skol asylum
Footballguy
After a second listen, the Stone Cold song may be a little familiar.
Good question, although I wouldn't shed a tear over it.@Anarchy99 - what's the eligibility status of people like Paul Carrack?
This thread won't end without him?Good question, although I wouldn't shed a tear over it.
I guess it depends on how long this goes on.I'm tempted to say no.
Small Town Boy is probably one of the most poignant videos of the video era. Good tune - Somerville had some vocal range.Small Town Boy was the most popular number from the Bronski Beat. All of Somerville's work fits the time period with heavy synth and keyboards and all with pretty much semi-alternative dance elements. I think either people like that sound or they don't with not many people falling in the middle.
Carrack had 4 Top 40 singles on his own, so the stuff about being in a band is irrelevant. Squeeze had 7 Top 4 songs. So not a candidate no matter how you slice it.@Anarchy99 - what's the eligibility status of people like Paul Carrack?
Seems like he'd fit under this clause:
- A song by an artist that released a song away from their primary band as a solo artist is considered as a song eligible on its own right.
But, he's been with so many bands with so many hits, it's hard to say he had a "primary" band...
Used to love the way Pat Summerall previewed it as "Murder......She Wrote" at the end of the NFL on CBS late Sunday games.used to watch Murder, She Wrote when it was a new show.
I had forgotten about those other 3. So I listened to them just now. Now I remember why I forgot them.Carrack had 4 Top 40 singles on his own
If I'm not mistaken, MTV at the time was playing just about anything that had a video attached. So video play did not always equal radio play.These 3 surprised me as non qualifiers. All 3 had heavy play on MTV back in the day, I figured they were bigger hits chart wise. Had you not listed their spots I would have guessed Mexican Radio would have been the lowest of the 3, yet it's the highest. Shows what I know. Lol.
Cool thread, I'll be following.
A lot of these songs will be for music junkies and not for the masses. There will be a bunch that you will know down the road . . . but if you weren't big into music at the time you probably won't know many. You were only 6 when the 80's started and the huge majority of these songs are never played anymore. I would guess you may know more of the songs from later in the decade.45, born December 1973.
The hot 100 factors in radio play and sales...video play may have been a gap in the formula...If I'm not mistaken, MTV at the time was playing just about anything that had a video attached. So video play did not always equal radio play.
The way that Billboard has ranked songs has changed many times over the years. They have considered and incorporated sales figures, air play, downloads, and now even streaming. I believe they now consider something like "album sale equivalents" on the album chart. Bottom line, the goal posts have always kept moving.If I'm not mistaken, MTV at the time was playing just about anything that had a video attached. So video play did not always equal radio play.
Be sure to join us next week for the next episode of Great Moments In Unfortunate Typos.Anarchy, these stories are as good as - or better than - the dongs!
FBI - hah!
Good times.![]()
Be sure to join us next week for the next episode of Great Moments In Unfortunate Typos.
Joyce is still singing that funky rock with Mother's Finest. They still tour and have a loyal following around the southeast, but what is crazy is the huge following they still have in Europe. Good for them.@simey Bat Signal
This record was a typical mid-80s soul ballad. It's not better or worse than most of the others, except it had better singers than almost all of them.
Anarchy posted a bit about Joyce - she was one of the late '70s best rock singers.
These were the 2 biggest for me.- Atari Gaming System
- Pitfall Video Game For Atari
You and my wife both. We had a bunch of gaming systems over the years for all our kids, including the Nintendo Gamecube. Pitfall was her favorite game back in the day, so I had to get a second Gamecube to play in our bedroom when she found out they had a Pitfall game. I became a gaming widow for a while. The game play was totally different, but I believe that in the game you unlock the original game to play.These were the 2 biggest for me.
I was a few years younger than you (High school freshman in '83) - so, Atari was perfectly timed for my childhood.
Pitfall was owned by one of my rich friends - he had every game as soon as it came out - and I thought it was the bomb!
The alligators - rope swings - pits (duh) and other obstacles seemed to be from the future - such smokin' graphics! Ha!
I finally got the game for Christmas and proceeded to clobber my little sis over and over until she snapped - stomped the console - which then snapped itself - NOOOOO - thus, no more Pitfall until Easter, when we got a replacement.
Such a holy day it was!
Good times.
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I was going to say that story can't be real, but if these tracks can hit the top 40 anything is possible.I just want to get this one out of the way because I got a whole lot of nothing.
GET WET - Just So Lonely (#39 - 5/30/1981)
How well I remember it: 3 (I remember the chorus.)
