"Hello Hooray" is a song written by Canadian singer-songwriter and producer Rolf Peter Kempf in the 1960s, first recorded by American folk singer Judy Collins on her 1968 album Who Knows Where the Time Goes as a folk-driven track inspired by Eastern mysticism and a carnival-like atmosphere.[1][2][3]The song achieved widespread popularity through its cover by American rock band Alice Cooper, featured on their 1973 album Billion Dollar Babies and produced by Bob Ezrin, where it was shortened for radio play and released as a single that peaked at No. 35 on the US Billboard Hot 100, No. 6 on the UK Singles Chart, and No. 18 on Canada's RPM Top 100 Singles.[1][2][3]With lyrics celebrating renewal and the thrill of performance—"Hello, hooray, let the show begin, I've been ready"—Alice Cooper's energetic version became an enduring concert opener for the band, performed live for over 40 years and continuing in setlists as of the 2020s.[2][3]Other notable covers include versions by folk artist Meg Christian, industrial musician Raymond Watts (as Pig), and punk band The Frankenstein Drag Queens From Planet 13, while the song has appeared in media such as the 2014 film X-Men: Days of Future Past and the 2014 documentary Super Duper Alice Cooper.[1][3]Recognized for its cultural impact, "Hello Hooray" was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2016.[1][2]
Background and composition
Writing by Rolf Kempf
Rolf Kempf, a Canadian singer-songwriter and producer born in the 1940s in Hamilton, Ontario, studied English literature at McMaster University before becoming active in Toronto's folk music scene during the mid-1960s.[1][4] There, he performed with a folk group and co-founded The Gass Company, later known as Colonel Popcorn’s Butter Band, releasing singles like "Ship Ahoy"/"Saturday Morning – Sunday Eve" in 1967 as part of the Yorkville music community.[4] In the late 1960s, Kempf relocated to Los Angeles seeking greater opportunities, where he immersed himself in the vibrant Laurel Canyon scene.[1]Kempf composed "Hello Hooray" in 1968 while living in Los Angeles, under challenging circumstances following a disastrous road trip with his band that led to its disbandment and the loss of his possessions, including his guitar.[4] He wrote the song on a borrowed guitar beside a pool in Laurel Canyon, initially envisioning it as a folk-style piece reflective of his earlier musical roots.[1][4] The track was soon recorded by Judy Collins for her 1968 album Who Knows Where the Time Goes.[1]After returning to Canada, Kempf continued his career as a performer and producer, settling in Vancouver, British Columbia, where he has remained active into the 2020s, exploring genres such as folk, world, and jazz music.[1] He has collaborated with songwriters like Alan Gerber and Stephen Kalinich, and recorded his own version of "Hello Hooray" on the 1993 album Woodstock Album.[1] In 2014, Kempf performed the song with the Vancouver Adapted Music Society (VAMS) All-Stars, showcasing his ongoing commitment to live music.[5] For his contributions, including "Hello Hooray," Kempf was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2016.[6]
Lyrics and themes
"Hello Hooray" is structured as a cyclical, invitational anthem that builds through repetitive choruses and verses evoking a performative ritual, opening with the exuberant refrain "Hello! Hooray! Let the show begin / I'm ready" and progressing to communal declarations like "We've been ready." The lyrics unfold in a verse-chorus format, with recurring motifs of readiness and renewal, such as "Ready as the rain to fall, just to fall again / Ready as a man to be born, only to be born again, and again and again and again," emphasizing perpetual cycles of rebirth and anticipation. Later verses introduce introspective waiting—"I've been waiting so long for another song / I've been thinking so long I was the only one"—before culminating in a transcendent call: "Descend with me above the time and the weather / Transcend the rolling hoops of rhyme on a feather," portraying the audience as enduring participants where "each of them an actor, each one a play." This theatrical framework positions the song as an invitation to a shared spectacle, blending personal reflection with collective engagement.[7][3]Thematically, the lyrics explore celebration through exclamatory greetings and the joy of commencement, tempered by undertones of longing and resilience amid repeated trials, as in the imagery of rain falling endlessly or a man reborn perpetually. Drawing on Eastern mysticism and carnival-like exuberance, the song conveys communal energy in lines uniting singer and listeners—"So I will sit and I'll act so prim / And I will laugh when this thing begins and begins"—suggesting a release from isolation into shared performance. Core to its meaning is the concept of self-renewal and rebirth, symbolizing human endurance and reinvention, inspired by philosophical ideas of reincarnation and the cyclical nature of existence. This is evident in the "rebirth of man" motif, where readiness for the "show" represents overcoming frustration through transformative participation.