Cordelia:OMG, the above list came from a station that was classified as Rock & Roll?!? I see Henry Gross's name here, and though he may have recorded some harder material, the only song of his that I know is "Shannon," one of the syrupiest records around! And the operatic-sounding Minnie Ripperton got R&B and AC airplay, but I don't know how she ended up here. This isn't to say that these artists and their songs weren't good, I'm just surprised to see them here!
This situation reminds me of a thread on this forum about the 2021 Hall of Fame nominees. That discussion concerned the evolution of what "Rock & Roll" meant in the '50s when Alan Freed coined the term, to what it means today. I didn't remember, or deliberately forgot, much of what came in between.
This list was from the year before Henry Gross released "Shannon". Henry was a founding member of Sha Na Na, played with them (at the tender age of 18) at Woodstock, and then went off on his own the next year (1970) releasing three solo LPs before the one that had "Shannon". The album you see on this chart, in fact, was his best-selling album, peaking at #26. The one with "Shannon" only made #64. He sold a ton of singles, and pretty much ruined his reputation.
As for Minnie, not only did she get album rock airplay, on the China Smith aircheck I've referenced, she does a station break ("Hi this is Minnie Riperton and we're listening to KMET, ninety-four-point (hits a really high note)-seven!"
