This seems strange. I have never heard Her on Kiss Before.
robmadden1 said:This seems strange. I have never heard Her on Kiss Before.
tcsnrayp said:And this would surprise you, why? Country has been crossing over to CHR, HOT and AC forever.
Jason Roberts said:No...not quite. And country, today enjoys some of the best songwriting of any genre.
Jeff_Davis said:Bandit,
"Bop" by Dan Seals didn't play on WCLU. I was there from September '85 until the end in April '87 and it wasn't on our list. The song came out in '86 and I played it when I was part time at WUBE in '87-'88, but never at WCLU. Thought you'd want to know since you are the WCLU authority.
JD
Jeff_Davis said:OK Bandit. I'm not sure what you remember, but I did the weekly Top 40 list at WCLU during the year and a half that I was there. That was when "Bop" peaked at #42 on the Hot 100. I even had to buy the 45s if the record companies didn't send them, and I can tell you that I never heard "Bop" until I got to WUBE in 1987. Maybe you heard it after they changed format to "Hot Country 1320 WCVG." That would have been the only time you heard it come out of that building. In '85-'87 WCLU was playing the hot hits like "Rock Me Amadeus", "Let's Go All the Way", and "Livin' On A Prayer." No country crossovers from Dan Seals on the list.
Jeff - if you want to see what you're really up against, go to Bandit's blog:Jeff_Davis said:Bandit,
You win.
I guess that year and a half of my life never happened. I guess I was never there. I guess I never spent every Saturday afternoon typing that list.
What was I thinking?
JD
RedGreen said:Jeff - if you want to see what you're really up against, go to Bandit's blog:
http://bandit73.pitas.com/
That'll explain it all.
Jason Roberts said:Frankly, some of the nations best tunesmiths are now residents of Tennessee. And country, today enjoys some of the best songwriting of any genre.
almaniac27 said:Jason Roberts said:Frankly, some of the nations best tunesmiths are now residents of Tennessee. And country, today enjoys some of the best songwriting of any genre.
I've listened to some modern country stations and I disagree. For one thing, all of the male singers sound exactly the same to me, all baritone down-home swagger. Most of the girls sound the same to me as well. And as for the songwriting, there's only so many songs to be written about tractors, girlfriends, wives, boyfriends or husbands leaving the singer, and their dog dying. There's an old joke, I forget who said it, that if you play a country song backward, the wife comes back and the dog comes back to life.
I do like some country music. Johnny Cash, George Jones, Hank Williams and old honky-tonk country is pretty good. For modern music, I like the alternative country stylings of the Old 97s, Whiskeytown, Uncle Tupelo, and the Waco Brothers.