Radio Mans fave with The Rascals

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People Got to be Free

1968…..#1 U.S. Billboard Hot 100, #1 U.S. Cash Box Top 100, #1 Canada Original video edited and AI remastered with HQ stereo sound. “People Got to Be Free” is a song released in 1968 by The Rascals, written by Felix Cavaliere and Eddie Brigati and featuring a lead vocal from Cavaliere. It became a big hit in the turbulent summer of 1968, spending five weeks atop the Billboard Pop Singles chart, the group’s longest such stay. It was also the group’s second-most successful single on the Billboard Black Singles chart, reaching number 14 and trailing only the previous year’s “Groovin'”. “People Got to Be Free” was RIAA-certified as a gold record on August 23, 1968, and eventually sold over 4 million copies. It later was included on the group’s March 1969 album Freedom Suite. Billboard ranked the record as the number 5 song for 1968. The single’s picture sleeve photo was previously featured in the inner album cover of the Rascals’ Time Peace: The Rascals’ Greatest Hits compilation. The B-side, “My World”, was a track from the group’s Once Upon a Dream album. The Rascals performed “People Got to Be Free” during their 2013 Once Upon a Dream show, with footage of 1960s civil rights marches displayed on the video screen behind them. While “People Got to Be Free” was perceived by some as related to the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. and of Robert F. Kennedy earlier that year, it was recorded before the latter’s death. Rather, it was partly a reaction to an ugly encounter wherein the long-haired group was threatened by a group of rednecks, because the group had grown beards and longer hair, after their tour vehicle broke down in Fort Pierce, Florida. The song is clearly a product of its times; however, two decades later writer Dave Marsh included it as number 237 in his book Heart of Rock and Soul: The 1001 Greatest Singles of All Time, saying in reference to, and paraphrase of, the song’s lyric, “Ask me my opinion, my opinion will be: Dated, but NEVER out of date.” After this song came out, the Rascals would only perform at concerts that featured an African American act; when that condition was not met, the Rascals canceled several shows in protest.

 

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