So many songs crash the charts every year. And so many of them are pressed from the same template by the monolithic music industry machine that it can often be difficult to really stop and listen. But for those who take the time, there can sometimes be secrets and spoils lurking beneath the guitar riff or lingering by the beat.
While influences range far and wide, and few songs arrive out of a formless void, there are nonetheless some tracks that carry more similarities to their musical predecessors than others. Musical artists from across the genres have a habit of channeling their own influences and picking up a lyric here, a melody there, and re-engineering them into their own music. Far from being cover songs or straight-up samples, these are 10 successful songs that managed to secretly channel other big hits.
Related: 10 Popular Songs Given The Rock Treatment
10 Las Ketchup, âThe Ketchup Song (AserejĂŠ)â
Las Ketchup took over the airwaves during the summer of 2002, breaking out from their native Spain with a mixed language song featuring a nonsense chorus and a catchy accompanying dance. âThe Ketchup Sonâ hit number one on 20 European charts as well as Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. But thereâs more to this song than meets the ear.
âThe Ketchup Songâsâ lyrics tell the story of Diego, a hip-hop fan who fancies himself something of a ladiesâ manâand a rapper. While the chorus is gibberish, the verses leading into it provide crucial context for the songâs main inspiration: It is, in fact, a mangled version of the Sugarhill Gangâs 1979 classic âRapperâs Delight.â The fictional Diego is a big fan of the song and enjoys drinking, dancing, and singing along as best he can.
While on the surface, the two songs donât sound all that similar, once you tune into the chorus of âThe Ketchup Song,â you can really hear where Las Ketchup was coming fromâbut donât hold your breath waiting to hear what Wonder Mike and Grandmaster Caz think of it.[1]
9 Deadmau5 feat. Rob Swire, âGhosts N Stuffâ
Music producer and DJ Joel Zimmermanâbetter known by his on-stage moniker Deadmau5âhas a penchant for referencing pop culture, old movies, and memes in his tracks, but rarely does the electro house master take inspiration from other sources. That is not, however, the case for his collaborators.
Deadmau5 typically composes the melody and core elements of his tracks before he puts out for a singer and/or lyricist to add their own unique touch, and this was no different when he called on Pendulum vocalist Rob Swire to put vocals on what ended up becoming one of the biggest tracks of his careerââGhosts N Stuff.â
On a Reddit AMA, however, Swire admitted to lifting the melody from Chris Isaakâs iconic soft-country track âWicked Game,â saying he âmay have borrowed the melody.â Thankfully, no lawsuits have been brought against the pair to date, but then Isaak probably isnât a big dub, bass, and drops kind of guy.[2]
8 Olivia Rodrigo, âBrutalâ
Ex-Disney anti-pop princess Olivia Rodrigo found herself in hot water recently when music fans noticed a striking similarity between her 2021 hit song âBrutalâ and legendary singer-songwriter Elvis Costelloâs âPump It Up.â Indeed, they share what sounds to be pretty much the same riff, with the inspiration between one track and the next being all but undeniable.
But while the similarities are too obvious to miss, thatâs not quite where the story ends, as Costello himself has cited Bob Dylanâs âSubterranean Homesick Bluesâ as the inspiration for âPump It Up.â As it happens, the riff long predates Costello and has appeared in a variety of hit songs before and since, including the Rogue Tradersâ 2005 hit âVoodoo Child.â
Recognizing the futility of fighting over good music, Costello even came out in defense of Rodrigo, getting his sizeable fanbase to back off the young singer by stating that this is just âhow rock & roll works⌠You take the broken pieces of another thrill and make a brand new toy.â Itâs hard to argue with that.[3]
7 Sam Smith, âStay with Meâ
Tom Petty saw his fair share of detractors and imitators across a 40-year career, with acts as diverse as the Red Hot Chili Peppers and The Strokes all staking a claim to a piece of his musical geniusâand mostly unchallenged too.
However, when Sam Smithâs âStay With Meâ went to the top of the UK Top 40 charts and to number two on the Billboard Hot 100, it was hard for the Heartbreakers frontman to stay quiet. Despite Smithâs track being slow-tempo and gospel-infused, it bears an uncanny likeness to Pettyâs guitar-driven âWonât Back Down,â with the vocal melodies syncing up despite the difference in key.
But allâs well that ends well, and after a bit of back and forth between the singersâ respective management and legal teams, Smith acknowledged the influence of his musical forebears by giving a co-writing credit to Tom Petty and âI Wonât Back Downâ co-writer Jeff Lynneâalthough it wasnât enough for them to feature on the âStay with Meâ Grammy nomination.[4]
6 The Sex Pistols, âPretty Vacantâ
The Sex Pistols tore through the late â70s music scene under the banner of punk rock, wrecking stages, taking names, and planting a Union Jack squarely in the center of the genre. Despite only releasing one studio albumâ1977âs Never Mind the Bollocks, Hereâs the Sex Pistolsâthe bandâs influence is extensive, reverberating through the decades and across the genres. And while some of their own influences, like Iggy Pop and the New York Dolls, arenât difficult to hear, others couldnât be farther from home.
