hornet61 said:
firepoint525 said:
hornet61 said:
firepoint525 said:
"The Letter" was the second shortest song (that I know of) to reach #1. The shortest was "Stay" by Maurice Williams and the Zodiacs.
Interesting to note that the longest song to hit #1 ("Hey Jude" by the Beatles) came just one year after "The Letter." ("American Pie" was longer, but was split over both sides of the 45.)
American Pie pts 1 and 2 is listed at number, so isn't it really the longest.
Thanks, just threw the "American Pie" thing in there as a disclaimer in case anyone contested me on it. "Hey Jude" is still the longest-playing single to reach #1.
OK, now I am really confused here...Hey Jude 7:03..Amer Pie pt 4:11 and pt 2 4:31 for 8:41
In the case of Fingertips and a couple of other #1's they specifically list either pt1 or pt2....Amer Pie lists pt 1 and 2 ...so wouldn't that make it longer than Hey Jude.
Okay, you got me there. Beginning November of 1969, Billboard combined listings of A and B sides of singles together, rather than charting A and B sides separately, as they had been doing up until that time. That would explain your confusion over "American Pie," versus those earlier examples that you gave, which would suggest that you are right about "American Pie" being "longer" than "Hey Jude." But I believe that "Hey Jude" would still hold the record for longest-playing single to hit #1 until "American Pie" set the new record almost four years later.