Creedence Clearwater Revival – Hey Tonight
“Hey Tonight” is CCR’s two-minute burst of roadside joy—an urgent, handclap-ready reminder that even when the sky is heavy, you can still choose motion, laughter, and a little human noise…
“Hey Tonight” is CCR’s two-minute burst of roadside joy—an urgent, handclap-ready reminder that even when the sky is heavy, you can still choose motion, laughter, and a little human noise…
“Cotton Fields” is CCR’s plainspoken postcard from the working South—three minutes of dust, distance, and memory, sung like a man looking back from the highway and realizing the past still…
“I Heard It Through the Grapevine” in CCR’s hands is gossip turned into thunder—an 11-minute night drive where suspicion, desire, and dread keep circling the same dark block until dawn…
“Long As I Can See the Light” is CCR’s weary benediction—home as a single, steady lamp in the distance, promising that even the hardest road still has a way back.…
“Travelin’ Band” is the bright, breathless roar of life on the road—two minutes of jet-engine momentum hiding a tired human heart that rarely gets to come down to earth. In…
“Born on the Bayou” is less a postcard from the South than a dream-memory—a humid, half-lit myth where childhood, blues folklore, and American longing drift together like fog over dark…
A Timeless Inquiry into the Cycles of Life and Nature When Creedence Clearwater Revival released “Have You Ever Seen the Rain?” in 1971, it was more than just another track…
“Lodi” is CCR’s saddest road song—an anthem for anyone who ever chased a dream too far, only to find themselves stranded in the wrong town with no money and no…
“I Put a Spell on You” is CCR’s most feral early statement—an old blues curse reborn as swamp-rock thunder, where desire turns into a vow you can’t take back. When…
“Run Through the Jungle” turns paranoia into poetry—an urgent warning that danger isn’t only “out there,” but can be waiting in your own backyard. Released in April 1970 as a…