Chapter 1: The One-Take Hit That Took Over Rock Radio
Some songs feel carefully engineered for success. Others explode so naturally that they almost seem accidental.
“My Sharona” by The Knack was one of those explosions.
Written in roughly an hour and recorded in a single take, the song became a phenomenon almost instantly after its 1979 release. It spent six straight weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and quickly turned into one of the most recognizable rock songs ever made.
“It sounded urgent, reckless, catchy—and completely impossible to ignore.”
Frontman Doug Fieger co-wrote the track with guitarist Berton Averre after becoming infatuated with a real teenager named Sharona Alperin, who would later become permanently tied to rock history through the song’s title and famous album cover.
Musically, “My Sharona” thrived on pure momentum.
The pounding bassline, Bruce Gary’s explosive drumming, and Fieger’s stuttering vocal delivery created a sense of nonstop tension and release. Then came Berton Averre’s legendary guitar solo—wild, technical, and far more intricate than most casual listeners expected from a radio hit.
The Knack also arrived with perfect timing.
At the end of the 1970s, rock music was caught between bloated arena acts and the rising energy of punk and new wave. The band’s stripped-down image and British Invasion-inspired style felt fresh, direct, and exciting again.