• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

KEARTH 101 (it's only 80's if we say so)

With the advent of the recent technology, I don't know why anyone would bother to make a request. I can literally get my song on the internet on either my computer or smartphone faster than it would take me find the number to even call a station. And for 60 seconds of my time and 99 cents, I can own the song for the rest of my life in downloaded digital format.

I am looking for the first station to man up and be completely honest with its audience and simply disconnect the phone - permanently. Jack comes close by admitting they only play their list (One of their old liners the guy read said "Arrow 93 took requests and look where it got them"), but they still have a listener line to call the station.
 
"Physical" was a huge song in late 1981, #1 for 10 agonizing weeks (I say agonizing, because it effectively block Foreigner's "Waiting For a Girl Like You" a much better song, from reaching the top for 10 weeks!)

Late 1980/early 1981. I posted that before you started, oldies. Please pay attention.
 
Last edited:
With the advent of the recent technology, I don't know why anyone would bother to make a request.

Depends on the goal. If you want to just hear a song, you're right. If, however, you want a call & response thing, hearing your voice on the radio, that's different.

For me, I use the request line for the stories I get from the listeners. I'm listening for a personal reason why they like a certain song. I get thousands of great stories, and those stories are fun for other listeners to hear.
 
Of course they played your song... you may, depending on the time of day, have been half of the audience!

Hey, it's ok...
It's still the better station, musically.

Have you checked out WOGL yet? :D
 
The A-Z on WOGL, while it comes up over holiday weekends, contains songs not usually played on a regular basis. Wouldn't that be considered specialty programming? What are the stats on tuneouts on WOGL when an unfamiliar song comes up during A-Z?
 
The A-Z on WOGL, while it comes up over holiday weekends, contains songs not usually played on a regular basis. Wouldn't that be considered specialty programming? What are the stats on tuneouts on WOGL when an unfamiliar song comes up during A-Z?

They've been doing this for years over Memorial Day weekend and actually for the week leading up to Memorial Day as well.

If there were substantial tune out, surely they would have cancelled it over time, but they have not. It's a tradition that Philly does every year, sort of what KRTH used to do back in the 80's.

Specialty programming has it's highlights also. You get to hear songs rarely played, such as Neil & Barbra singing "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" followed by "You Don't Have to Be A Star". Btw, Debby Boone should be coming up soon.
 
Last edited:
If there were substantial tune out, surely they would have cancelled it over time, but they have not. It's a tradition that Philly does every year, sort of what KRTH used to do back in the 80's.

I think this is something unique to Philly. I lived and worked there at one time, and I found that there weren't a lot of transients there. People lived in the same neighborhood their whole life. It's a town that's big on tradition. Frank Sinatra has been dead for over 17 years, and you can still hear Sounds Of Sinatra hosted by Sid Mark every Sunday morning on the radio. It's tradition! It's not as popular as it once was, but it's tradition. LA is a very different kind of town.
 
I think this is something unique to Philly. I lived and worked there at one time, and I found that there weren't a lot of transients there. People lived in the same neighborhood their whole life. It's a town that's big on tradition. Frank Sinatra has been dead for over 17 years, and you can still hear Sounds Of Sinatra hosted by Sid Mark every Sunday morning on the radio. It's tradition! It's not as popular as it once was, but it's tradition. LA is a very different kind of town.

Probably why WDRC-FM did the same sort of thing in Hartford. Not many transients in this part of Connecticut compared to Fairfield County, where the New York commuters live.
 
I'm lobbying to get semoochie's "manure" comment included in the next edition of Bartlett's Book Of Familiar Quotations. What a great line! Here is what KRTH was playing regularly in April. This list excludes a few mid-1960s songs which were played only a few times.

