?โ€ By George and Ira Gershwin. 

Videos by American Songwriter

It was Judy Garlandโ€™s performance of this song by the Gershwin brothers that was reported to be Marilyn Monroeโ€™s favorite. When going through tough times, especially, sheโ€™d play it very loud, over and over.

“Who Cares?”
Performed by Judy Garland, written by George & Ira Gershwin.

John Kennedy
“September Song” by Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson

President Kennedy loved this song more than any other. It was Walter Huston’s 1938 record that he played often. Kennedy also sang the song at parties, as he did at the Kennedy mansion in Palm Beach on the Saturday before he took his last trip, to Dallas. His aide Dave Powers said that JFK sang it โ€œbetter that usualโ€ that night.

Walter Huston, “September Song,” by Kurt Weill and Maxwell Anderson.

FDR
โ€œHome On The Range.โ€

Al Pacino
โ€œYouโ€™ve Got To Be Carefully Taughtโ€™ by Rodgers and Hammerstein.
โ€œIt was a crucial time in our countryโ€™s history,” said Pacino, “when the racial tension in the south was raging and the play (โ€˜South Pacificโ€™) was a direct reference to it. I thought it had a real passion in it and a relevance to the times we were living in.โ€

Al Capone
โ€œRoses of Picardy,โ€ by Frederick Weatherly and Haydn Wood.

Johnny Carson
โ€œHere Comes That Rainy Day,โ€ by Jimmy Van Heusen and Johnny Burke. It was Sinatraโ€™s version that Johnny loved best. On his final night of The Tonight Show, Bette Midler sang it for him. 

Michael Jackson
โ€œSmileโ€ by Charlie Chaplin, John Turner and Geoffrey Parsons. For more on this song, see Smile.

Dwight D. Eisenhower
“Oh, Susannah” by Stephen Foster.

Lyndon Johnson

“Don’t Fence Me In,” written by Cole Porter, performed by Roy Rogers.

Gerald Ford
“The Navy Hymn [“Eternal Father, Strong To Save”] by William Whiting.

David Letterman
“Everlong” by Foo Fighters. [For our full story of Dave, this song and Foo Fighters, see Everlong.]

Gene Wilder
โ€œSomewhere Over The Rainbowโ€ by Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg. Wilder died at his Stamford, Connecticut home on August 29, 2016 at 83 as this, his favorite song played, as performed by Ella Fitzgerald.  

Paul McCartney
“God Only Knows” by Brian Wilson
โ€œ`God Only Knowsโ€™ is one of the few songs that reduces me to tears every time I hear it,” said McCartney. “Itโ€™s really just a love song, but itโ€™s brilliantly done. It shows the genius of Brian. Iโ€™ve actually performed it with him and Iโ€™m afraid to say that during the sound check I broke down. It was just too much to stand there singing this song that does my head in and to stand there singing it with Brian.”

Stephen Hawking
โ€œHave I Told You Latelyโ€ by Rod Stewart. In 2015, Hawking answered many questions on Reddit, including what his favorite song is.

Robert Mitchum
โ€œSunday Morning Coming Downโ€ by Kris Kristofferson

Robert Mitchum

Andy Warhol
“All Tomorrow’s Parties” by The Velvet Underground.

George Clooney
โ€œ’Destination Moonโ€ by Marvin Fisher and Roy Alfred, the version by Dinah Washington. 

https://youtu.be/Jb4VHztmegg
Dinah Washington, “Destination Moon”

Bill Gates
โ€œUnder Pressureโ€ by David Bowie and Queen

Taylor Swift
โ€œYouโ€™re So Vainโ€ by Carly Simon.
โ€œAfter hearing that,” Taylor said, “it was like a key had just unlocked this forbidden area of storytelling for me. You can say exactly what you feel, even if itโ€™s bitter and brazen!โ€ 

Barack Obama
โ€œReady or Notโ€ by The Fugees.