[3]Interpretations of the lyrics have evolved from an initial optimistic lens focused on natural and human renewal—evoking folk-like hope in cycles of birth and play—to broader spectacles of theatrical bombast and collectivespectacle, highlighting the text's adaptability to themes of performance anxiety resolved through communal catharsis. While early readings emphasize innocent anticipation and rebirth as personal optimism, later views amplify the carnivalimagery into a grand, ritualistic invitation that channels anxiety into celebratory energy, underscoring the lyrics' inherent dramatic structure. Written solely by Rolf Kempf, the song's textual versatility stems from its open-ended imagery of shows, songs, and endless beginnings.[3]
Judy Collins version
Recording and release
"Hello Hooray" was first commercially recorded by Judy Collins in 1968 for her seventh studio album, Who Knows Where the Time Goes, serving as the opening track. Written by Canadian singer-songwriter Rolf Kempf, the song was included among a mix of covers and originals on the record, which marked a significant point in Collins' evolving folk-rock style.[1][8]The recording sessions took place at Elektra Sound Recorders in Los Angeles, with production handled by David Anderle and engineering by John Haeny. Arranged as a folk ballad enhanced by orchestral elements, the track features prominent organ work by Michael Sahl, alongside electric guitar from Stephen Stills, bass by Chris Ethridge, and drums by Jim Gordon, creating a layered, atmospheric sound.[9][7][10]The album was released in November 1968 by Elektra Records, with "Hello Hooray" available only as an album track rather than a standalone single. Within Collins' discography, Who Knows Where the Time Goes represented her commercial breakthrough, peaking at number 29 on the Billboard 200 and achieving gold certification by October 1969 for sales exceeding 500,000 copies in the US.[8][11][12]
Reception
Upon its release as the opening track on Judy Collins' 1968 album Who Knows Where the Time Goes, "Hello Hooray" received praise for its uplifting folk arrangement and alignment with the era's countercultural spirit of renewal and performance joy. Collins herself described falling in love with the song the moment she heard it.[2]The track contributed to the album's positive critical response, with a contemporary review in International Times praising the record as beautiful music amid the era's rock sounds. Enthusiasts and critics alike viewed it as a touchstone for the movement, blending introspective lyrics with buoyant melodies amid the turbulent social climate.[13][8]Audience reception was bolstered by the album's commercial success, which peaked at No. 29 on the Billboard 200 chart and earned RIAA gold certification in 1969 for sales exceeding 500,000 copies, reflecting broad appeal during Collins' rising popularity. The song also featured in her live repertoire, performed at select concerts as part of sets that emphasized her folk interpretations and connected with fans seeking optimistic anthems.[14][15][16]Over time, "Hello Hooray" has endured as the seminal folk rendition that established the song's celebratory themes, influencing perceptions of it as an emblem of artistic exuberance in the late 1960sfolk scene.[2]
Alice Cooper version
Recording and production
The recording of "Hello Hooray" took place in 1972 as part of the sessions for Alice Cooper's sixth studio album, Billion Dollar Babies, primarily at Morgan Studios in London during December, with additional work at the Record Plant in New York later that month and into January 1973.[17] The track was produced by Bob Ezrin, who had previously collaborated with the band on School's Out (1972) and played a key role in introducing the song to the group after encountering a demo from its writer, Rolf Kempf.[1] Ezrin oversaw the overall production at these locations, where the band refined the arrangement amid a broader album process that spanned multiple studios, including initial demos at the Galesi Estate in Greenwich, Connecticut, earlier that year.[17]Originally a folk ballad recorded by Judy Collins in 1968, the Alice Cooper version underwent a significant transformation into a hard rock track infused with theatrical flair, shifting from acoustic introspection to a bombastic opener suitable for arena spectacles.