How well I liked it then: 2 (Didn't like the chorus.)
How well I like it now: 2 (The chorus sounds like a skipping CD playing.)
As I already indicated, they put out one album that was produced by Billy Joel's producer Phil Ramone and features Billy Joel's drummer Liberty Devitto. This song sounds a little similar to Uptown Girl, which would come out 2 years later. Not sure where the Joel connection came from.
The only other info I could find is that the singer from Get Wet at some point met Miles Copeland, brother of The Police's Stewart Copeland, which apparently led to her meeting Sting, which may have led to Get Wet recording and releasing their only album. But there is so little intel available that I should probably just fabricate the back story on the band and it would be way more interesting.
Even the news of the day was severely lacking. The only thing noteworthy was that the CDC reported the first handful of cases of AIDS. Even the movie releases that week were putrid: Possession, Dead And Buried, Polyester, and The Nights The Lights Went Out In Georgia. I never heard of any of them. Raiders Of The Lost Ark would come out two weeks later, so there is that.
One of Tim's favorite non one hit wonder songs was number one that week . . . Bette Davis Eyes. At least the album chart had some decent selections. The Top 5 albums were Hi Infidelity by REO Speedwagon, Paradise Theater by Styx, Dirty Deeds Done Dirt Cheap by AC/DC, Arc Of A Diver by Steve Winwood, and Moving Pictures by Rush. If only we could get a Top 5 album chart like that in 2019.
To try to rightsize this stinker of a post, I will dip into a crazy high school story since I was a freshman at the time. I had a wood shop class with perhaps the dumbest individual I have ever met. I mean, this guy was an insult to stupid people. The guy was a stickler on safety. Everyone had to do everything in accordance with strict safety procedures and follow all safety protocols. In one of his safety demonstrations on how to properly utilize a cross cut saw, he showed kids how NOT to hold the wood when cutting it . . . and promptly cut his thumb off.
They put his thumb in ice and rushed him to the hospital, and they were able to successfully reattach his thumb, but he missed the rest of the semester. At this point, I would have only classified him as dumb. But that was just the beginning. When he came back to teach weeks later, he was explaining to people how he accidentally cut his thumb off and gave a blow by blow demonstration . . . AND DID IT AGAIN! So they had to stick his thumb in ice and rush him to the hospital again. The second time didn't go as well as the first, and he only got limited use and mobility of his thumb the second time. Needless to say, the school didn't keep him around to see if he could post the trifecta.
Played the crap out of Pitfall, too, but it was so long and tedious running through all those screens.Pitfall was owned by one of my rich friends - he had every game as soon as it came out - and I thought it was the bomb!
@TakiToki has the Adventure avatar.Played the crap out of Pitfall, too, but it was so long and tedious running through all those screens.
Was also a big Adventure fan. There's one avatar around here with one of those dragons from the game - the ones that look like oversized ducks. I remember when word got out that you could go into one of the castles and pick up a dot and drag it out, revealing the code. We thought we had split the atom or something.
Correct according to this@TakiToki has the Adventure avatar.
Regarding the secret - iirc, that was the invention of the "Easter egg" in vid games - could be wrong tho - no research.
Good times.![]()
Fun vid - good info - thnx, Rove
I really liked this at the time, but completely forgot about it until I clicked onto ya linky.POINT BLANK - Nicole (#39 - 9/5/1981)
I remember this song, but once again, the story accompanying it is better than the music.
Did you figure out an automated way of doing this, or did you literally have to scrape each week's chart manually? I'm looking to do something on a similar theme in the future, but there's no way I have the patience for the latter.I reviewed EVERY official Billboard Weekly Hot 100 list (520 of them in total) TWICE, so the list should be pretty accurate (although if I missed any please let me know). There are 272 artists / songs that qualify (I may review the list again, but that is the number at present).
I did it manually but in reviewing the charts it was pretty easy to rule out a lot of the performers pretty quickly. Any that were on the cusp I just clicked on the artist's name and their chart history would pop up. No doubt about it, it was time consuming. It does require having some time to kill.Did you figure out an automated way of doing this, or did you literally have to scrape each week's chart manually? I'm looking to do something on a similar theme in the future, but there's no way I have the patience for the latter.
What source to you use for easy chart lookup? I used to use Allmusic, but they seemed to make their site more convoluted.Anarchy99 said:Any that were on the cusp I just clicked on the artist's name and their chart history would pop up.
Remember this one well - good tune.