ABC - Jackson 5 (1/1970)
Always & Forever - Heatwave (18/1978)
Always Something There To Remind Me - Naked Eyes (8/1983)
American Pie - Don McLean (1/1971)
Another Brick In The Wall - Pink Floyd (1/1980)
Another One Bites The Dust - Queen (1/1980)
Any Way You Want It - Journey (23/1980)
Babe - Styx (1/1979)
Baby Hold On - Eddie Money (11/1978)
Baby I Love Your Way - Peter Frampton (12/1976)
Back On The Chain Gang - Pretenders (5/1982)
Bad Moon Rising - Creedence Clearwater Revival (2/1969)
Baker Street - Gerry Rafferty (2/1978)
Band On The Run - Paul McCartney/Wings (1/1974)
Beast Of Burden - Rolling Stones (8/1978)
Beat It - Michael Jackson (1/1983)
Bennie & The Jets - Elton John (1/1974)
Best Of My Love - Emotions (1/1977)
Bette Davis Eyes - Kim Carnes (1/1981)
Billie Jean - Michael Jackson (1/1983)
Black Magic Woman - Santana (4/1970)
Black Or White - Michael Jackson (1/1991)
Black Water - Doobie Bros (1/1974)
Blinded By The Light - Manfred Mann's Earth Band (1/1976)
Bohemian Rhapsody - Queen (9/1976, 2/1992)
Borderline - Madonna (10/1984)
Brass In Pocket - Pretenders (14/1980)
Brick House - Commodores (5/1977)
Broken Wings - Mr Mister (1/1985)
Brown Eyed Girl - Van Morrison (10/1967)
Build Me Up Buttercup - Foundations (3/1969)
Bust A Move - Young MC (7/1989)
Call Me - Blondie (1/1980)
Carry On Wayward Son - Kansas (11/1976)
Centerfold - J Geils Band (1/1981)
Cold As Ice - Foreigner (6/1977)
Come On Eileen - Dexys Midnight Runners (1/1983)
Crazy For You - Madonna (1/1985)
Crazy Little Thing Called Love - Queen (1/1979)
Crocodile Rock - Elton John (1/1972)
Da Ya Think I'm Sexy - Rod Stewart (1/1978)
Dance With Me - Orleans (6/1975)
Dancing In The Dark - Bruce Springsteen (2/1984)
Dancing With Myself - Billy Idol (--/1981, 102/1983)
Danger Zone - Kenny Loggins (2/1986)
Daniel - Elton John (2/1973)
De Do Do Do De Da Da Da - Police (10/1980)
December 1963 - Four Seasons (1/1975, 14/1994)
Dirty Laundry - Don Henley (3/1982)
Do It Again - Steely Dan (6/1972)
Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is - Chicago (7/1970)
Domino - Van Morrison (9/1970)
Don't Bring Me Down - Electric Light Orchestra (4/1979)
Don’t Do Me Like That - Tom Petty/Heartbreakers (10/1979)
Don’t Go Breaking My Heart - Elton John/Kiki Dee (1/1976)
Don't Let The Sun Go Down On Me - Elton John (2/1974)
Don’t Stand So Close To Me - Police (10/1981)
Don't Stop - Fleetwood Mac (3/1977)
Don't Stop Believin' - Journey (9/1981)
Don't Stop Til You Get Enough - Michael Jackson (1/1979)
Don’t You Forget About Me - Simple Minds (1/1985)
Don’t You Want Me - Human League (1/1982)
Double Vision - Foreigner (2/1978)
Down On The Corner - Creedence Clearwater Revival (3/1969)
Down Under - Men At Work (1/1982)
Dream On - Aerosmith (59/1973, 6/1976)
Dreams - Fleetwood Mac (1/1977)
Dress You Up - Madonna (5/1985)
Drift Away - Dobie Gray (5/1973)
Dust In The Wind - Kansas (6/1978)
Easy Lover - Philip Bailey/Phil Collins (2/1984)
Edge Of Seventeen - Stevie Nicks (11/1982)
Everlasting Love - Carl Carlton (6/1974)
Every Breath You Take - Police (1/1983)
Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic - Police (3/1981)
Everybody Wants To Rule The World - Tears For Fears (1/1985)
Everything She Wants - Wham (1/1985)
Evil Ways - Santana (9/1970)
Evil Woman - Electric Light Orchestra (10/1975)
Eye Of The Tiger - Survivor (1/1982)
Faith - George Michael (1/1987)
