Osaurus
Footballguy
If you can call them that.Nipsey said:I guess I forgot Ace of Base had a bunch of songs.
If you can call them that.Nipsey said:I guess I forgot Ace of Base had a bunch of songs.
Desperate but not serioustimschochet said:Halfway done! Now it’s about to get serious.
"Serious"? Hint solved.timschochet said:Halfway done! Now it’s about to get serious.
Up next is a song about a guy who’s been the subject matter of a few songs by a different, much more famous artist.
LolAt the halfway point, here's the updated list of folks that did not have only one Billboard Top 40 song (they had more than or less than 1).
Kim Carnes - 11
The Tokens - 5
The Archies - 4
Quarterflash - 3
The New Seekers - 3
Rupert Holmes - 3
Katrina & The Waves - 3
The Dream Academy 3
Robert John - 3
Alannah Myles - 2
Tal Bachman - 2
Michael Sembello - 2
Brownsville Station - 2
Men Without Hats - 2
Jay Ferguson - 2
The Cardigans - 2
Exile - 2
A-Ha - 2
The Waitresses - 0
Natalie Imbriglia - 0
The "ooga chucka" part was copied from Jonathan King's 1971 version of the song, which King had copied from a reggae song.Tin Cup said:It is arguably the best use of “ooga chaka ooga ooga”of any song written, recorded, performed, sold, bought, or processed in the 20th century.timschochet said:Sorry I considered Blue Swede, just don’t think enough of that tune.
Welcome to the club. Seats in the grandstand are full, but the benches in the bleachers still have some open seats. Grab one quick... more will be joining us quickly as we move into the top50.Nipsey said:I guess this thread has passed me by.
You just put Ace of Base and Roxette in the same sentence? You’re dead to me.cap'n grunge said:Catchy tunes. Them and Roxette.
Even worse - he put Van Morrison and Roxette in the same sentence.You just put Ace of Base and Roxette in the same sentence? You’re dead to me.
Roxette is better.You just put Ace of Base and Roxette in the same sentence? You’re dead to me.
I did?Even worse - he put Van Morrison and Roxette in the same sentence.
Reminds me a of a band from the period, name starts with an 'R'. Actually, it starts with The.Jeopardy - Greg Kihn Band
Damn, I saw the name Greg Kihn and filled in the rest with Breakup Song.Breakup Song down?
They have more songs than that.Sidebar: List your favorite two-hit wonders.
Sweet, what does mine say?
Ballroom Blitz
Love is Like Oxygen
The problem for any of these discussions is that people mostly only consider the songs that still get played today. Sweet had five Billboard Top 20 songs. A lot of performers had more to their catalogs than the one or two songs that survived 40 years later.Sidebar: List your favorite two-hit wonders.
Sweet, what does mine say?
Ballroom Blitz
Love is Like Oxygen
Night Ranger SyndromeThe problem for any of these discussions is that people mostly only consider the songs that still get played today. Sweet had five Billboard Top 20 songs. A lot of performers had more to their catalogs than the one or two songs that survived 40 years later.
More a forgotten spot that a blind spot. Great song: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBdFA6sI6-8They have more songs than that.
Fox on the Run
Little Willy
I loved this scene. Gale was a great character.
Taste is subjective but this song isn't good. It is so so boring. Not sure how it ended at 50 compared to a lot of the songs that were already mentioned.50. “Major Tom (Coming Home)” Peter Schilling (1983)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=OMDbX1zksgI
Always loved this song, but Breaking Bad messed it up for me. Very disturbing scene. Still love it though.
How about I subjectively punch it in the face?Taste is subjective but this song isn't good. It is so so boring. Not sure how it ended at 50 compared to a lot of the songs that were already mentioned.
Gale’s got nothing on you.
Ace Frehley!Up next: part of the greatest run, in terms of popular success, of any songwriter in history.
Jim Steinman?Up next: part of the greatest run, in terms of popular success, of any songwriter in history.
I can’t think of anyone Jim Steinman wrote for that didn’t have at least 2 or more hits.Jim Steinman?
http://www.funnysigns.net/major-toms-ground-control/50. “Major Tom (Coming Home)” Peter Schilling (1983)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=OMDbX1zksgI
Always loved this song, but Breaking Bad messed it up for me. Very disturbing scene. Still love it though.
I’m appalled that you felt the need to clarify that. In this scenario, the Ace of Base advocates would be the Flat Earth Society.Roxette is better.
This sign got a 3.6/5 rating? 1.4/5 of those voting need to be banned from the Internet.
For those who might have missed the hint, and because I’m now 100% confident I’m not spotlighting:Mr. Irrelevant said:Based on your selections so far I'm confident this isn't it - but, if this were my list, the song in question would definitely feature a fiddle.
What in the absolute ####?zamboni said:We've brought this film up in other threads - that church on fire scene always gave me the willies.
I'm assuming everyone here has seen this.timschochet said:56. “Take On Me”- A-ha (1984)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=djV11Xbc914
I never loved this song while it was a hit. The video was always more interesting to me than the song. Later on it began to grow on me.
It’s certainly one of THE defining songs of the 1980s and the MTV video era, no question.
The Bee Gees were to Billboard what Barry Bonds was to MLB. Set a bunch of records that will never be broken; kept it in the popular zeitgeist; in retrospect hugely embarrassing.49. “Emotion” Samantha Sang (1977)
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zPwpVJ-eIgg
Maurice Gibbs, talking about the years 1977-1978 once said, “we weren’t on the charts; we were the charts.” This was certainly true of his brother Barry; no artist, not even the Beatles, has ever been this dominant: 4 #1 hits for The Bee Gees, along with 3 more Bee Gees songs in the top ten, 3 #1 hits for youngest brother Andy Gibb, a #1 hit for Yvonne Elliman, and a #3 hit for fellow Australian Samantha Sang. All written by Barry Gibb. All within a single year. Never done before, and will never be repeated either.
“Emotion” fits right in, its a quintessential Bee Gees disco era song, though sung by somebody else with the Gibbs backing her. It’s exquisite pop writing and professional orchestration, and the harmonies are terrific. Gibb offered Sang more songs but she turned him down; she wanted to be thought of as her own performer and not part of the “Bee Gees” collective. But without Barry at the helm, she quickly faded into obscurity.