Roll Over Beethoven

Highly Appreciated

ROLL OVER BEETHOVEN
 
 
“Roll Over Beethoven”  is a 1956 hit single by Chuck Berry originally released on Chess Records, with “Drifting Heart” as the B-side.  The lyrics of the song mention rock and roll and the desire for rhythm and blues to replace classical music.  There is a popular saying that a deceased person would “roll over in their grave” if they heard something that would have deeply disturbed them had they been alive.  The title line of the song is a reference to how Ludwig van Beethoven would do just that in reaction to the advent of the new musical genre that Chuck Berry was leading.  The song has been covered by many other artists, and Rolling Stone ranked it #97 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

While not at all minimizing the contributions of the legends that I have discussed thus far, my own nominee for the man who most directly congealed a variety of musical ingredients into what we know today as rock and roll is Chuck Berry.  Berry’s classics like “Maybellene” (1955), “Rock and Roll Music” (1957) and “Johnny B. Goode” (1958) sound as fresh to my ears today as they did the first time I heard them more than 50 years ago.  His 1956 hit “Roll Over Beethoven” – “Roll Over Beethoven” also might be my very favorite Beatles cover song – contains a truly delicious song lyric:  “Roll over [in your grave], Beethoven / And tell Tchaikovsky the news”. 

 

(June 2013/1)

 

Last edited: March 22, 2021