Episode 18: Borrowed Voices - The Hits Famous Artists Gave Away
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Some songs are not given away because they fail.
They are given away because the writer knows exactly what they are.
In this episode of Who Ordered the Pie?, we explore a different kind of authorship. These are the moments when writers recognize that a song belongs somewhere else and make that decision deliberately.
This is Borrowed Voices, Part One: When the Writer Let Go.
We begin with Prince and “Manic Monday,” a song he did not hand off after the fact, but wrote intentionally for The Bangles. When it was released in 1986, it reached number two on the Billboard Hot 100, held out of the top spot only by Prince himself with “Kiss.”
From there, we look at distance as authorship through Mark Knopfler’s “Private Dancer.” Written from observation rather than confession, the song needed a voice with lived authority. When Tina Turner recorded it, the lyric did not change. The weight behind it did. Her version reached the Billboard Top Ten in 1984 and became a cornerstone of her career defining comeback.
Next is certainty. Paul McCartney recorded a fully formed demo of “Come and Get It” and handed it intact to Badfinger. Tempo, arrangement, harmonies. Nothing was meant to change. The song became a Top Ten hit in both the United States and the United Kingdom in 1970, launching the band into the mainstream almost overnight.
We close with momentum. John Lennon and Paul McCartney finished “I Wanna Be Your Man” in the room for The Rolling Stones. The Stones released it in 1963, giving them their first charting hit in the United Kingdom at exactly the moment they needed it. What people often read as rivalry was, in this case, support.
Across these stories, the common thread is not generosity or competition.
It is clarity.
Because sometimes the most confident thing a writer can do is let a song go exactly where it belongs.
Cocktail: Shared Fire
For this episode, the drink reflects transition rather than resolution. Shared Fire is a rum based cocktail built on contrast and balance, finished with a controlled flame. The full recipe and flame technique are available online.
Until next time, here’s to loud riffs, quiet sips, and the stories in between.
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Who Ordered the Pie? a music history podcast with custom cocktail pairings.
Show notes, recipes, and extras: WhoOrderedThePie.com
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