Released: October 1, 1967

Featuring: Steve Miller Band

[Verse 1]
You said you love him
You almost lost your mind
The man you love
He hurts you all the time
When things go wrong
Go wrong with you
It hurts me too

[Verse 2]
You love him more
And you should love him less
I pick up behind him
And take his mess
When things go wrong
Go wrong with you
It hurts me too

[Verse 3]
He loves another woman
And I love you
Yet you love him
And stick to him like glue
When things go wrong
Go wrong with you
It hurts me too

[Verse 4]
Yeah, but you better leave him
Or he better put you down
'Cause I ain't gon' stand
To see you pushed around
When things go wrong
Go wrong with you
It hurts me too

[Spoken Outro]
Thank you very kindly
Oh, you sweet people, suffer with us a wee bit longer

Chuck Berry

One of the pioneers of rock and roll music, Chuck Berry was a influential singer, songwriter, and guitarist whose string of hit songs in the late 1950s helped popularize rock and roll around the world. Berry’s music infused a cross-section of styles including Rockabilly, Country, Blues, and Rhythm & Blues, crafting his own original Rock and Roll sound that was often imitated by British rock groups in the 1960s.

Berry wrote lyrics reflecting the interests of teens and young adults, performing his songs with an over-the-top performance style and guitar solos that would define rock music and become iconic. Berry is acknowledged as a great rock lyricist because of his us of humor and satire.

Born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1926, Berry grew up interested in music but living a working-class life until he first picked up a guitar in the early 1950s. In 1955 Chuck got his big break on a trip to Chicago, when Muddy Waters recommended Berry to popular blues music label Chess Records. Berry recorded many of his early hits there, including his first number one hit song “Maybellene”, followed by “Rock and Roll Music” and “Johnny B. Goode”. Berry’s 1957 hit “Roll over Beethoven” was a watershed in music history, a song whose lyrics point to where Rock and Roll became the dominant music genre as teenagers gained independence over the music of their parent’s generation.