Faithfully - Journey (12/1983)
Fantasy - Earth Wind & Fire (32/1978)
Feelin' Stronger Every Day - Chicago (10/1973)
Feels Like The First Time - Foreigner (4/1977)
Fly Like An Eagle - Steve Miller Band (2/1976)
Fooled Around & Fell In Love - Elvin Bishop/Mickey Thomas (3/1976)
Free Fallin’ - Tom Petty (7/1989)
Free Ride - Edgar Winter Group (14/1973)
Funkytown - Lipps Inc (1/1980)
Get Down Tonight - KC/Sunshine Band (1/1975)
Ghostbusters - Ray Parker Jr (1/1984)
Girls Just Want To Have Fun - Cyndi Lauper (2/1983)
Give A Little Bit - Supertramp (15/1977)
Go All The Way - Raspberries (5/1972)
Go Your Own Way - Fleetwood Mac (10/1977)
Goodbye Stranger - Supertramp (15/1979)
Goodbye Yellow Brick Road - Elton John (2/1973)
Got To Be Real - Cheryl Lynn (12/1978)
Grease - Frankie Valli (1/1978)
Green River - Creedence Clearwater Revival (2/1969)
Gypsy - Fleetwood Mac (12/1982)
Have You Ever Seen The Rain - Creedence Clearwater Revival (8/1971)
Head To Toe - Lisa Lisa/Cult Jam (1/1987)
Heart & Soul - Huey Lewis/News (8/1983)
Heart Of Glass - Blondie (1/1979)
Heartbreaker - Pat Benatar (23/1979)
Heaven Is A Place On Earth - Belinda Carlisle (1/1987)
Heaven Must Be Missing An Angel - Tavares (15/1976)
Here Comes The Rain Again - Eurythmics (4/1984)
Here Comes The Sun - Beatles (LP/1969)
Here I Go Again - Whitesnake (1/1987)
Hey Jude - Beatles (1/1968)
Hey Nineteen - Steely Dan (10/1980)
Hit Me With Your Best Shot - Pat Benatar (9/1980)
Hold The Line - Toto (5/1978)
Holiday - Madonna (16/1983)
Honky Cat - Elton John (8/1972)
Honky Tonk Women - Rolling Stones (1/1969)
Hot Stuff - Donna Summer (1/1979)
Hotel California - Eagles (1/1977)
How Deep Is Your Love - Bee Gees (1/1977)
Hungry Heart - Bruce Springsteen (5/1980)
Hungry Like The Wolf - Duran Duran (3/1982)
Hurts So Good - John Cougar (2/1982)
I Can See Clearly Now - Johnny Nash (1/1972)
I Can't Go For That - Hall & Oates (1/1981)
I Do It For You - Bryan Adams (1/1991)
I Feel For You - Chaka Khan/Grandmaster Melle Mel (3/1984)
I Just Died In Your Arms - Cutting Crew (1/1987)
I Love Rock 'N Roll - Joan Jett/Blackhearts (1/1982)
I Melt With You - Modern English (78/1983)
I Ran - A Flock Of Seagulls (9/1982)
I Still Haven’t Found What I’m Looking For - U2 (1/1987)
I Wanna Be Your Lover - Prince (11/1979)
I Want To Know What Love Is - Foreigner (1/1984)
I Want You Back - Jackson 5 (1/1969)
I Want You To Want Me - Cheap Trick (7/1979)
I Will Survive - Gloria Gaynor (1/1978)
I Wish - Stevie Wonder (1/1976)
I'm Not In Love - 10cc (2/1975)
I'm Your Boogie Man - KC/Sunshine Band (1/1977)
If You Leave - Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark (4/1986)
Imagine - John Lennon (3/1971)
In The Air Tonight - Phil Collins (19/1981, 102/1984)
Instant Karma - John Lennon (3/1970)
Into The Groove - Madonna (--/1985)
Island Girl - Elton John (1/1975)
Isn't She Lovely - Stevie Wonder (LP/1976)
It Don't Come Easy - Ringo Starr/Badfinger (4/1971)
It’s Still Rock & Roll To Me - Billy Joel (1/1980)
It's Too Late - Carole King (1/1971)
Jack & Diane - John Cougar (1/1982)
Jamming - Bob Marley/Wailers (--/1977)
Jessie’s Girl - Rick Springfield (1/1981)
Jet - Paul McCartney (7/1974)
Jet Airliner - Steve Miller Band (8/1977)
Jive Talkin' - Bee Gees (1/1975)
Just What I Needed - Cars (27/1978)
Just You 'N' Me - Chicago (4/1973)
Keep It Comin' Love - KC/Sunshine Band (2/1977)