[1] This reconfiguration emphasized heavier instrumentation, including driving guitars and a pulsating rhythm section, while incorporating Broadway-inspired elements such as layered crowd-like chants of the title phrase to evoke a sense of communal ritual and showmanship.[17] Ezrin, along with arranger Al McMillan, contributed to the addition of strings and horns that heightened the dramatic build-up, creating a sense of escalating tension that mirrored the band's evolving shock-rock aesthetic.[17]The arrangement was a collaborative effort among the band members, who adapted the song's structure to fit their high-energy style, extending the intro into a fanfare-like sequence that set the tone for the album.[18] Vincent Furnier, performing as Alice Cooper, delivered the lead vocals with a commanding, theatrical intensity—alternating between whispered menace and soaring exhortations—that amplified the track's performative quality and underscored its role as a curtain-raiser for the band's live persona.[1] Furnier's vocal approach, marked by dynamic phrasing and echoes of vaudeville flair, helped cement the song's identity as a powerful, unique statement within the album's production.[17]
Release and chart performance
"Alice Cooper's version of "Hello Hooray" was released as a single by Warner Bros. Records on January 3, 1973, backed with "Generation Landslide" as the B-side. The track also served as the opening song on the band's albumBillion Dollar Babies, which was released on February 25, 1973. Produced by Bob Ezrin, the single version was edited to 3:01 in length, compared to the full album track running 4:15.The single achieved moderate success in the United States but performed strongly in several international markets. It peaked at number 35 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. Internationally, it reached number 6 on both the UK Singles Chart and the Dutch Top 40, demonstrating the band's growing popularity in Europe.
Upon its release as a single in January 1973, "Hello Hooray" received attention for its departure from Alice Cooper's characteristic high-energy style, with Record World describing it as "the unpredictable Alice depart[ing] from its usual high energy with this slower tune" that still promised to follow a "gilded route" to success.[19] The track's anthemic build and dramatic orchestration were highlighted as fitting the band's evolving theatrical aesthetic, setting it apart from their more frenetic hard rock numbers.[19]Critics praised the song's suitability as the opener for Billion Dollar Babies, noting how its circus-like fanfare and commanding vocals introduced the album's blend of shock and spectacle. Circus magazine called it "just staggering," emphasizing its role in capturing the band's live-show pomp and circumstance.[20]Creem lauded the album overall as "the Sgt. Pepper of punkdom," with "Hello Hooray" exemplifying the polished production and flair that elevated Cooper's sound.[21] The single's chart performance, peaking at number 35 on the Billboard Hot 100, underscored its immediate appeal amid the band's rising popularity.Retrospective assessments in rock histories have positioned "Hello Hooray" as a pivotal moment in Alice Cooper's shock-rock evolution, marking the transition to more sophisticated staging and thematic depth. The Guardian described the track as part of Billion Dollar Babies, the album representing the band's creative peak and solidifying their status as rock's premier provocateurs.[22] Later analyses credit its vaudevillian introduction with influencing the genre's emphasis on performance art over raw aggression.[23]
Live performances
Alice Cooper frequently incorporated "Hello Hooray" as the opening song for his concerts starting with the 1973 Billion Dollar Babies tour, a practice that continued through subsequent decades including tours in the 2010s and 2020s.[24][25][26]The song's live renditions emphasized theatrical spectacle, with pyrotechnics exploding across the stage to herald Cooper's entrance as the show began, often blending into horror-themed elements like guillotines and fake executions that defined his performances.[27] Crowd interaction was central, as the lyrics directly addressed the audience, building excitement amid the chaotic energy of the shock rock presentation. A notable incident occurred during the December 13, 1973, show at Toledo Sports Arena, where the performance of "Hello Hooray" was interrupted after its opening bars by thrown objects, sparking a riot that limited the concert to just two songs and injured crew members.[28][29]Live versions of "Hello Hooray" have been documented in audio and video releases, including a 1973 recording from the Billion Dollar Babies tour featured on the album's 2023 50th anniversary deluxe edition, capturing the song's role in setting the tone for Cooper's elaborate stage shows.
