Serious🤮
Serious🤮
Good Lord! There's the quote of the week.But I've always liked a lot of disco.
Good Lord! There's the quote of the week.
Millennium. At least the first 22 or 23 (depending on how you count 2000) years of it.weekmonth year decadecentury,
Relevancy. The "Ballad of the Green Beret" was a song that everyone liked, went to number one and was relevant at the time.
Does anyone want to hear it now?
Times change, and the environment surrounding that song changes over time.
I remember back in the 80s', I filled in sometimes at a station who used the line: 'Hot Hits'. One had to be careful to say each word clearly, not running them together. Otherwise it could come out sounding completely different.
At KFBK, a local supermarket sponsored our traffic reports. There was a two-week period where the lead sale item was "large Haas avocados." Finally, I just went ahead, opened the mic and said "Dana, you might want to hit the "H" a little harder."I remember back in the 80s', I filled in sometimes at a station who used the line: 'Hot Hits'. One had to be careful to say each word clearly, not running them together. Otherwise it could come out sounding completely different.
At my first station, KIBS in Bishop, California, we discovered one of our young disc jockeys was dyslexic.I worked at one that used "Today's Best Hits," and we had the same problem. We had a banner on the wall that said, "Today's Best...Hits!"
I also worked at a "KLIK Country." Try saying "Click Country" too quickly and see what happens!
So help me, if he sings along....Millennium. At least the first 22 or 23 (depending on how you count 2000) years of it.
At my first station, KIBS in Bishop, California, we discovered one of our young disc jockeys was dyslexic.
Unfortunately, it happened during a live read for Huck Finn's cafe.
That'll do it...That's called a "spoonerism" or "metathesis!" I once heard about a TV anchor who was fired for suffering a spoonerism while reading the primetime lineup during a newscast. His unfortunate spoonerism happened when he was mentioning a show with actor "Forest Tucker!"
Okay---had a few minutes, so back to longest runs on the KHJ Thirty.Just looked at the KHJ charts on Ray Randolph's fabulous site 93khj.blogspot.com. Ten-week chart runs were very rare.
"Hey Jude" stayed on the KHJ chart for 11 weeks in 1968.
The record up to that point---Paul Mauriat's "Love Is Blue". It did 12.
That got broken in 1970 by the Supremes' "Someday We'll Be Together". 13 weeks. There were several after that ("Joy to the World", "Imagine", "American Pie"), but 13 was the absolute limit.
It was two years before a record ran longer on the KHJ chart---Harry Nilsson's "Without You" did 15.
I'm just enough of the right kind of geek to keep going, but it'll have to be later.
...which means the woman who seduced him in "Summer-The First Time" is 96.With al the mentions of "Honey", it's amazing that it just happens Bobby Goldsboro is 82 today.
Soft AC stations dont play it?The older I get the more I like SOME disco songs, Disco Inferno has a great bass line IMHO
But speaking of songs that are dead and buried never to be heard of again...
#1 You Light Up My Life
Soft AC stations dont play it?
I have heard look away by chicago on kckc ib kansas city.I haven't heard "You Light Up My Life" on ANY radio station in decades. Sean Ross has it as number 5 of the biggest hits that got lost---usually by popular demand:
The Best and Worst of What’s Lost - RadioInsight
Actually, Tom's Number Ones series is a great place to find out what a 40-year-old man who has no nostalgic relation to hit records of the past (he's reviewing every number one from the first Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1958 onward) thinks about songs that your first reaction might be "but that was a big hit."Meantime, a review of "Honey" that mentions "Ballad of the Green Berets". Tom Breihan does not have a filter, so expect language:
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The Number Ones: Bobby Goldsboro’s “Honey”
In The Number Ones, I’m reviewing every single #1 single in the history of the Billboard Hot 100, starting with the chart’s beginning, in 1958, and working my way up into the present.www.stereogum.com
Of course you did.I have heard look away by chicago on kckc ib kansas city.