Keep On Loving You - REO Speedwagon (1/1980)
Killer Queen - Queen (12/1975)
Kiss - Prince (1/1986)
Kiss On My List - Hall & Oates (1/1981)
Knock On Wood - Amii Stewart (1/1979)
La Bamba - Los Lobos (1/1987)
Ladies Night - Kool & The Gang (8/1979)
Lady - Commodores (8/1981)
Lady - Styx (6/1974)
Lady Madonna - Beatles (4/1968)
Lean On Me - Bill Withers (1/1972)
Let It Be - Beatles (1/1970)
Let The Music Play - Shannon (8/1983)
Let’s Dance - David Bowie (1/1983)
Let's Get It On - Marvin Gaye (1/1973)
Let’s Go - Cars (14/1979)
Let's Go Crazy - Prince (1/1984)
Let's Groove - Earth Wind & Fire (3/1981)
Let's Stay Together - Al Green (1/1971)
Lies - Thompson Twins (30/1983)
Light My Fire - Doors (1/1967)
Lights - Journey (68/1978)
Like A Prayer - Madonna (1/1989)
Listen To The Music - Doobie Bros (11/1972)
Listen To What The Man Said - Wings (1/1975)
Little Red Corvette - Prince (6/1983)
Live & Let Die - Wings (2/1973)
Living For The City - Stevie Wonder (8/1973)
Living On A Prayer - Bon Jovi (1/1986)
Long Cool Woman - Hollies (2/1972)
Long Train Runnin' - Doobie Bros (8/1973)
Lookin' Out My Back Door - Creedence Clearwater Revival (2/1970)
Lotta Love - Nicolette Larson (8/1978)
Love Her Madly - Doors (11/1971)
Love Is A Battlefield - Pat Benatar (5/1983)
Love Shack - B-52’s (3/1989)
Love The One You're With - Stephen Stills (14/1970)
Love Train - O'Jays (1/1973)
Love Will Find A Way - Pablo Cruise (6/1978)
Lovin’ Touchin’ Squeezin’ - Journey (16/1979)
Low Rider - War (7/1975)
Lowdown - Boz Scaggs (3/1976)
Lucky Star - Madonna (4/1984)
Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds - Elton John (1/1974)
Lyin’ Eyes - Eagles (2/1975)
Mad About You - Belinda Carlisle (3/1986)
Maggie May - Rod Stewart (1/1971)
Magic Man - Heart (9/1976)
Major Tom - Peter Schilling (14/1983)
Maneater - Hall & Oates (1/1982)
Manic Monday - Bangles (2/1986)
Margaritaville - Jimmy Buffett (8/1977)
Maybe I’m Amazed - Paul McCartney (10/1977)
Mercy Mercy Me - Marvin Gaye (4/1971)
Miss You - Rolling Stones (1/1978)
Missing You - John Waite (1/1984)
Modern Love - David Bowie (14/1983)
Mony Mony - Billy Idol (1/1987)
Moondance - Van Morrison (LP/1970, 92/1977)
More More More - Andrea True Connection (4/1976)
More Than A Feeling - Boston (5/1976)
Mother & Child Reunion - Paul Simon (4/1972)
Movin’ Out - Billy Joel (17/1978)
My Eyes Adored You - Frankie Valli (1/1974)
My Life - Billy Joel (3/1978)
My Sharona - Knack (1/1979)
My Sweet Lord - George Harrison (1/1970)
Nasty - Janet Jackson (3/1986)
Need You Tonight - INXS (1/1987)
Never Can Say Goodbye - Jackson 5 (2/1971)
Night Fever - Bee Gees (1/1978)
Night Moves - Bob Seger (4/1976)
Nights On Broadway - Bee Gees (7/1975)
Nightshift - Commodores (3/1985)
No Matter What - Badfinger (8/1970)
No One To Depend On - Santana (36/1972)
Old Days - Chicago (5/1975)
Old Time Rock & Roll - Bob Seger (28/1979, 48/1983)
One Of These Nights - Eagles (1/1975)
One Way Or Another - Blondie (24/1979)
Only The Good Die Young - Billy Joel (24/1978)
Only The Lonely - Motels (9/1982)
Ooh Child - Five Stairsteps (8/1970)
Our House - Madness (7/1983)
Out Of Touch - Hall & Oates (1/1984)
Over My Head - Fleetwood Mac (20/1975)
Owner Of A Lonely Heart - Yes (1/1983)
Oye Como Va - Santana (13/1971)
PYT - Michael Jackson (10/1983)
Papa Was A Rollin' Stone - Temptations (1/1972)
Peaceful Easy Feeling - Eagles (22/1972)