Personnel
The personnel for Alice Cooper's studio recording of "Hello Hooray," the opening track on the 1973 album Billion Dollar Babies, consisted of the core Alice Cooper Group lineup. Vincent Furnier provided lead vocals and harmonica, Michael Bruce handled rhythm guitar and keyboards (contributing to the song's theatrical arrangement), Glen Buxton played lead guitar, Dennis Dunaway performed on bass, and Neal Smith was on drums.[17][30]The track was produced by Bob Ezrin, who also contributed to the arrangements alongside the band, emphasizing the song's dramatic, Broadway-inspired intro and structure. No additional guest musicians are credited specifically to "Hello Hooray."[17]
Other cover versions
Meg Christian version
Meg Christian recorded a cover of "Hello Hooray" as the opening track on her debut album I Know You Know, released in 1974 by Olivia Records, the pioneering lesbian-owned label she co-founded to promote women's music.[31][32] The version adopts a feminist folk style with an acoustic, singer-songwriter arrangement centered on Christian's classical guitar playing, beginning delicately before building to a sweeping melodic chorus that conveys communal uplift.[33][34]Retaining the original structure by Rolf Kempf—first popularized in folk roots by Judy Collins—Christian's adaptation includes added original lyrics at the end, such as "So we will sit and we'll act so prim / And we will laugh / After all these years of crying," which reinterpret the song as an empowering anthem of joy and solidarity in response to oppression.[33][35] This slower, intimate tempo and escalating vocal delivery highlight themes of lesbian community healing and laughter as acts of resistance, aligning with the era's separatist women's music movement.[33]As a leading figure in the women's music scene of the 1970s, Christian's rendition on I Know You Know—Olivia's first full-length release—exemplifies her role in fostering feminist identity through music performed in dedicated venues, emphasizing empowerment and collective bonds over individual performance.[33][32]
Subsequent covers
Following Meg Christian's 1974 interpretation, numerous artists have covered "Hello Hooray," adapting it to diverse styles from industrial rock to chiptune, often highlighting its theatrical energy.[36]In the early 1970s, prior to widespread recognition but contemporaneous with Alice Cooper's version, covers emerged from lesser-known acts, including an unverified rendition by the British group The Chartbusters in February 1973, a studio recording by Windmill Studio Artists that same month, and a German-language adaptation by The Hiltonaires in 1973.[36][37][38]Later interpretations include a soulful take by Phe Cullen on her self-titled 2002 album, emphasizing vocal depth over rock intensity.[35][39] In 2005, the horror punk band Frankenstein Drag Queens From Planet 13 delivered a high-octane, punk-infused version on their box setLittle Box of Horrors, capturing the song's chaotic spirit.[36][40]The track appeared in a collaborative tribute in 2010, with Richard Barone featuring Frankenstein 3000 on Remember the Coop! A Tribute to Alice Cooper's Killer Classics, blending indie rock with electronic elements.[41][42] Industrial rock project Pig offered a gritty, noise-driven cover on their 1993 EP Hello Hooray.[43] In 2014, Canadian indie rock band Fast Romantics performed an upbeat version for the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame induction of the song.[1] More recent adaptations feature Berzon's hard rock rendition on the 2016 tribute album Billion Dollar Babies: A Tribute to Alice Cooper's Greatest Hits, and an instrumental chiptune arrangement by 8 Bit Arcade in 2020 on The Ultimate Alice Cooper, reimagining it through retro video game sounds.[37][44][45]