Church of Scientology - We Stand Tall (1990)
Mungo Jerry - We're OK (1977)
Spanky and Our Gang - I'd Like To Get To Know You (1968)
Alan Thicke - That Boston Dandy (1969) THAT Alan Thicke. There are three of these songs that I can find, Alan Thicke fellating Bobby Orr on 45. Must have been some paycheck, eh. I mean, he was great and all, but he must have been embarrassed. I'm embarrassed for him.
Aerosmith - Seasons of Wither (1974)
Alice Cooper (with Marcella Detroit) Millie and Billie (1978)
Eric Burdon & The Animals - All Is One (1967)
Andy Williams - Wichita Lineman (1969)
Paul Kantner, Grace Slick & Paul Freiberg - Your Mind Has Left Your Body (1973)
Barry McGuire & the Doctor - South of The Border (1971)
From PopMatters:
McGuire and Hord got together as a duo and put out one album in late 1970, appropriately entitled Barry and the Doctor. They were joined by a top-notch group of side musicians including the Byrd's Chris Hillman, the Eagles' Bernie Leadon, the Flying Burrito Brothers' "Sneaky" Pete Kleinow, Dillard and Clark's Byron Berline, and even an uncredited Herb Albert. The album had a loose, bluesy feel and a folkie back to the land sentimentality. It was a critical success and a commercial failure. McGuire reported that the album's recording was fueled by massive amounts of cocaine and resultant unpredictable behavior. It was McGuire's last secular album before becoming a born-again Christian.
Barry and the Doctor has since become a cult classic whose unavailability enhanced its reputation as one of the great lost albums of the era. It's recently been re-released. The question then becomes, does the actual music live up to its hype? The answer is "yes", but it is a very good record, not a great one. The record has a pleasant instrumental vibe and offers innocent messages. The lyrics are a bit corny, generally extolling life in the country versus the city as a heavy environmental message—a common trope of California tunes from the period (just ask Canned Heat, Jesse Colin Young, etc.). Despite the reported coke use, Hord displays his guitar chops by playing smoothly, and McGuire's 12-string beautifully rings out the riffs. The material never sounds rushed. Instead, it flows and often folds intricately upon itself. One would presume the artists smoked pot or took acid instead of snorting cocaine because of the material's psychedelic sensibility.
Beach Boys - Rollin' Up To Heaven (1975)
Black Oak Arkansas - Hot & Nasty (1971)
Bruford - Back To The Beginning (1978)
Chevy Chase - Rapper's Plight (1980)
Chris Knight & Maureen McCormick - There Is Nothing More To Say (1973) Completely new and utterly meaningless lyrics based on the same title by The Millennium.
Colin Bluntstone - I Don't Believe In Miracles (1972)
Creedence Clearwater Revival - Feelin' Blue (1969)
Dean Martin - By The Time I Get To Phoenix (1969)
Frank Sinatra - I Sing The Songs (1978) "I Write The Songs" rewritten for the voice of god.
Frank Zappa - Andy (1980)
Gabe Kaplan - Up Your Nose (With A Rubber Hose) (1977) Co-written by Greg Prestopino. He has written songs for the likes of Celine Dion ("Show Some Emotion"), Natalie Cole ("Wild Women Do"), Puff Daddy ("Can't Nobody Hold Me Down"), Aaron Neville ("Beautiful Night"), Bette Midler ("Let Me Drive"), Jennifer Love Hewitt ("In Another Life") and Matthew Wilder ("Break My Stride"). Aaron Carter and Unique ll are also among the many artists who have recorded his songs. And here he is.
Genesis - Down And Out (1979)