Bassist Glen Matlock revealed that the main riff from the Pistolsâ âPretty Vacantââa massive hit in its own rightâwas inspired by none other than the thoroughly mainstream Europop group ABBA. Armed with the songâs chord progression and lyrics, Matlock was in search of the final piece when he heard ABBAâs âSOSâ on the radio, and it gave him what he needed. When ABBAâs own bassist caught wind of this, far from feeling troubled or litigious, he put Matlock on his Christmas card listâŚ[5]
5 Led Zeppelin, âWhole Lotta Loveâ
Led Zeppelin has a rich history of casual plagiarism, liberally adopting parts of other, older songs throughout the prime of their careerâand rarely being caught at the time. It should come as no surprise then that one of their biggest and best-known tracks, âWhole Lotta Love,â was cribbed from someone elseâs songbook.
And that someone is songwriter Willie Dixon, via the deeply influential blues musician Muddy Waters. Zeppelinâs singer Robert Plant admitted to adapting certain elements of the âWhole Lotta Loveâ lyrics from Dixonâs âYou Need Love,â which was famously and popularly recorded by Waters back in 1962âa mere seven years before the rock quartet put out Led Zeppelin II.
Plant claimed guitarist Jimmy Pageâs iconic riff (which would go on to become the theme music for UK chart show Top of the Pops) was Pageâs own invention. Still, even that bears some similarity to Dixonâs original composition. In any case, a lawsuit brought by Dixon in 1985 wound up gaining the blues artist credit on subsequent Zeppelin releases featuring the track, alongside all the royalties that come with it.[6]
4 Sonny & Cher, âI Got You Babeâ
Sonny Bono and Cher entered the pop music scene in the â60s, shooting to fame and stardom with their tracks âBaby Donât Goâ and âI Got You Babe.â With Bono writing most of their material and Cher adding the star quality, the pair took on bigger acts than themselves for their share of the publicâs attention, often coming out on top.
One such contemporary was Bob Dylan. Bono stated that their 1965 song âI Got You Babeâ was deeply inspired by Dylanâs 1964 track âIt Ainât Me Babe,â saying, âI always wrote, either subliminally or intentionally, some phrase Iâd hear somewhere⌠And Iâd look for a hook lyric, you know, and you goâbabe, I got you, babe⌠Dylan had âbabeâ all over the airwaves, you knowâŚ. And I took that and then just added the âI got youâ part to it.â
Dylan himself was less than impressed by this, aware that other artists were making new hits from his songs. He acknowledged The Byrds, The Turtles, and Sonny & Cher were taking parts of his music and tuning it to their audience but couldnât get behind their âjingly-janglyâ kind of sound.[7]
3 Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars, âUptown Funkâ
When international super-producer Mark Ronson and multi-instrumentalist R&B star Bruno Mars collaborated on âUptown Funkâ in 2014, it had all the makings of an instant success. The songâs catchy chorus, chantable breakdown, and retro beat sent it straight to the top of the charts, and pretty much everyone was digging it. Everyone apart from The Gap Band.
While Ronsons liberally admitted on many occasions to being influenced by older artists and funk records, he never namedropped The Gap Bandâs âOops Upside Your Head.â Nonetheless, the similarities between the disco staple and âUptown Funkâ are more than just coincidental.
Things came to a head when The Gap Band initiated a lawsuit, claiming Ronson and Mars had stolen from their song and seeking to be credited and receive royalties from the smash hit. And, following the suitâs success, they did; five new namesâLonnie Simmons, Ronnie Wilson, Charles Wilson, Robert Wilson, and Rudolph Taylorâwere officially added to the trackâs publishing credits in 2015.[8]
2 Bon Jovi, âYou Give Love a Bad Nameâ
Sometimes, a songâs influences come not from the singer or band but the songwriterâand with the way the music industry works, with certain behind-the-scenes talents always on speed dial to lend a hand with a major artistâs next big record, so many songs wind up having the same writer. But this is nothing new.
Before ever penning a line of Bon Joviâs âYou Give Love a Bad Name,â Desmond Child wrote âIf You Were a Woman (And I Was a Man).â Bonnie Tyler cut the record, and it was a huge hit in Europe but not the U.S. Thus, when recording with Bon Jovi a few years later, Child took direct inspiration from his and Tylerâs track, which he thought ought to have broken the U.S. market.
Child consciously reworked the chorus, lifted the melody, orchestrated the guitar riff, and, in the process, created an international mega-hit for Jon Bon Jovi and company. And thereâs barely been a Bon Jovi record since that hasnât benefitted from the songwriter and producerâs magic touch.[9]
1 One Direction, âBest Song Everâ
UK boyband One Direction found themselves caught in a bit of a media storm back in 2013 when likenesses between their âBest Song Everâ and The Whoâs classic rock track (and CSI: NY theme song) âBaba OâRileyâ were identified by critics. While the intros to both songs are uncannily alike, the inspiration didnât come from the boys, who were in their late teens at the time, but from the songwritersâWayne Hector, John Ryan, Ed Drewett, and Julian Bunettaâall of whom were older, wiser and should probably have known better than to put out something so similar to such a popular record.
Responding to the controversy, The Whoâs guitarist and principal songwriter Pete Townshend recounted the story of meeting Bachman-Turner Overdrive singer and guitarist Randy Bachman, who admitted to his rock contemporary that BTO copied âBaba OâRileyâ for their hit track âYou Ainât Seen Nothing Yet.â The One Direction boys werenât the first to do itâif they themselves did it at allâand they almost certainly wonât be the last.[10]