Jackie Deshannon ~ What The World Needs Now Is Love (1965) -

The "interest" in the story isn't just in the recording, but in its timing. Only a few years later, after the assassinations of Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr., the song was played almost constantly on the radio. It transformed from a catchy Bacharach tune into a cultural sigh of relief.

By the time they reached the bridge, where the brass swells and she insists it's the only thing that there's just too little of, the session musicians knew they weren't just making a pop record. They were capturing a pulse. The Ripple Effect Jackie Deshannon ~ What the World Needs Now is Love (1965)

Released in April 1965, the song didn't just climb the charts; it became a prayer for a decade in crisis. It was played at rallies, on battlefields via transistor radios, and in quiet living rooms. The "interest" in the story isn't just in

Inside a dimly lit recording studio, Jackie DeShannon stood behind the microphone. She was already a trailblazer—one of the first female singer-songwriters to really crack the code of the industry—but today, she was nervous. It transformed from a catchy Bacharach tune into

She was about to record a song that had already been rejected. The Song That Nobody Wanted

Tell you more about on other artists (like The Beatles or Cher).

The year was 1965, and the air in New York City felt heavy. Between the flickering news reports of the Vietnam War and the rising tensions of the Civil Rights Movement, the world felt like a string tuned so tight it was about to snap.