Skip to main content

Five legendary bands whose music wouldn’t sound the same without the late Chuck Berry

5 bands influenced by chuck berry
The world lost one of popular music’s most important and influential musical architects on Saturday, as Chuck Berry died at the age of 90. Berry’s profound lyrics, melodies, and guitar stylings are the very bedrock of all rock-influenced music made in the past six decades. Without the iconic St. Louis-born musician, the sounds coming out of your radio, streaming service, or record player would be profoundly different.

“If you tried to give rock and roll another name,” said John Lennon, “You might call it ‘Chuck Berry’.”

A virtuosic guitarist who brought a fiery, blues-laden sound to usher in a revolutionary musical era, Berry motivated musicians to think beyond the very basic song structures of early rock, pushing the genre to new heights with his songwriting.

While virtually all modern rock artists owe a debt of gratitude to Mr. Berry, below we’ve outlined five major acts — each universally influential musical pioneers in their own right — who drew directly (and heavily) from Chuck Berry’s music. Whether covering Berry outright, or simply synthesizing the sounds into their own take on musical concepts he pioneered, it’s not an exaggeration to say that each of these famed artists likely would never have made it big without Berry’s music to inspire them.

The Beatles

The Beatles - Roll Over Beethoven

Perhaps the most famed Chuck Berry fan was The Beatles’ John Lennon, who drew heavily from his blues-laden sound, and had many kind words to say about Berry publicly. Over the course of his career with the Beatles, he and the other lads from Liverpool played over a dozen different Berry songs at live shows and on recordings, which helped the band eventually evolve their own original (and utterly iconic) take on the genre.

While Berry’s blues-rock influence is most obvious on earlier Beatles compositions like I Saw Her Standing There, even later songs like Back In The U.S.S.R. and 1969’s Come Together borrowed heavily from Berry’s lyrical influence.

The Rolling Stones

The Rolling Stones, Carol. Live 1969 (complete)

Growing up in a similar place and time as their oft rivals The Beatles, The Rolling Stones also owe Berry a debt of gratitude for his music, having recorded his song Come On as their first ever single, alongside numerous other songs he wrote in the following decades. In fact, Berry’s recordings were the reason the band’s iconic guitarist Keith Richards decided to pick up the instrument in the first place.

“I don’t even know if Chuck realizes what he did,” said Richards in a statement following Berry’s passing, “It was just such a total thing, a great sound, a great rhythm coming off the needle of all of Chuck’s records. It’s when I knew what I wanted to do.”

The Beach Boys

The Beach Boys - Surfin' USA

Like the Stones and the Beatles, the first recorded material from The Beach Boys’ seminal songwriter Brian Wilson bore unabashed Chuck Berry influence. In fact, Surfin’ USA, the Beach Boys’ first hit, was a reworked version of Berry’s song Sweet Little Sixteen with new lyrics penned by Wilson. It helped launch the career of the band that many critics consider to be among the most influential songwriters in pop music history.

Though he changed the lyrics to reflect surfing culture, Wilson kept the rapid-fire mention of American cities that existed in Sweet Little Sixteen, exchanging Berry’s Boston, MA and Pittsburgh, PA for Manhattan Beach, CA and Waimea Bay, HA.

Elvis Presley

Elvis Presley - Johnny B. Goode

An impressive songwriter in his own right, Elvis was a huge fan of Chuck Berry’s work, recording numerous hits written by Berry throughout his career, including Johnny B. Goode and Memphis, Tennessee. Apart from the songs themselves, the King also mixed Berry’s sharp new guitar-laden sound into his own music as soon as he encountered it.

In fact, Elvis liked Berry’s first hit — 1955’s Maybellene — so much when he first heard it, he immediately added it to his live repertoire. The respect went both ways, with Berry once calling Elvis, “The greatest who ever was, is, or ever will be.”

Bob Dylan

Chuck Berry - Too Much Monkey Business

While you may not hear Berry’s influence in Dylan’s music as readily as the other bands on this list, the poetic lyricism that Chuck Berry brought to the world of rock music was of the utmost importance to Bob Dylan, who once called Berry “The Shakespeare of rock and roll.” That’s because, prior to Berry, most rock songs relied on simple and boring thematic structures.

“In the ’50s, when people were just singing virtually about nothing, he was writing social-comment songs,” said John Lennon, “He was writing all kinds of songs with incredible meter to the lyrics, which influenced Dylan and me and many other people.”

Though Dylan also relied on the works of classic American songwriters like Woody Guthrie for influence, he incorporated the clear and poetic lyrical delivery of Berry into much of his music. A good example of this can be found in Berry’s Too Much Monkey Business, which employs rapid-fire lyrics and a blues structure that is remarkably similar to Dylan’s later classic, Subterranean Homesick Blues.

Everyone Else

Bruce Springsteen - You Never Can Tell

Renowned songwriters like Bruce Springsteen, guitar legends like Jimi Hendrix, and even hard rock Gods like AC/DC were all heavily influenced by the music of Chuck Berry, each recording versions of Berry’s songs in their prolific careers. Suffice it to say that without Berry’s perfect word choice, his revolutionary guitar sound, and his blues-inspired chord structures, the world’s musical landscape would strike an entirely different sound. An inferior sound, in our book. To take a memorial musical journey with the great Chuck Berry and friends, follow our Spotify playlist below.

Parker Hall
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Parker Hall is a writer and musician from Portland, OR. He is a graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin…
What is spatial audio? Apple’s 3D sound feature fully explained
Person listening to spatial audio using Apple AirPods Max headphones.

At WWDC 2021 (Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference), Apple officially added support for spatial audio with Dolby Atmos Music for Apple Music. It quickly became a popular format among consumers, too: Apple estimates that by February 2022, playback of spatial audio tracks had quadrupled from just a few months prior as people experimented with the format. But what exactly is spatial audio? How is it different from (or the same as) Dolby Atmos? And what kind of audio equipment do you need to listen to it?

There's a lot of ground to cover, and some of it is a bit technical, but we're going to break it all down in easy-to-understand terms. You'll be a spatial audio expert in minutes, and you'll know exactly how to access this growing trend in movie and music streaming.
What exactly is spatial audio?

Read more
The best podcasts of 2022
best podcasts

Whether you've already stored all your favorite podcasts in your app of choice, ready for listening, or are new to the world of podcasts, there's no denying their popularity. Podcasts are everywhere these days and have become some of the most beloved entertainment and education mediums worldwide. Whatever you're into, from tech and video game chat to world news and politics or true crime, there are plenty of specialized interest shows to choose from.

With so many podcasts available, there’s no way that you can listen to all of them. To help you out, no matter your interests, we've gathered a variety of shows to turn you on to your next great listen.

Read more
How to convert your vinyl to a digital format
Rebirth of cool: Is vinyl ready for a second wind, or just a fad?

It doesn't matter one bit if your vinyl collection consists of just a single milk crate or if it fills several Ikea Kallax shelves and is slowly taking over your home — we can all agree that there's just something about vinyl.

Maybe it's the warm, uncompressed sound spinning off a solid turntable, or the feel of holding a physical piece of art in your hands while the record spins — it's a special experience that has regained much of its glory in a world dominated by digital streaming. The problem is, records are fragile, and crates full of them don't fit in your back pocket.

Read more