Peg - Steely Dan/Michael McDonald (11/1977)
Photograph - Ringo Starr (1/1973)
Piano Man - Billy Joel (25/1974)
Play That Funky Music - Wild Cherry (1/1976)
Pour Some Sugar On Me - Def Leppard (2/1988)
Promises Promises - Naked Eyes (11/1983)
Proud Mary - Creedence Clearwater Revival (2/1969)
Proud Mary - Ike & Tina Turner (4/1971)
Reasons - Earth Wind & Fire (LP/1975)
Red Red Wine - UB40 (34/1984, 1/1988)
Reeling In The Years - Steely Dan (11/1973)
Relax - Frankie Goes To Hollywood (67/1984, 10/1985)
Remember The Time - Michael Jackson (3/1992)
Respect - Aretha Franklin (1/1967)
Rhiannon - Fleetwood Mac (11/1976)
Rich Girl - Hall & Oates (1/1977)
Rikki Don't Lose That Number - Steely Dan (4/1974)
Rock On - David Essex (5/1973)
Rock Steady - Whispers (7/1987)
Rock The Casbah - Clash (8/1982)
Rock With You - Michael Jackson (1/1979)
Rocket Man - Elton John (6/1972)
Rock’n Me - Steve Miller Band (1/1976)
Roll With It - Steve Winwood (1/1988)
Running On Empty - Jackson Browne (11/1978)
Sara - Starship (1/1985)
Sara Smile - Hall & Oates (4/1976)
Satisfaction - Rolling Stones (1/1965)
Saturday In The Park - Chicago (3/1972)
Say You Love Me - Fleetwood Mac (11/1976)
Separate Ways - Journey (8/1983)
September - Earth Wind & Fire (8/1978)
Sexual Healing - Marvin Gaye (3/1982)
Shake It Up - Cars (4/1981)
Shattered - Rolling Stones (31/1978)
She Drives Me Crazy - Fine Young Cannibals (1/1989)
Shout - Tears For Fears (1/1985)
Signed Sealed Delivered I'm Yours - Stevie Wonder (3/1970)
Silly Love Songs - Wings (1/1976)
Sing A Song - Earth Wind & Fire (5/1975)
Sister Golden Hair - America (1/1975)
Smoke From A Distant Fire - Sanford/Townsend Band (9/1977)
Smooth - Santana/Rob Thomas (1/1999)
So In To You - Atlanta Rhythm Section (7/1977)
Some Guys Have All The Luck - Rod Stewart (10/1984)
Some Kind Of Wonderful - Grand Funk (3/1974)
Somebody To Love - Queen (13/1976)
Somebody's Baby - Jackson Browne (7/1982)
Someone Saved My Life Tonight - Elton John (4/1975)
Spirit In The Sky - Norman Greenbaum (3/1970)
Stand By Me - Ben E King (4/1961, 9/1986)
Start Me Up - Rolling Stones (2/1981)
Stay - Jackson Browne (20/1978)
Stayin' Alive - Bee Gees (1/1976)
Stuck In The Middle With You - Stealers Wheel (6/1973)
Stuck With You - Huey Lewis/News (1/1986)
Sultans Of Swing - Dire Straits (4/1979)
Summer Of ‘69 - Bryan Adams (5/1985)
Super Freak - Rick James/Temptations (16/1981)
Superstition - Stevie Wonder (1/1972)
Sussudio - Phil Collins (1/1985)
Sweet Child O’ Mine - Guns N’ Roses (1/1988)
Sweet Dreams - Eurythmics (1/1983)
Sweet Home Alabama - Lynyrd Skynyrd (8/1974)
Tainted Love - Soft Cell (8/1982)
Take It Easy - Eagles (12/1972)
Take It On The Run - REO Speedwagon (5/1981)
Take It To The Limit - Eagles (4/1975)
Take Me Home Tonight - Eddie Money/Ronnie Spector (4/1986)
Take My Breath Away - Berlin (1/1986)
Take On Me - a-ha (1/1985)
Takin' Care Of Business - Bachman-Turner Overdrive (12/1974)
Tempted - Squeeze (49/1981)
That’s All - Genesis (6/1983)
That's The Way I Like It - KC/Sunshine Band (1/1975)
The Boys Are Back In Town - Thin Lizzy (12/1976)
The Boys Of Summer - Don Henley (5/1984)
The Cisco Kid - War (2/1973)
The Glamorous Life - Sheila E (7/1984)
The Groove Line - Heatwave (7/1978)
The Joker - Steve Miller Band (1/1973)
The Loco-Motion - Grand Funk (1/1974)
The Logical Song - Supertramp (6/1979)
The Long & Winding Road - Beatles (1/1970)
