Resurrection Tracks: The Ones That Time Forgot (But Never Killed) Some songs don’t explode onto the scene. They slip through the cracks. No chart dominance. No endless radio rotation. No myth built around them—at least not at first. And yet… they survive. Much like the weight and reflection of Good Friday leading into Easter, these tracks didn’t disappear—they waited. Waiting for new ears. New moments. New meaning. These are not just B-sides or deep cuts. These are Resurrection Tracks. 1. “Looking at You” – MC5 (1970) This isn’t a song—it’s a detonation. Raw Detroit energy. No polish. No restraint. Just pure forward motion. Ignored by the mainstream at the time, it later became a blueprint for punk’s entire attitude. 👉 This didn’t come back quietly. It came back through every band it inspired. 2. “Maggie M’Gill” – The Doors (1970) Buried at the tail end of Morrison Hotel, this track feels like it’s stumbling through a desert at 2AM. Loose. Bluesy. Slightly unhinged. It never scr...
The Day B-Sides Took Over Rock (And No One Noticed) There’s a story they don’t tell you about rock ‘n roll. Not in documentaries. Not in “greatest hits” compilations. Not even in the liner notes. Because if they did… it would change everything. It starts, like all good conspiracies do, with something small. A flip of a record. A song you weren’t meant to play first. The B-side. 🌀 The First Crack in the Story We were told the A-side was the hit. The polished one. The radio-friendly one. The one that mattered. But every now and then… you’d flip the record. And what you’d hear didn’t sound like leftovers. It sounded like something else entirely. Unfiltered. Unchecked. Like All in Your Mind by Stray. A driving, sprawling piece of heavy rock that doesn’t care about format, structure… or permission. That’s not a B-side trying to keep up. That’s a track stretching its legs where no one was looking. 🌙 The Ones That Didn’t Fit the Narrative Some songs didn’t just sit quietly on the flip...