Michelle Obama
โ€œUptown Funkโ€ by Bruno Mars and Mark Ronson

Mark Ronson
โ€œ’Fools Goldโ€ from The Stone Roses.
โ€œI recall hearing it,” said Ronson, “and it changed my entire musical perspective because it was a combination of New York hip-hop and British pop melody. It had that amazing sampled breakbeat with this haunting, incredible melody delivered by Ian Brown.โ€

The Stone Roses, “Fools Gold”


Ronald Reagan
โ€œNancy (With the Laughing Face)โ€ by Jimmy Van Heusen and Phil Silversย 

Arianna Huffington
โ€œFree Fallinโ€™โ€ by Tom Petty

Roger Ebert
“I’m Your Man,” by Leonard Cohen. Roger said it was the song that saved his life, as he explains in the video below.

Roger Ebert on the Song That Saved His Life.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta
โ€œBorn To Runโ€ by Bruce Springsteen
“I think about motivating music when I exercise,” said Sanjay, “and the song thatโ€™s been on my playlist since college is ‘Born to Run’ by Bruce Springsteen, Usually when Iโ€™m at the end of my run, and I feel like I canโ€™t go anymore, thatโ€™s the song Iโ€™ll flip to on my phone. Thereโ€™s no way I can stop running as long as that song is playing.”

Angelina Jolie
โ€œKnow Your Rightsโ€ by The Clash.

https://youtu.be/e004RHFIxLg
“You have the right not to be killed. Murder is a crime.”
The Clash, “Know Your Rights”

Rihanna
โ€œ
Redemption Song,โ€ by Bob Marley

Norah Jones
โ€œEverybody Knows This Is Nowhere,โ€ by Neil Young

Ozzy Osbourne
โ€œA Whiter Shade of Paleโ€ by Procol Harum.
โ€œWhen I hear that haunting melody on the Hammond organ,” Ozzy said, “I immediately become transfixed.โ€ 

Leonardo DiCaprio
โ€œSittin’ On the Dock of the Bayโ€  by Otis Redding

Tony Blair
โ€œAve Maria,โ€ by Renee Fleming.
โ€œThe song itself is extraordinary,” said Blair, “full of poignant emotion. At a time when a close friend was dying, I used to play it and the peace and serenity of it was a source of comfort.โ€ 

Renee Fleming, “Ave Maria” by Schubert

Zooey Deschanel
โ€œUnchained Melodyโ€ from the Righteous Brothers.

Megan Fox
โ€œHouse of the Rising Sun,โ€ by The Animals’

Judi Denchย 
โ€œStrange Fruitโ€ by Billie Holidayย 

Billie Holiday, “Strange Fruit” live

Jools Holland
โ€œFor Once In My Lifeโ€ by Stevie Wonder.
โ€œEvery element of the song is amazing,” said Jools. “What the bass plays is fantastic. Thereโ€™s the drums, the two guitars, then thereโ€™s the stringsโ€ฆ the whole world musically is in that song. It inspired me as a musician and a songwriter.

Sean โ€œDiddyโ€ Combs
โ€œItโ€™s Like Thatโ€™ by Run DMC.
โ€œFor me,” Diddy said, “it was young, it was strong, it was black, it was powerful. It was hip-hop and it made me feel like I could do anything.โ€

Ricky Gervais
โ€œLilywhite” by Cat Stevens.

Ben Carson
โ€œMacArthur Parkโ€ by Richard Harris, written by Jimmy Webb

Bill Nighy
โ€œThings Have Changed,โ€ by Bob Dylan.
โ€œThe fact that I find this song inspiring,” Nighy said, “could indicate that I am not in very good shape, given that it contains some grim observations of how bad things can get. What is uplifting, apart from its general brilliance, is that it is thrilling to know that you are not alone in these matters.

Chris Christie
โ€œThunder Road,โ€ by Bruce Springsteen

Daniel Radcliffe
โ€œBuddy Hollyโ€ by Weezer. 

Weezer, “Buddy Holly”

Do you have a favorite song? If you would like to share with us for the follow-up piece to this, Favorite Songs of Readers, we invite you to send them. Let us know if we can use your name, and also, if you don’t mind, please indicate your profession and where you live. Send to paul@editorial.americansongwriter.com.