The Long Run - Eagles (8/1979)
The Longest Time - Billy Joel (14/1984)
The Love You Save - Jackson 5 (1/1970)
The Power Of Love - Huey Lewis/News (1/1985)
The Promise - When In Rome (11/1988)
The Things We Do For Love - 10cc (5/1977)
The Tide Is High - Blondie (1/1980)
The Way You Make Me Feel - Michael Jackson (1/1987)
This Is It - Kenny Loggins/Michael McDonald (11/1979)
Thriller - Michael Jackson (4/1984)
Throwing It All Away - Genesis (4/1988)
Ticket To Ride - Beatles (1/1965)
Time After Time - Cyndi Lauper (1/1984)
Tiny Dancer - Elton John (41/1972)
Too Hot - Kool & The Gang (5/1980)
Too Much Heaven - Bee Gees (1/1978)
Tragedy - Bee Gees (1/1979)
Travelin' Band - Creedence Clearwater Revival (2/1970)
Two Tickets To Paradise - Eddie Money (22/1978)
Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey - Paul & Linda McCartney (1/1971)
Unchained Melody - Righteous Bros (4/1965, 13/1990)
Under Pressure - Queen/David Bowie (29/1981)
Up Around The Bend - Creedence Clearwater Revival (4/1970)
Uptown Girl - Billy Joel (3/1983)
Urgent - Foreigner (4/1981)
Use Me - Bill Withers (2/1972)
Use Ta Be My Girl - O'Jays (4/1978)
Vacation - Go-Go’s (8/1982)
Vogue - Madonna (1/1990)
Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go - Wham (1/1984)
Walk Like An Egyptian - Bangles (1/1986)
Walk This Way - Aerosmith (--/1975, 10/1976)
Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ - Michael Jackon (5/1983)
War - Edwin Starr (1/1970)
We Belong - Pat Benatar (5/1984)
We Will Rock You/We Are The Champions - Queen (4/1977, 52/1992)
West End Girls - Pet Shop Boys (1/1986)
What A Fool Believes - Doobie Bros (1/1979)
What's Goin' On - Marvin Gaye (2/1971)
What's Love Got To Do With It - Tina Turner (1/1984)
When Doves Cry - Prince (1/1984)
White Wedding - Billy Idol (108/1982, 36/1983)
Who Loves You - Four Seasons (3/1975)
Who'll Stop The Rain - Creedence Clearwater Revival (2/1970)
Who’s Crying Now - Journey (4/1981)
Why Can't We Be Friends - War (6/1975)
Witchy Woman - Eagles (9/1972)
With Or Without You - U2 (1/1987)
Woman - John Lennon (2/1981)
Working For The Weekend - Loverboy (29/1981)
Working My Way Back To You/Forgive Me Girl - Spinners (2/1979)
You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet - Bachman-Turner Overdrive (1/1974)
You Are The Sunshine Of My Life - Stevie Wonder/Gilstrap/Bailey (1/1973)
You Are The Woman - Firefall (9/1976)
You Belong To Me - Carly Simon (6/1978)
You Can't Hurry Love - Phil Collins (10/1982)
You Dropped A Bomb On Me - Gap Band (31/1982)
You Give Love A Bad Name - Bon Jovi (1/1986)
You Make Loving Fun - Fleetwood Mac (9/1977)
You Make My Dreams - Hall & Oates (5/1981)
You May Be Right - Billy Joel (7/1980)
You Should Be Dancing - Bee Gees (1/1976)
You Spin Me Round - Dead Or Alive (11/1985)
You’re My Best Friend - Queen (16/1976)
You're So Vain - Carly Simon (1/1972)
You're The First The Last My Everything - Barry White (2/1974)
You're The One That I Want - John Travolta/Olivia Newton-John (1/1978)
You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling - Hall & Oates (12/1980)
You've Lost That Lovin' Feeling - Righteous Bros (1/1964)
Young Turks - Rod Stewart (5/1981)
Your Love - Outfield (6/1986)
Your Song - Elton John (8/1970)
25 Or 6 To 4 - Chicago (4/1970)
99 Luftballons - Nena (2/1983)
867-5309/Jenny - Tommy Tutone (4/1982)
1999 - Prince (44/1982, 12/1983, 40/1999)

