Showing posts with label Rupert Holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rupert Holmes. Show all posts

Thursday, January 16, 2020

KILT Radio Survey - January 16, 1980




Throughout 1979 and 1980, I would hop on my blue Sears 10-speed bicycle every Saturday morning and pedal down to Collins Music Center on 7th Street and pick up a copy of the KILT 40. If memory serves, I kept them for a while, but most likely trashed them as I transitioned to a listener of the FM stations. Here's a sample survey from January 16, 1980 (click any image to enlarge):


Did I gather up this particular survey? I can't say for sure, but more likely than not. I can't speak to DJ Sheila Mayhew or opening act Max Webster as I don't recall either. Plus, I probably hadn't heard Rush by 1980, for that matter. But I was peripherally aware of the Sam Houston Coliseum (1937 - 1998) in downtown Houston.






KILT
SongBillboard
1/19/80
CashBox
1/19/80
Record World
1/19/80
1
Cruisin' 67 8
2
Do That to Me One More Time
224
3
Escape (The Piña Colada Song)
33 5
4
Coward of the County
443
5
Crazy Little Thing Called Love
1822 21
6
I Call Your Name
8688-
7
Rock with You
11 1
8
We Don't Talk Anymore
7610
9
Deja Vu
2117 20
10
Yes I'm Ready
241916
11
Romeo's Tune 2525 26
12
The Long Run
11137
13
Sara
1514 14
14
Forever Mine
333034
15
You Know That I Love You
3635 36
16
Under My Thumb
--100
17
Don't Do Me Like That
1710 13
18
Rapper's Delight
95-60
19
Better Love Next Time
1221 17
20
I Wanna Be Your Lover
131519


KILT
SongBillboard CashBoxRW
21
99 5556 53
22
Third Time Lucky
262023
23
Ladies Night 85 9
24
Working My Way Back to You 484242
25
Longer
3532 32
26
Fool in the Rain
314651
27
Wonderland
4271 89
28
September Morn
394952
29
It's My House
-- 116
30
An American Dream
293738
31
Why Me 3227 29
32
Second Time Around
---
33
Daydream Believer 2845 49
34
Voices 373331
35
On the Radio
4960 43
36
Jane
14922
37
Lonely Eyes
4643 46
38
Refugee
---
39
Him
7268 63
40
Wait for Me
192635


KILT
SongBillboard CashBoxRW
-
Too Hot 7681 71
-
Kiss Me in the Rain
79--
-
I Thank You -- 99
-
Back on My Feet Again 8784-


That would make a pretty good playlist, huh? I count at least five tunes that appear in Rhino's fantastic Radio Daze CD compilation series and a couple of tunes from Rubert Holmes and Kool & The Gang. Of the above tunes, the only 45 I purchased at the time was "Why Me" to which I still have an inexplicable attraction.





KILT
AlbumBillboard
1/19/80
CashBox
1/19/80
RW
1/19/80
1
Damn the Torpedoes 56 14
2
The Wall
126
3
No Nukes
2517 39
4
Kenny
785
5
Off the Wall
810 10
6
Bee Gees Greatest
453
7
The Long Run
31 1
8
Phoenix
111115
9
Cornerstone
94 4
10
Deguello
332841



Survey scans from manfrommars.com

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

AT40, February 16, 1980 [Part 2 of 4]

 

I'm breaking down the AT40 show of February 16, 1980 track by track.  For a look at #40-31, click here.

#30:  "Don't Let Go" by Isaac Hayes. In the dying days of disco (before it was rebranded as "dance music"), this fun single was unleashed. I loved it then as much as I like it now even though back in 1980, I was clueless to Hayes' extraordinary history in the music business. Written by Jesse Stone, this tune was originally a hit for Roy Hamilton in 1958. None of that mattered to me, I just dug the low vocals and would try to imitate them even though my voice hadn't changed yet.

#29:  "Déjà Vu" by Dionne Warwick.  An Isaac Hayes two-fer! Hayes wrote this tune, Barry Manilow produced it, and it won a Grammy for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. Strange bedfellows, but they recorded a smooth, soulful ballad nonetheless.

