. . "1969-06-16"^^ . "7.0"^^ . "9"^^ . . "126.0"^^ . "\"Somethin' Else\""@en . "1997-11-11"^^ . . . "Eddie_Cochran_Somethin_Else_Liberty_F-55203.jpg"@en . . "11"^^ . "\"Teenage Heaven\""@en . . "Sharon Sheeley, Bob Cochran"@en . . . "\"Hallelujah! I Love Her So\""@en . "1959-06-23"^^ . . "\"Somethin' Else\" is a song by the rockabilly musician Eddie Cochran, co-written by his girlfriend, Sharon Sheeley, and his older brother, Bob Cochran, released in 1959. The first-person lyrics describe how Cochran wants a convertible he can't afford and a girl who he fears will not go out with him. But in the end, by saving money, he is able to buy a slightly older car, and works up the confidence to ask the girl out. The song was written on the back of a match book. Veteran studio drummer Earl Palmer played the same drum beat on \"Somethin' Else\" as Charles Connor did on Little Richard's \"Keep A-Knockin'\". But Eddie Cochran was unaware that Sheeley wanted to duplicate the drum sound of the Little Richard recording. The song peaked at #22 on the UK singles chart but only reached #58 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States."@en . . "Sharon Sheeley Bob Cochran"@en . . "\"Communication Breakdown\""@en . "Somethin' Else (song)"@en . "July 1959"@en . "Somethin' Else"@en . "10"^^ . "Liberty F-55203"@en . . . "Paul Williams, Jimmy Page"@en . "\"Whole Lotta Love\""@en . ""@en . . ""@en . . ""@en . . . . . . . "128.0"^^ . . "\"Somethin' Else\" is a song by the rockabilly musician Eddie Cochran, co-written by his girlfriend, Sharon Sheeley, and his older brother, Bob Cochran, released in 1959. The first-person lyrics describe how Cochran wants a convertible he can't afford and a girl who he fears will not go out with him. But in the end, by saving money, he is able to buy a slightly older car, and works up the confidence to ask the girl out. The song was written on the back of a match book. Veteran studio drummer Earl Palmer played the same drum beat on \"Somethin' Else\" as Charles Connor did on Little Richard's \"Keep A-Knockin'\". But Eddie Cochran was unaware that Sheeley wanted to duplicate the drum sound of the Little Richard recording. The song peaked at #22 on the UK singles chart but only reached #58 on the "@en . "\"Boll Weevil Song\""@en . .