Who Wrote Original Artist Rock And Roll Part 2 Lyrics?

2025-11-06 01:58:18 92

4 Answers

Delilah
Delilah
2025-11-08 19:25:25
I went back through a few liner notes and music database entries to be sure, and the original composition credit for 'Rock and Roll Part 2' belongs to Mike Leander and Gary Glitter (Paul Gadd). The track is an odd little beast — effectively an instrumental with punctuated vocal exclamations — so when people ask who 'wrote the lyrics' there’s not a conventional lyric sheet to point to. Instead, the credited writers are recognized for the chant and hook as well as the musical structure.

Thinking about it from a musician’s perspective, it makes sense that the producer-songwriter dynamic is front and center here: Leander’s arrangements gave the record its punch, while Glitter’s vocal stamp (that raw shouty style) supplied the memorable human element. For me this track is a neat example of how arrangement and attitude can count as songwriting just as much as verses and choruses.
Henry
Henry
2025-11-08 23:04:50
If you dig into the original credits, the track commonly known as 'Rock and Roll Part 2' lists Mike Leander and Gary Glitter (born Paul Gadd) as the writers. The record came out in 1972 and was part of Gary Glitter’s early-70s output; Leander produced and co-wrote a lot of the material, so his name shows up as a primary creative force alongside Glitter. The song is famously sparse lyrically — it’s basically drum-driven with repeated shouts of 'hey' and a chant-style hook — so the songwriting credit mostly covers composition and that chant/lyric motif rather than a long set of verses.

People often point out that because the vocal content is so minimal, the tune’s identity rests on the arrangement and production as much as any words, which is why Leander’s role is emphasized in histories and credits. For anyone curious about the origins of sports Anthem culture, that pairing of Leander and Glitter is the short answer, and I still find the way such a tiny lyric became so ubiquitous kind of wild.
Vivian
Vivian
2025-11-09 12:45:18
Quick note that answers your core question: the names on the original credits for 'Rock and Roll Part 2' are Mike Leander and Gary Glitter, whose real name is Paul Gadd. If you’re focusing strictly on 'lyrics,' the song barely has any — it’s mostly chants and the repeated 'hey' hook — so the lyric credit reflects that shared, minimal vocal content rather than a full set of written verses. I find it interesting how something so simple turned into a global stadium staple, even if the backstory complicates how people feel about using it today.
Quinn
Quinn
2025-11-10 07:14:20
Here’s the lowdown in plain terms: the credited writers for 'Rock and Roll Part 2' are Mike Leander and Gary Glitter (Paul Gadd). If you’re asking specifically about the lyrics, there aren’t many — mostly chants and shouts — so the lyrical credit is shared but minimal. Mike Leander was the producer/arranger behind Glitter’s early hits and often got co-writing credit because he shaped the music and structure; Gary Glitter provided the vocal identity and the chant elements that became the song’s hallmark.

A side note I always mention when this song comes up: its ubiquity in stadiums and commercials made the simple chant wildly famous, but later controversies around the performer complicated how people use or reference the song in public spaces. Personally, I still think it’s fascinating how a few syllables can become a cultural fixture.
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