I was in grade school during the '71-'75 time frame, so I wasn't really listening to top 40 yet, so I would have missed that. I specifically recall it becoming airplay staple on AOR later on.michael hagerty said:"Stairway": I don't know a Top 40 that didn't play it...unedited...between 1971 and 1975. Releasing it as a single might have coordinated some of that airplay (some stations didn't start until '73 or '74) and would have given consumers a single they could buy, but that's about it.
I had to look that one up. "Another Star" was the third single, and "As" was the fourth, but neither was a hit. Neither made top 30. "Pastime Paradise" would have been an interesting choice for a single, seeing as how it was sampled into "Gangsta's Paradise" by Coolio in 1995."Lovely": Agree about the need for an edit. KFRC, San Francisco did a brilliant one, and played "Lovely" instead of the third single (was it "As"?).
Not only were the Gibbs themselves dominating the charts in 1978, so were Gibb-associated artists, like their little brother Andy, and Samantha Sang, who basically sounded like a guest vocalist on a BeeGees record. Even the RSO label itself was doing quite well (aside from the Gibbs) with Player and Eric Clapton having hits. The risk of overexposure for the Gibbs was very real, so maybe someone cautioned against releasing a fourth BeeGees single from Fever. It probably would have crushed the Tavares version, if the two had ever gone head-to-head; not only that, but Saturday Night Fever would have been competing with itself with that one."Woman": Early enough (from "Saturday Night Fever") that it wouldn't have been the straw that broke the camel's back. The Bee Gees' backlash coincided with disco wearing out its welcome. I doubt that would have changed.