AT40 Extra: Out of left field, Casey interrupts the countdown with this non sequitur. "The biggest chart hit The Rolling Stones ever had." "Honky Tonk Women" 1969. It's a classic, to be sure, but why play it here?

#28:  "Him" by Rupert Holmes. In the first of two songs by Holmes in the Top 40 this week. This one had debuted the previous week and was on its way to a peak of #6. Here's what I previously wrote about this tune over on The CD Project: "There's nothing special about it, just a solid 3½ minutes of soft rock if you ignore the strange vocal solo.  As an 8th grader, my gym classmates and I would mockingly sing this song (with slightly altered lyrics) to our first year teacher/coach, weakly trying to imply that he was gay.  I'll chalk that up to 13 year old ignorance, but its embarrassing now to think I ever acted that way.  Belated apologies to that coach as well as Mr. Holmes."

Before a commercial break, Casey teases a story about Tom Petty's contract troubles with Shelter Records and MCA.

Casey returns from the break by telling us that American Top 40 is heard in the 50 states and around the world every week on great radio stations like:
  • WIZM - La Crosse, Wisconsin
  • WJET - Erie , Pennsylvania
  • WDRC - Hartford, Connecticut
#27:  "Wonderland" by The Commordores. This is an odd tune that can't decide if it wants to be a ballad or funk tune. Lionel Richie sings it but didn't write it. I like the synth solo, though. It peaked at #25, unusually low for the group at the time.

Casey shares the troubles of Tom Petty, his contract, and his lawsuit against MCA. Long story short, Petty was treated like a piece of meat, with the label giving few concessions. In Casey's revisionist, more wholesome version, however, "everybody won!" Hooray for capitalism!

#26:  "Refugee" by Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers. I like it now, but I didn't much care for this one back in 1980. It was a minor-key rocker and I was more into major key soft-rock and disco. Now I dig the thing.

#25:  "When I Wanted You" by Barry Manilow. I'm a Fanilow (heck, I saw him in concert not 2 months ago), but this overwrought ballad doesn't do much for me. It peaked a #20 but held the top spot on the Adult Contemporary chart for a week. I'm thinking it's the material, because the Addrisi Bros. and songwriter Gino Cunico couldn't do much with it, either.

#24:  "Escape (The Piña Colada Song)" by Rupert Holmes. Here's Holmes again, this time with his former #1. I liked it at the time, not so much now although the hipster generation has embraced it for whatever reasons.  It reminds me of playing basketball after lunch in 8th grade.  At that age, just singing a song that included lyrics about an alcoholic drink made us feel more grown up.

AT40 Archives: "I'm Your Boogie Man" by KC & The Sunshine Band.  Casey's counting down the #1 songs of the 1970's' this is the second of three in this show. This tune was #1 for one week in June 1977.

--end of hour two--

#23:  "How Do I Make You" by Linda Ronstadt. Admittedly, I'm in a small minority, but Ronstadt's Mad Love album is my favorite release from her. This was the first single released from that album. This was Ronstadt's 14th Top 40 hit; it peaked at #10. But seriously, check out that album.

Casey teases a story about a group that had nine different albums enter theBillboard Lp chart within a seven week period. Details, and their latest hit, are coming up.

#22:  "Too Hot" by Kool & The Gang. Always liked this bit of smooth goodness; it fits perfectly within my vocal range which meant that unsuspecting ladies were often subjected to this song as a part of my failed, feeble attempts at flirting. Bonus points for the muted guitar throughout and a decent soft-rock sax solo. It would peak at #5 and deservedly so.

The group mentioned above with nine different albums on the chart is Led Zeppelin and their current hit...

#21: "Fool in the Rain" by Led Zeppelin.  One of those bands I'm told I should like, but I just don't. These days when I hear a LZ song, my first thought is usually "who did they steal that from?" In this case, it's Sly Stone. Don't worry, boys, Genesis also lifted that bassline later the same year for "Misunderstanding."

Billboard, February 16, 1980, p. 94

More to come...