michael hagerty said:Billboard
Do you happen to know by chance the two songs which charted at #97 and #99, in 1978 and 1979, respectively? Thought I'd throw that one in there, trivia, of course.
michael hagerty said:Billboard
oldies76 said:michael hagerty said:Billboard
Do you happen to know by chance the two songs which charted at #97 and #99, in 1978 and 1979, respectively? Thought I'd throw that one in there, trivia, of course.![]()
michael hagerty said:Again, an industry magazine not intended as a reflection of consumer activity.
RIN3GUY said:michael hagerty said:Again, an industry magazine not intended as a reflection of consumer activity.
Thanks for the info, Michael. But then who were the totally wrong-headed people who decided to turn it into a (wildly popular) radio show for public consumption??
RIN3GUY said:The commercial success of American Top 40 with Casey Kasem leads me to believe that the Billboard chart rankings must have somehow ended up being much more reflective of popular music tastes than what wholesale music sales might suggest.
RIN3GUY said:Any discrepancies could be rectified by checking Cash Box, since it included juke box activity, an even finer indicator of personal musical preferences since it was just 25 cents to make selections instead of $1 or more for a single.
RIN3GUY said:Artists which did significantly better on Cash Box than Billboard include Linda Ronstadt, Kiss, Bay City Rollers, Eric Carmen, Raspberries, the Babys, Barry Manilow, and ELO. Maybe someone should sit up and take note. It would be nice to hear more of all of these on Classic Hits stations today! They will need selections like these once they start that 1-year moratorium on Eagles' songs!![]()
michael hagerty said:I have been able to find nothing that indicates that Record World factored airplay into its charts.
The magazine went out of business in 1982...18 months after Billboard added airplay to its formula.
michael hagerty said:While I'd be willing to say most Americans between the ages of 30 and 60 have heard AT40 more than once, the segment of the audience that listened weekly to all three hours and kept track of the numbers was a small fraction.
michael hagerty said:American Top 40 was a huge success and a very good show. The point I was making about listenership is a basic truth of broadcasting. Even if you have a 30 share, that means 70 percent of the audience is listening to something else. And a 30 share on Sunday morning between 9 and noon in most cases didn't equal a 10 share in weekday afternoon drive.
The AM station in the small town where I grew up used to run AT40 on Sunday afternoons. Sunday mornings were largely reserved for church programming.DavidEduardo said:Particularly in smaller markets, AT40 was a chance to have a quality show on the air in a daypart ordinarily staffed by the weakest part time jocks. If you could cue a record, you could run AT40. It came at essentially no cost, and made the station sound big.
The key to AT40 is that it was a superb show with great talent and a great concept that could be run in dayparts not known for either.
michael hagerty said:I would never call Tom Rounds or Ron Jacobs (the founders of Watermark Productions and two legendary program directors (KFRC and KHJ, respectively) "totally wrong-headed people". They were businessmen who had an idea for a nationally syndicated countdown show. For that, they needed a national list of 40 records every single week.
The point is that the charts (neither Billboard, Record World nor Cash Box) were accurate accountings of what was selling to people buying records with their own money. They were tracking wholesale purchases that (again, until you got into most of the songs in the Top 10) may or may not have sold at retail.
Even if they had been accurate at the time, what teenagers bought 40 years ago has no bearing on what 45 year old adults want to hear today. You're compounding irrelevancies.
RIN3GUY said:Although they frequently agree or almost agree on chart peaks, I consider Cash Box to be a bit more accurate than Billboard. Juke box activity at least required financial input, unlike radio airplay.
RIN3GUY said:One odd chart note: In 3 years' time, The Cars had the bad luck of having three songs "stall out" at #41!
johnbasalla said:And what is the luckiest record ever to peak at #40 on the Billboard charts?
"The End of Our Road" by Marvin Gaye. Spent 2 weeks at #40 right at the time that "American Top 40" debuted in 1970.
michael hagerty said:johnbasalla said:And what is the luckiest record ever to peak at #40 on the Billboard charts?
"The End of Our Road" by Marvin Gaye. Spent 2 weeks at #40 right at the time that "American Top 40" debuted in 1970.
Not sure that qualifies as especially lucky. AT40 signed on with 10 stations, none of them #1 in their markets. They did not have affiliates in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago or San Francisco. They launched in Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit, Minneapolis, St. Louis, San Diego, San Antonio, Honolulu, San Bernardino and Albany.
oldies76 said:Do you happen to know by chance the two songs which charted at #97 and #99, in 1978 and 1979, respectively? Thought I'd throw that one in there, trivia, of course.![]()
CTListener said:michael hagerty said:johnbasalla said:And what is the luckiest record ever to peak at #40 on the Billboard charts?
"The End of Our Road" by Marvin Gaye. Spent 2 weeks at #40 right at the time that "American Top 40" debuted in 1970.
Not sure that qualifies as especially lucky. AT40 signed on with 10 stations, none of them #1 in their markets. They did not have affiliates in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago or San Francisco. They launched in Boston, Philadelphia, Detroit, Minneapolis, St. Louis, San Diego, San Antonio, Honolulu, San Bernardino and Albany.
Where did AT40 debut in Boston? I remember hearing it on WBZ in the early '80s and could have sworn it was on WRKO in the '70s, but you've said 'RKO didn't carry it. I can't imagine that it was on WMEX because I never listened to that station and I definitely did listen to AT40 around 1973-75.
RIN3GUY said:I found "When You're #1" by Gene Chandler, #99 in '79; can't find the other one. What is it?
johnbasalla said:I wouldn't be surprised to learn that there was some chart chicanery going on when "18 With A Bullet" by Pete Wingfield was actually listed as #18 with a bullet on the "Hot 100". I wonder where this 1975 single peaked on the Cash Box and Record World charts?