Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)


"Life Is a Rock " is a 1974 song written by Norman Dolph and Paul DiFranco. It was recorded by an ad hoc group of studio musicians called Reunion, with Joey Levine as lead singer. The lyrics are a fast patter of 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s disc jockeys, musicians, songwriters, record labels, and song titles and lyrics, broken only by the chorus. Levine had previously been lead singer and co-writer of bubblegum music hits "Yummy Yummy Yummy" and "Chewy Chewy" by the Ohio Express. "Life Is a Rock" peaked at No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and reached No. 33 on the UK Singles Chart.
The song's outro quotes "Baby I Need Your Loving" by The Four Tops, "Celebrate" by Three Dog Night, "I Want to Take You Higher" by Sly and the Family Stone, and "Uptight " by Stevie Wonder.
The track was later covered by Tracey Ullman in 1983, and was featured in her 1984 album, You Broke My Heart in 17 Places.

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Year-end charts

Covers

This song was remade by Randy Crenshaw and released on 2001 Disney album Mickey's Dance Party under the name "Life Is a Rock " The remake includes references not just to current and past music groups, but also to TV shows and internet slang, and some Disney characters.
A "customized" version of the song, "Life Is a Rock, but 'CFL Rolled Me" was the last rock and roll song played on the Larry Lujack show on WCFL in Chicago on March 15, 1976, before the station switched from Top 40 to beautiful music format. Rival AM station WLS had their own version. The WLS version was the first song played on WLS-FM when the famous callsign returned to the station in 2008, now airing a classic hits format. In 1974, radio station KFRC in San Francisco also aired a "customized" version of the song, titled "Life Is a Rock," with an extra verse naming all of the station's personalities at the time. The verse was sung by KFRC's afternoon personality, Chuck Buell. 980, WRC in Washington, DC also had a customized version that was played on the air.
In 1988 McDonald's produced a jingle heavily influenced by the song for its "$1,000,000 Menu Song" promotion. The McDonald's recording, with an identical melody and a rapidly spoken list of menu offerings recited in an identical monotone pitch and rhythm, was released as a mass giveaway in the form of a 33-1/3 RPM flexible plastic single.

Name checks

The 45-rpm single version fades out here. The extended album version continues, with the following references:
Performed as medley or spoken over the fade-out: