More than six decades after it first dominated the charts, Bobby Lewis’ hit “Tossin’ and Turnin'” continues to stand among music’s most enduring seasonal anthems.
Billboard ranks the 1961 smash No. 3 on its Greatest of All Time Songs of the Summer chart, placing it behind only Puff Daddy and Faith Evans featuring 112’s “I’ll Be Missing You” and Brandy and Monica’s “The Boy Is Mine.” The ranking compares the biggest Songs of the Summer across multiple decades, building on Billboard’s annual Songs of the Summer chart, which measures cumulative performance on the Hot 100 during the period between Memorial Day and Labor Day.
Recorded in late 1960, “Tossin’ and Turnin'” caught fire the following summer. The energetic rhythm-and-blues rocker reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 on July 10, 1961, remaining there for seven consecutive weeks before finishing as Billboard’s year-end No. 1 single of the year. More than 60 years later, it remains one of only six songs from the whole decade of the 1960s to spend at least seven weeks atop the Hot 100.
The song tells the familiar story of a man lying awake because he can’t stop thinking about his lover. Yet its pounding beat, handclaps and jubilant saxophone solo transform sleepless frustration into something irresistibly danceable.
That contrast is part of what has kept the record alive for generations. In his retrospective series on every Billboard Hot 100 No. 1, Stereogum critic Tom Breihan praised the record’s explosive energy, calling it “history’s greatest insomnia-themed party anthem” while highlighting its unforgettable saxophone break.
Originally written by Ritchie Adams and Malou René, “Tossin’ and Turnin'” was first intended for singer Jackie Wilson before Lewis recorded it for the independent Beltone label. The gamble paid off spectacularly, giving Lewis the defining hit of his career.
Lewis’ own story was remarkable. Born in Indianapolis in 1925, he spent much of his childhood in an orphanage before being adopted at age 12. Despite severe vision problems, he taught himself piano as a young child, later performing in carnival shows and with local orchestras before finally breaking through nationally in his mid-30s.
His success on the pop charts proved brief. Lewis scored one more Top 10 hit later in 1961 with “One Track Mind,” but never again reached the heights of “Tossin’ and Turnin’.” Even so, the song endured through appearances in films including Animal House, introducing it to new generations of listeners.
It also found an unexpected second life in 1987, when alternative rock pioneers The Replacements recorded a delightfully off-kilter version as a bonus track on the reissue of Pleased to Meet Me. Rather than simply recreating the original, the Minneapolis band quickly veered into improvised jokes, musical detours and snippets of other songs. Pittsburgh public radio station WYEP, ranking every Replacements song, described the recording as beginning “fairly faithful” before the band starts “ad-libbing absurdisms and weaving in stream-of-consciousness bits of other songs,” calling it “fun for the more dedicated fans of the band.”
Lewis continued performing into his 80s despite becoming virtually blind, often saying that, as Stevie Wonder once observed, inner vision could matter just as much as eyesight. He died in 2020 at age 95.
Today, “Tossin’ and Turnin'” isn’t simply remembered as one of the biggest hits of 1961. Thanks to its remarkable staying power and Billboard’s all-time ranking, it remains one of the greatest songs ever to soundtrack an American summer.
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