michael hagerty said:I didn't know this until the last Andrews Sister death prompted a discussion here, but the Andrews Sisters had 113 charted Billboard singles, only one of which failed to make the top 30.
46 of them were Top 10 (more than The Beatles or Elvis)...8 of them were #1...in a 17-year chart run.
landtuna said:michael hagerty said:I didn't know this until the last Andrews Sister death prompted a discussion here, but the Andrews Sisters had 113 charted Billboard singles, only one of which failed to make the top 30.
46 of them were Top 10 (more than The Beatles or Elvis)...8 of them were #1...in a 17-year chart run.
Quite a remarkable record to be sure but....
Both Elvis and The Beatles changed both music and the cultures in which they existed. Although the Andrews Sisters were very popular (and I enjoy their old films too) they were "just" popular performers.
But perhaps someone with more in-depth knowledge can answer this.....what competition did they have? I remember quite a few male groups in the 40's and 50's. I don't remember female groups until the early 60's.
michael hagerty said:I get your point about Elvis and The Beatles, Landtuna, but in fairness, no musical act changed the culture before Elvis. And even if the Andrews Sisters were capable of that, they were overshadowed by an agent of far greater cultural change: World War II.
michael hagerty said:As for a lack of competition from other female groups: Being in a minority doesn't guarantee chart success...and certainly not record-setting chart success. The Andrews Sisters outsold Bing Crosby going into the 40s, Frank Sinatra until the middle 50s and landed more Top 10s than the two acts who did change the culture.
michael hagerty said:And while Elvis changed the culture in ways that ended the Andrews Sisters' 17-year hit streak (Elvis had to re-start his career after only 12 years and the Beatles broke up 6 years after coming to America), the Andrews Sisters did have a marvelous little echo....giving Bette Midler her first big record in 1973...a faithful if faster "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy".
michael hagerty said:I think calling them "just popular performers" is selling them very short.
landtuna said:michael hagerty said:I get your point about Elvis and The Beatles, Landtuna, but in fairness, no musical act changed the culture before Elvis. And even if the Andrews Sisters were capable of that, they were overshadowed by an agent of far greater cultural change: World War II.
I know there were popular vocalists prior to Frankie but they were mostly classically trained stars like opera singers, were they not? Frankie seems to have changed the culture somewhat by being the target of the Bobby Soxers and their first hero worship type adulation.
Prior to that though would you not agree that Big Band/Swing changed the music culture somewhat - and Swing/Jazz in the 20's?
michael hagerty said:As for a lack of competition from other female groups: Being in a minority doesn't guarantee chart success...and certainly not record-setting chart success. The Andrews Sisters outsold Bing Crosby going into the 40s, Frank Sinatra until the middle 50s and landed more Top 10s than the two acts who did change the culture.
Yeah, I understand. Of course, at one time Abbott & Costello were the supreme kings of comedy (and the Andrews Sisters had a little bit to do with that).
michael hagerty said:And while Elvis changed the culture in ways that ended the Andrews Sisters' 17-year hit streak (Elvis had to re-start his career after only 12 years and the Beatles broke up 6 years after coming to America), the Andrews Sisters did have a marvelous little echo....giving Bette Midler her first big record in 1973...a faithful if faster "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy".
Covers! BAH! Nothing like the original.
michael hagerty said:I think calling them "just popular performers" is selling them very short.
You will note I put quotes around "just" to make just such a distinction.
So.....is the answer to my question that the Sisters didn't have any direct head-to-head competition? I couldn't think of any myself but I'm not an expert on WWII-era music.