50 Years Ago This Week
Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
Leaving the chart:
Re-entering the chart:
"Superstar," Murray Head w/ The Trinidad Singers
(First charted Jan. 31, 1970, reaching #74 US; reaches #60 US this run)
New on the chart:
"Let Your Love Go," Bread
(#28 US)
"One Bad Apple," The Osmonds
(#1 US the weeks of Feb. 13 through Mar. 13, 1971; #37 AC; #6 R&B; #51 UK)
And new on the boob tube:
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55 Years Ago Year-End Blowout Special
From the week ending December 25, 1965:
"I Ain't Gonna Eat My Heart Out Anymore," The Young Rascals
(#52 US)
"It Was a Very Good Year," Frank Sinatra
(#28 US; #1 AC)
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Wiki said:December 27 – President of India V. V. Giri declares new elections.
December 28
December 29 – U.S. President Richard Nixon signs into law the Occupational Safety and Health Act.
- Burgos Trial: Three Basques are sentenced to death, twelve others sentenced to imprisonment (terms from 12 to 62 years), and one is released.
- The suspected killers of Pierre Laporte, Jacques and Paul Rose and Francis Sunard, are arrested near Montreal.
December 30 – In Viscaya in the Basque country of Spain, 15,000 go on strike in protest at the Burgos trial death sentences. Francisco Franco commutes the sentences to 30 years in prison.
December 31 – Paul McCartney sues in Britain to dissolve The Beatles' legal partnership.
January 2
- Ibrox disaster: A stairway crush at the Rangers vs. Celtic football match in Glasgow, Scotland, kills 66.
- A ban on radio and television cigarette advertisements goes into effect in the United States.
Selections from Billboard's Hot 100 for the week:
1. "My Sweet Lord" / "Isn't It a Pity", George Harrison
2. "One Less Bell to Answer," The 5th Dimension
3. "Knock Three Times," Dawn
4. "The Tears of a Clown," Smokey Robinson & The Miracles
5. "Black Magic Woman," Santana
6. "I Think I Love You," The Partridge Family
7. "Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?," Chicago
8. "Stoned Love," The Supremes
9. "Domino," Van Morrison
10. "Gypsy Woman," Brian Hyland
11. "For the Good Times," Ray Price
12. "Stoney End," Barbra Streisand
13. "No Matter What," Badfinger
14. "Pay to the Piper," Chairmen of the Board
15. "It's Impossible," Perry Como
16. "River Deep - Mountain High," The Supremes & Four Tops
17. "Groove Me," King Floyd
18. "Rose Garden," Lynn Anderson
19. "5-10-15-20 (25-30 Years of Love)," The Presidents
20. "One Man Band," Three Dog Night
21. "Lonely Days," Bee Gees
22. "He Aint Heavy...He's My Brother," Neil Diamond
23. "If I Were Your Woman," Gladys Knight & The Pips
24. "Immigrant Song," Led Zeppelin
25. "Your Song," Elton John
26. "Be My Baby," Andy Kim
27. "Love the One You're With," Stephen Stills
28. "We've Only Just Begun," Carpenters
29. "I'll Be There," Jackson 5
32. "We Gotta Get You a Woman," Runt
33. "Stop the War Now," Edwin Starr
34. "(Don't Worry) If There's a Hell Below We're All Going to Go," Curtis Mayfield
35. "I Really Don't Want to Know" / "There Goes My Everything", Elvis Presley
36. "Born to Wander," Rare Earth
39. "After Midnight," Eric Clapton
40. "Mr. Bojangles," Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
46. "Only Love Can Break Your Heart," Neil Young
47. "Remember Me," Diana Ross
48. "Amazing Grace," Judy Collins
50. "Amos Moses," Jerry Reed
58. "Watching Scotty Grow," Bobby Goldsboro
61. "Paranoid," Black Sabbath
62. "I Hear You Knocking," Dave Edmunds
65. "Temptation Eyes," The Grass Roots
71. "If You Could Read My Mind," Gordon Lightfoot
76. "(Do the) Push and Pull (Part 1)," Rufus Thomas
78. "One Bad Apple," The Osmonds
79. "Let Your Love Go," Bread
82. "Superstar," Murray Head w/ The Trinidad Singers
91. "Sweet Mary," Wadsworth Mansion
Leaving the chart:
- "Fire and Rain," James Taylor (16 weeks)
- "Heaven Help Us All," Stevie Wonder (11 weeks)
- "Montego Bay," Bobby Bloom (16 weeks)
- "Share the Land," The Guess Who (10 weeks)
- "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me" / "Patch It Up", Elvis Presley (10 weeks)
Re-entering the chart:
"Superstar," Murray Head w/ The Trinidad Singers
(First charted Jan. 31, 1970, reaching #74 US; reaches #60 US this run)
New on the chart:
"Let Your Love Go," Bread
(#28 US)
"One Bad Apple," The Osmonds
(#1 US the weeks of Feb. 13 through Mar. 13, 1971; #37 AC; #6 R&B; #51 UK)
And new on the boob tube:
- Hogan's Heroes, "The Dropouts"
- The Ed Sullivan Show, Season 23, episode 15
- Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In, Season 4, episode 15
- Hawaii Five-O, "Paniolo"
- Ironside, "Blackout"
- The Brady Bunch, "The Impractical Joker"
- The Partridge Family, "The Red Woodloe Story"
- That Girl, "That Script"
- Mission: Impossible, "Takeover"
- Adam-12, "Log 175: Con Artists"
- The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "Howard's Girl"
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55 Years Ago Year-End Blowout Special
From the week ending December 25, 1965:
"I Ain't Gonna Eat My Heart Out Anymore," The Young Rascals
(#52 US)
"It Was a Very Good Year," Frank Sinatra
(#28 US; #1 AC)
_______
What J.T.B. said. And FWIW, what I played (and own) is the album version; the single version was edited down and had faux-live audience noise added.Interesting. I've never heard this, and had no idea Herb Albert was involved in Zorba the Greek
Sure you've heard it before...it was called "1-2-3" then.Never heard this before either. I guess it's a song.
I find this one interesting in that it has a little more of a garage rock sound to my ear than their future hit "Western Union".Also meh.
Not to my ear. It's very now...give or take 55 years.Now we're getting somewhere. Ironically, after my recent comment, this sounds like the 50s.
A bit more understandable, as it's a cover of a doo-wop song...which was from the early '60s, but early '60s doo-wop is commonly lumped in with '50s music. It's interesting to hear the Beach Boys put out something like this after a release from the Pet Sounds sessions, but there's a story behind that...Probably my favorite Beach Boys song, after "Sloop John B." Also sounds like the 50s.
Also found this tidbit:Wiki said:Capitol rush-released "Barbara Ann" as a single after the relatively poor performance of the group's previous disc, "The Little Girl I Once Knew".
Dean Torrence of Jan and Dean is featured on lead vocals along with Brian Wilson. Torrence is not credited on the album, but Carl Wilson is heard saying "Thanks, Dean" at the song's conclusion.
Sounds like the one you got is full scale; mine is maybe half scale; the trunk is under a foot high. I used to put it on top of the TV.RJDiogenes said:I got it for Mom last year when her big tree died. I thought she might use it as her main tree rather than get a new big one, since she's, y'know, 80 years old. But no, she thinks she's still 70.
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