![the who stuttering song the who stuttering song](https://i5.walmartimages.com/asr/bf3027ce-9693-45c4-bfa8-dad424bedee8_1.3a3c070875a8ba13325e978df24aac5c.jpeg)
Randy played them You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet and explained it was a joke and agreed to include the song on the album if the band could re-record it. After recording their new album Not Fragile, their record company, Mercury Records, asked if the band had a spare song to include. After Gary stepped down from his job as manager, Randy sang their new song with stuttering vocals as an inside joke with the intention that only Gary would hear the tape. The band’s first manager was Gary Bachman, another Bachman brother, who stuttered. Among them have been Too Much Time on My Hands by Styx, My Sharona by The Knack, Changes by David Bowie, My Generation by The Who, Benny and the Jets by Elton John, and many more.īachman –Turner Overdrive consisted of the Bachman brothers Randy, Robbie, and Tim, along with Fred Turner. There have been numerous songs in the rock era that display stuttering vocals.
![the who stuttering song the who stuttering song](https://www.stutteringhelp.org/sites/default/files/BTO.jpg)
Jane Fraser, president of the Stuttering Foundation, said recently, “Not only was You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet the first song with stuttering vocals to reach number one, but more importantly it was the first such song that was actually about a real person who stutters and therefore has a human connection to the struggles faced by someone who stutters.” The Stuttering Foundation has recognized the song You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet, a 1974 number one hit by Bachman-Turner Overdrive, as being the most unique of the many rock songs featuring stuttering vocals.