Some of the biggest songs in music history almost belonged to someone else.

One of Bruce Springsteen’s most recognizable hits was originally written with another legendary group in mind before it became a signature song for The Boss.

Springsteen revealed that he wrote “Hungry Heart” after seeing The Ramones perform in Asbury Park and wanted to create something specifically for the punk rock band. But after hearing the track, it was The Boss’ manager, Jon Landau, who encouraged him to keep it—a decision that changed the course of rock history.

“We were talking for a while, and I was like, ‘Man I’ve got to write the Ramones a song,'” Springsteen recalled during a visit to The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon. “So I went home and I sat at my table and I wrote it in about the time it took me to sing it. I brought it in and we went to make a demo for it or I played it for [Jon Landau], and he said, ‘Nah, you better keep that one.’ He was right about that. It did pretty well.”

Indeed it did. “Hungry Heart” was Springsteen’s first major hit, making it to No. 5 on the Billboard Top 100 chart. The upbeat track had more of a pop sound than some of Springsteen’s earlier songs—but it was a massive success. Some might even say that “Hungry Heart” turned Springsteen into a mainstream radio artist.

Looking back, it’s hard to imagine “Hungry Heart” belonging to anyone else. While The Ramones helped inspire the song’s creation, Springsteen’s version became a defining moment in his career and introduced his music to an even wider audience. Decades later, the track remains one of his most recognizable hits—a reminder that some of rock’s biggest moments come from the songs that almost never happened the way fans know them today.

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