I don't think having a title in the lyrics is really all that unique. If you're looking for something a little different, try my "Title NOT in the lyrics" quiz - http://www.jetpunk.com/user-quizzes/5367/title-not-in-the-lyrics
I was glad to see the brilliant Roger Miller here. He often doesn't get the credit he deserves. I loved it when I heard his "Oo de Lally" song from Disney's Robin Hood on a cell phone commercial a couple of years ago. ("Robin Hood and Little John walkin' through the forest...") We always snapped our fingers, whistled, laughed out loud, or at the least smiled when a Roger Miller song came on the radio, even when the subject matter was serious, as in "Dang Me."
I suspect that a lot of people know Iron Man, but wouldn't necessarily recognize the lyrics. A lot of other songs on this quiz have clearer vocals. Still, I'm a bit surprised it's the least guessed.
The Divinyls one is a bit misleading. It has a / in the middle of a sentence that leads into the song title, which would make it all one line in my opinion.
That's the only version. It's a Justin Bieber song, so they can't use the term that obviously belongs there or they couldn't market it to 13-year-old girls.
a rock band
And 15% for American Woman, one of the most widely known songs across generations and musical tastes.
Those numbers are routinely beat by questions like the national flower of Tannu Tuva or for an 18-letter word describing melancholy Angolan penguins.
Did dreadfully on this one.
And yes, I know it's how they band wrote it, doesn't make it right, even superstars can be wrong....