Thank you!
 
With the advent of the recent technology, I don't know why anyone would bother to make a request.

Hey, I was gonna say that... :cool:

You are very right. Cell phones are only used to make an actual phone call in special situations or when we want to do FaceTime or some such. I mean, why talk when u cn txt.

But BigA hit this one on the head. We take calls from listeners so that they can be used on the air for the feel that real people make. We don't have to get many calls for our purposes, so those old "burning the phone lines" radio things don't matter... just a couple of cool listener drops will suffice.
 
But BigA hit this one on the head. We take calls from listeners so that they can be used on the air for the feel that real people make.

We've had everything, from marriage proposals to birth announcements to dedications of songs to deceased spouses. The full range of emotions, especially on Memorial Day weekend, with soldiers and families of soldiers calling in with their stories. It's more about the community of listeners than the music or particular songs we play. That's what real radio is all about.
 
The song became #1 November 21, 1981 and stayed there for 10 weeks through January 23, 1982 before "I Can't Go For That" took over Jan. 30th, 1982

The song was released in September 1981. I have the Billboard books.

Really KM?


https://www.billboard.com/charts/hot-100/1981-11-21

If you have the old Pop Annual 1955-1986 book, which was the handiest one to put my hands on when I posted, that is where any error originated.

I must note that you call me out, but not the OP, who also had it wrong when he started the thread.
 
"Waiting For A Girl Like You" never made #1. It was stuck at #2 for TEN weeks because of "Physical"

Because........more people bought the 45 of "Physical" than bought the 45 of "Waiting For A Girl Like You" for those ten weeks.

It's been a couple of years, so I'll say it again:

Number one is a statistic...not an award. It simply means that one record (a 45 in those days) sold more copies in a given week than the other records.

By the way, the same week "Physical" hit number one on the singles chart, "Foreigner 4" hit number one on the LP chart. With the exception of giving up a week to AC/DC, it was number one for three months. Olivia's album peaked at #6.

So, if you've spent 33 years upset over this, you can stop now. Way more people wound up with a copy of "Waiting For A Girl Like You" than "Physical". They just bought it the way most people bought music in 1981/1982, on albums and tape, not 45s.
 
Last edited:
The A-Z on WOGL, while it comes up over holiday weekends, contains songs not usually played on a regular basis. Wouldn't that be considered specialty programming? What are the stats on tuneouts on WOGL when an unfamiliar song comes up during A-Z?

I can't and wouldn't speak for all Philly area folks, but I scanned by WOGL while out driving Friday afternoon. Somewhere in the Ts of the A-Z thing...liked the first song I tuned in to. Then they pulled out some God-foraken drek I never want to hear again, and tuned out not to reutrn so long as that countdown ran. I ended up wiith WBEN's "top 1000" countdown most of the time I was near a radio--clearly basically a remix of their normal format (minus the few 2000s-era songs they play) with some lesser-heard 80s and 90s songs to fill out the 1000.

One person's example, no more no less, but even as a lifelong resident who appreciates WOGL under normal circumstanes, but can do without the A to Z stunt.
 
