yes, they did write is, but it was heavily infuenced by Ritchie Valens' "Ooh, My Head", which in turn borrowed heavily from Little Richard's "Ooh, My Soul."
Jimmy Page said ..."What we tried to do was give Ritchie's mother credit, because we heard she never received any royalties from any of her son's hits, and Robert did lean on that lyric a bit. So what happens? They tried to sue us for all of the song!".
2007-07-02 23:13:14
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answer #1
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answered by dirk_hampstead 3
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No--they wrote Boogie with Stu, the actual title
and specific rendition of the song, and by the
way it's a reference to the man known--from
day one actually--as the sixth Stone, Ian Stewart,
and who
happens to be playing the piano in the song
which appears on Physical Graffiti.
< The song is Derived (huge difference,
as Page and Plant and Jones have all
thoroughly owned up to) from a Richie
Valens tune. The title of which I'll be
right back with.
***arrrrgghhhh!!! Beat to the punch again!
Of course! "Ooh, my head," and further
hats off to the gent just above with the
proper reference to Little Richard, among
rock 'n roll's original royalty.
2007-07-02 23:15:42
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answer #2
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answered by rockman 7
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undecided of a million 2 Stu Stuart or Stewart, unique pianist with the Rolling Stones who became into dropped via Loog Oldham because of the fact he didnt look impressive. He grew to grow to be the Stones street supervisor and additionally performed keyboard on a selection of their previously tracks 3. He died some years in the past
2016-12-08 23:14:59
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answer #3
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answered by rothman 4
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Ritchie Valens "Ooh, My Head"
I think it is the same song, under a different name. It's not just influenced by, it's Valens' song.
2007-07-02 23:31:24
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answer #4
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answered by The Rock & Roll Doctor 6
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