The following songs, in alphabetical order by year, are associated with the dance "The Twist" and the associated cultural craze:

Dancing Twist, Berlin, 17 May 1964

1959 edit

  • "The Twist" (Hank Ballard) – originally released by Hank Ballard and the Midnighters as a B-side, but going to No. 1 in the US upon being covered by Chubby Checker (released 1959, charted in 1960 and 1962),[1] who would become the artist most associated with the Twist phenomenon. The song was subsequently covered numerous times, often by Checker himself, including a duet with the Fat Boys in 1988.

1960 edit

1961 edit

Note: These last two are compound sequel songs, with "Tequila Twist" serving not only as a sequel to "The Twist", but also as a sequel to the Champs' 1958 hit "Tequila", and "Twist and Shout" serving as a sequel to both "The Twist" and the Isley Brothers' 1959 hit "Shout".

1962 edit

1963 edit

  • "Do the Twist" (Dale Hawkins) – The Isley Brothers (from the album Twisting and Shouting)
  • "Home on the Range Twist"/"Spaghetti Twist" – The Fortune Tellers (Japan release)[6]
  • "Twist It Up" (K. Mann-D. Appell) – Chubby Checker[2]
  • "Twist Train (Night Train)" (Washington, Lipkins, J. Forest) – The Brain Twist
  • "The Twister" (E. McDaniel) – Bo Diddley (UK release)
  • "Twisting & Shaking" – (J. T. Ratliff) J. T. Ratliff
  • "Wesoły Twist (The Gay Twist)" (F. Leszczyńska, H. Rostworowski) – Helena Majdaniec (Poland release)

1964–present edit

References in other songs edit

The following songs, while not songs specifically about the Twist or twisting, reference the dance/phenomenon in their lyrics.

Dance litany songs edit

Several pop songs have referenced the Twist among several other songs, sometimes calling on listeners/dancers to change their dance step when the singer calls out the name of a different dance.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Bronson, Fred (2003). The Billboard Book of Number One Hits, p.74. Billboard. ISBN 9780823076772.
  2. ^ a b c d Bronson (2003), p.85.
  3. ^ a b Bronson (2003), p.93.
  4. ^ Bronson (2003), p.107.
  5. ^ "The Chipmunk Songbook" at AllMusic
  6. ^ a b c 45Cat.com. Retrieved June 28, 2020.