Way more people wound up with a copy of "Waiting For A Girl Like You" than "Physical". They just bought it the way most people bought music in 1981/1982, on albums and tape, not 45s.


Would you conclude then that the fitness craze of the early 80's had a direct influence on "Physical" keeping it at #1 for ten weeks or without the influence, could "Waiting For a Girl Like You" made #1 before Hall & Oates took over?
 
Would you conclude then that the fitness craze of the early 80's had a direct influence on "Physical" keeping it at #1 for ten weeks or without the influence, could "Waiting For a Girl Like You" made #1 before Hall & Oates took over?

It's irrelevant. You're putting importance on a chart that had virtually none. Album sales eclipsed singles sales by 1969 and from 1974 on, singles sales were falling rapidly. 45 buyers after 1974 were increasingly kids 14 and under. Older teens and adults bought singles only when there was a song that really hooked them that they didn't want to risk the price of an album on...novelty records and quasi-novelties like "Physical" being a prime example.

If what matters to you is whether Foreigner sold more records than Olivia, the answer is in the album chart, not the singles.
 
It's irrelevant. You're putting importance on a chart that had virtually none.

If what matters to you is whether Foreigner sold more records than Olivia, the answer is in the album chart, not the singles.

My question is, what factors kept "Physical" at the top for two and a half months on the Hot 100 but yet Foreigner 4, which included the single "...Girl" was #1 on the album 200. There had to be some influence Mr. Hagerty for Olivia.

Same thing with "Uptown Funk" this year, #1 for 14 weeks

Influences usually include a craze going on, performances, gigs, heavy airplay, trends & fads...etc..

Why do you think songs like "The Twist" and "The Hustle" reached the top? Dance crazes at the time helped.
 
My question is, what factors kept "Physical" at the top for two and a half months on the Hot 100 but yet Foreigner 4, which included the single "...Girl" was #1 on the album 200. There had to be some influence Mr. Hagerty for Olivia.


Same thing with "Uptown Funk" this year, #1 for 14 weeks


Influences usually include a craze going on, performances, gigs, heavy airplay, trends & fads...etc..


Why do you think songs like "The Twist" and "The Hustle" reached the top? Dance crazes at the time helped.



I understand.


Crazes help, but sometimes it's just a lot of people like the song.


However, if they've already paid 10 bucks for the album, they're not going to drop another buck and a quarter on the single. And as virtually all of the record-buying teens above 14 and young adults had shifted away from singles to LPs and tape well before 1981, acts that sold a lot of albums didn't sell as many 45s as acts that were dependent on selling their stuff one turntable hit at a time.


Let's take a look at the singles chart the week "Physical" hit number one:


1. Olivia Newton-John: Physical
2. Hall & Oates: Private Eyes
3. Foreigner: Waiting For A Girl Like You
4. Rolling Stones: Start Me Up
5. Air Supply: Here I Am
6. Bob Seger: Tryin' To Live My Life Without You
7. Little River Band: The Night Owls
8. Police: Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic
9. Christopher Cross: Arthur's Theme
10. Mike Post: Theme From "Hill Street Blues"


Now the album chart for the same week:


1. Foreigner 4
2. Rolling Stones: Tattoo You
3. Police: Ghost In The Machine
4. Journey: Escape
5. Bob Seger: Nine Tonight
6. Earth, Wind & Fire: Raise
7. Stevie Nicks: Bella Donna
8. Hall & Oates: Private Eyes
9. Genesis: Abacab
10: Dan Fogelberg: The Innocent Age

Half the artists in the singles top 10 weren't in the album top 10, and vice-versa.

You can argue that Olivia Newton-John, Air Supply, Christopher Cross, The Little River Band and Mike Post had top 10 singles, but that didn't translate to album sales (in fairness, the Air Supply album was six months old and had gone platinum...but it was #42 that week, which means "The One That You Love" didn't move many of those albums).

Foreigner, the Stones, the Police, Journey, Bob Seger, Earth, Wind and Fire, Stevie Nicks, to some extent Hall & Oates, Genesis and Dan Fogelberg made their bucks off albums. Singles sales were a bonus. And with declining singles sales, they didn't add a whole lot to the picture.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom