dgendvil said:Or how about Love Theme From Romeo & Juliet from 1969 (#1 from 1969) by Henry Mancini & The Streak (#1 from 1974) by Ray Stevens?
Talk_Dude said:Having songs like "Dominque" competing against "Satisfaction" is just plain stupid. It's like trying to rank the best sports teams with football, baseball, basketball, and hockey teams all on the same list. It's a fool's game.
oldies76 said:Talk_Dude said:Having songs like "Dominque" competing against "Satisfaction" is just plain stupid. It's like trying to rank the best sports teams with football, baseball, basketball, and hockey teams all on the same list. It's a fool's game.
But no one would ever rank Dominique with Satisfaction anyways, one is foreign and they were #1 in two different years and music eras (pre-64 vs. British).
Talk_Dude said:I'm guessing you work for Clear Channel.
oldies76 said:Talk_Dude said:I'm guessing you work for Clear Channel.
Actually I don't. Explain differently.
Actually, I thought he made the point quite well. You DON'T play "Satisfaction" and "Dominique" back to back! I seriously doubt that anyone did back then, either, because of the generational change that took place between the two. The British invasion swept from the airwaves nearly everything that had come before it. "Dominique" was an example of what was wrong with top 40 radio in 1963, and why we needed a British invasion to set things right again. You wouldn't play "Dominique" and "Satisfaction" back-to-back anymore than you would play "Dominique" and "Macarena" back-to-back.Talk_Dude said:You totally, completely, and utterly miss the point. I'm guessing you work for Clear Channel.oldies76 said:But no one would ever rank Dominique with Satisfaction anyways, one is foreign and they were #1 in two different years and music eras (pre-64 vs. British).Talk_Dude said:Having songs like "Dominque" competing against "Satisfaction" is just plain stupid. It's like trying to rank the best sports teams with football, baseball, basketball, and hockey teams all on the same list. It's a fool's game.
Talk_Dude said:No explanation is necessary. You totally, completely, and utterly missed the point. I assumed anyone that clueless worked for Clear Channel.
oldies76 said:Talk_Dude said:No explanation is necessary. You totally, completely, and utterly missed the point. I assumed anyone that clueless worked for Clear Channel.
Ha..you assumed wrong and yes, I did get the point. Dominique and Satisfaction....you don't play back to back..Dominque and Volare...of course.
Markieo said:Let's see..."You Light Up My Life", "The Candy Man", "The Night Chicago Died", "Lovin' You", "My Ding-A-Ling", "The Streak", "Billy, Don't Be A Hero", "Kung Fu Fighting", "I Am Woman", "Brand New Key", "One Bad Apple", "Ben", "When I Need You", "Having My Baby", many disco records...and that's just the '70's!![]()
Talk_Dude said:The song "Dominque" should be played on a "Music of Your Life" station, and the song "Satisfaction" should be played on a rock oldies station. It's not about playing them back-to-back, it's about playing them on the same station.
BnRinBayArea said:but I can assure you, good/bad/indifferent, there IS an audience for them!
I wasn't sure who to reply to here, so I multi-quoted. I'm going to go ahead and say it: "Dominique" was an anomaly (sp). It was a hit during that two-month time frame between the Kennedy assassination, and the landing of the Beatles on our shores. We may never see a situation like that again. I seriously doubt that very many people were paying attention to the charts (except maybe radio and music industry types) in December of 1963. (Kinda makes one wonder why the Four Seasons celebrated that month in song!) I'm thinking that "Dominique" simply filled a void during that time. Sure, "Louie Louie" was #2, but 1963 wasn't really a "rock" year. That all changed when the Beatles invaded, but that wasn't until '64.Talk_Dude said:Still, you're totally, completely, and utterly wrong. The song "Dominque" should be played on a "Music of Your Life" station, and the song "Satisfaction" should be played on a rock oldies station. It's not about playing them back-to-back, it's about playing them on the same station. More specifically, it's about splitting the old ranking lists from the 1960's into separate charts, so that Music of Your Life songs don't compete on the same list with rock songs.
oldies76 said:"Dominique" is an oldie just like "Satisfaction". So an oldie should air on an "oldies" station. Now the question is, do I rotate "Dominique" regularly, as I would "Satisfaction"...of course not. Would I play "Dominique" during a specialty show featuring the early 60's or the best of 1963?? Yes I would. So the answer to your statement is both songs qualify as oldies and BOTH should be played on oldies stations, AS NEEDED.Talk_Dude said:The song "Dominque" should be played on a "Music of Your Life" station, and the song "Satisfaction" should be played on a rock oldies station. It's not about playing them back-to-back, it's about playing them on the same station.
"Music of your Life" relates to easy-listening standards that were mainly produced prior to 1955.
Maybe I'm missing something here. Did Pat Boone really have that much influence on the music business in 1977? I could see it if it was 1957, but by '77, Boone was 15 years removed from his own last top 40 appearance. If he were so influential, it seems that he should have been able to keep his daughter returning to the charts for years to follow. And we know that that didn't happen.Talk_Dude said:Actually, the original "You Light Up My Life" by Kasey Cisyk was (I thought) much better than the cover by Pat Boone's daughter.
As for Debbie Boone's version of "You Light up My Life", you are correct that it is a masterpiece. It's masterpiece example of the art of corporate music marketing. It was sold like a box of soap and the public bought it. It wasn't as good as the original, but Debbie Boone looked cuter on the cover than Kasey Cisyk would have, and she was Pat's daughter.
firepoint525 said:Having said that, I believe that "Dominique" should NOT be played on any oldies stations NOW. A few years ago, I might have said differently, but not anymore. An MOYL station would be the perfect place for it, if anyone is still airing it. We have an MOYL station here in Nashville, and they play stuff from the '60s, '70s, '80s, right up until now. Even Norah Jones is on their playlist, and of course, lots of Barry Manilow. MOYL certainly existed after 1955.