Hi Mike. Yes it’s a great song. I wouldn’t worry about the title though as there are hundreds of different songs out there with the same title. If the name fits, go with it!
1. ‘The Power of Love’
Three different songs with this title, by Frankie Goes to Hollywood, Huey Lewis and Jennifer Rush, were in the charts in the same year, 1985.
2. ‘Dagenham Dave’
The Stranglers, 1977; Morrissey, 1995.
3. ‘God Is A DJ’
Faithless, 1998; Pink, 2003.
4. ‘Stockholm Syndrome’
Muse and Blink-182 both released albums in 2003 with “Stockholm Syndrome” at track five, and “Interlude” at track seven, notes Lewis James Brown.
5. ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls’
Metallica, 1985; the Bee Gees, 1993.
6. ‘God Save the Queen’
The Sex Pistols, 1977, “and the other one”, offers Fiona Laird.
7. ‘Absolute Beginners’
The Jam, 1981; David Bowie, 1986. Nominated by Devil’s Advocate.
8. ‘Come Together’
MC5, February 1969; The Beatles, October 1969; Blur, 1991; Primal Scream, 1991; Spiritualized, 1998. Nominated by Richard.
9. ‘Stairway to Heaven’
Neil Sedaka, 1960; Led Zeppelin, 1971; The O’Jays, 1976 (B-side of “Livin’ for the Weekend”).
10. ‘Who’s that Girl?’
Eurythmics, 1983; Madonna, 1987. With thanks to John Preston.
As for what they had in common with the Beatles I’m not sure. However, their second single release was ‘I Need You’, which was their own song, not the George Harrison song from the ‘Help’ album. George Martin remixed the studio recording for inclusion on History: America’s Greatest Hits (1975)
Their first album America (1971) was recorded at Trident Studios in London. Although the trio initially planned to record the album in a similar manner to The Beatles’ Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Samwell (their producer), convinced them to perfect their acoustic style instead.