John Fogertyis the songwriting mastermind and vocalist behind Creedence Clearwater Revival's biggest hits, but one of the group's most popular tracks has always made him "cringe."
The legendary musician has previously admitted that he wasn't always proud of the band's beloved song "Fortunate Son," but that didn't stop the track from becoming one of the biggest rock songs of all time.
Fogerty — who celebrated his 81st birthday last month — explained in a July 2025 interview with the Los Angeles Times that he finished recording the vocals for "Fortunate Son" after he had already been in the studio for a while recording another CCR classic, "Down on the Corner."
"So I’d been singing at the top of my lungs for probably an hour and a half, then I had to go back and finish 'Fortunate Son.' I was screaming my heart out, doing the best I could, but later I felt that some of the notes were a little flat — that I hadn’t quite hit the mark," he admitted. "I always sort of cringed about that."
Fogerty, however, isn't blind to the fact that fans have always loved "Fortunate Son," despite his own personal qualms with the track's vocals. He even acknowledged in the same interview that the gritty sound to his voice on the song may have been exactly what listeners love about it.
"I know that in the case of the Beatles, John [Lennon] would just sit in the studio screaming and screaming until his voice got raw enough, then he’d record some takes," Fogerty said. "Perhaps the fact that it was a little out of tune made it — what’s the word? — more pop-worthy. I don’t know."
View this post on InstagramWhether it's Fogerty's iconic vocals or the song's instantly recognizable guitar riffs, "Fortunate Son" has undoubtedly earned a spot among some of the greatest rock songs in music history.
In 2014, it was inducted into the Library of Congress National Recording Registry, and it consistently appears on various "best-of" lists, like Ultimate Classic Rock's roundup of the top rock songs of all time (No. 11), and Pitchfork's "200 Best Songs of the 1960s" list (No. 17).
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