The Kinks – You Really Got Me
“You Really Got Me” – Single by the Kinks from the album The Kinks
B-side “It’s All Right”
Released: 4 August 1964
Label: Pye (UK), Reprise (US)
Songwriter: Ray Davies
Producer: Shel Talmy
Charted No.7 in US and No.2 in UK
“You Really Got Me” was written by Ray Davies, the Kinks’ vocalist and main songwriter, sometime between 9 and 12 March 1964. Created on the piano in the front room of the Davies’ home, the song was stylistically very different from the finished product, being much lighter and somewhat jazz-oriented. Ray said of the song’s writing, “When I came up with (‘You Really Got Me’)] I hadn’t been writing songs very long at all. It was one of the first five I ever came up with.”
Davies said that he had been inspired to write the song one night during his college days playing with the Dave Hunt Band, when he saw an attractive girl on the dance floor. He said: “When we finished, I went off to find her, but she was gone and never returned to the club. She really got me going.”
Dave Davies got the dirty guitar sound by slashing the speaker cone on his amplifier with a razor blade. The vibration of the fabric produced an effect known as “fuzz,” which became common as various electronic devices were invented to distort the sound. At the time, none of these devices existed, so Davies would mistreat his amp to get the desired sound, often kicking it.
According to Dave, the amp slashing happened in his bedroom in North London when he was irate – he had gotten his girlfriend, Sue Sheehan, pregnant, and their parents wanted to keep them from getting married. Instead of doing self harm, he used the blade on the amp to channel his rage. The amp was a cheap unit called an Elpico that had been giving him problems – he decided to teach it a lesson!
In the studio, the wounded Elpico was hooked into a another amp, which Dave recalls as a Vox AC30 and producer Shel Talmy remembers as a Vox AC10. The sound they got changed the course of rock history, becoming the first big hit to use distortion.
Davies and Sheehan stayed apart, but she had the baby, a girl named Tracey who finally met her father in 1993.