Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Jan 11, 2004 13:19:44 GMT -5
No, your eyes aren't playing tricks on you, CHR Flashback is back! I'll go back and fill in the old ones when I have time (I might as well, since I already have the years for those weeks chosen) but I'll keep up with the current ones, so it doesn't keep piling up. This week, we go back to the year that Counting Crows were up on stage performing with "The Rain King", then, after Madonna played her part, she proceeded to Take A Bow as Ini Kamoze entered stage left announcing "Here Comes The Hotstepper", but Melissa Etheridge wouldn't have any of it, saying "I'm The Only One" as Aerosmith's "Blind Man" came up to her and asked "When Can I See You", like Babyface. Yes, it was 1995 and this was only the second chart to be figured by total spins (from April, 1994 to the end of the year, R&R had a point system, which explains the odd chart runs that year). PLEASE NOTE: The two holiday weeks are figured in to the "Weeks Charted" data.
LC TC wc SONG/ARTIST 01 01 11 On Bended Knee/Boyz II Men 02 02 16 Always/Bon Jovi 03 03 21 Another Night/The Real McCoy 04 04 06 Take A Bow/Madonna 07 06 15 Hold My Hand/Hootie & The Blowfish 06 07 21 I'm The Only One/Melissa Etheridge 09 08 07 You Don't Know How It Feels/Tom Petty 08 09 10 Here Comes The Hotstepper/Ini Kamoze 13 10 11 Every Day Of The Week/Jade 12 11 22 You Gotta Be/Des'ree 10 12 14 You Want This/Janet Jackson 15 13 08 The Rhythm Of The Night/Corona 11 14 16 Allison Road/Gin Blossoms 18 15 09 The Sweetest Days/Vanessa Williams 14 16 24 All I Wanna Do/Sheryl Crow 17 17 26 100% Pure Love/Crystal Waters 21 18 08 Mental Picture/Jon Secada 29 19 02 Bang And Blame/REM 20 20 09 Zombie/The Cranberries 24 21 05 Creep/TLC 25 22 07 Mishale/Andru Donalds 16 23 16 Secret/Madonna 33 24 02 When I Come Around/Green Day 22 25 10 Rain King/Counting Crows 23 26 24 I'll Make Love To You/Boyz II Men 30 27 05 I Belong To You/Toni Braxton 19 28 14 Living In Danger/Ace Of Base 34 29 02 Bad Reputation/Freedy Johnston 35 30 02 Buddy Holly/Weezer 27 31 22 I'll Stand By You/The Pretenders 26 32 11 Blind Man/Aerosmith 31 33 06 Shame/Zhane 32 34 19 New Age Girl/Deadeye Dick 36 35 29 When Can I See You/Babyface 28 36 12 Dance Naked/John Mellencamp ?? 37 ?? Mystery Song/Mystery Artist 40 38 05 Get Ready For This/2 Unlimited 38 39 41 December, 1963 (Oh What A Night)/Four Seasons XX 40 01 Always And Forever/Luther Vandross
Dropper: From #37: What's The Frequency Kenneth/REM
Note: Usually, on charts earlier in the year, inconsistencies in the Weeks On Chart column are found, since, for one of the holiday weekend charts, I make up my own interim chart and more often than not, there are debuts on that chart, but not this. I did the interim chart a little differently for 1994-95. You see, as I said, in 1994, the charts were figured out by a point system, but there was a play rank column. Since I knew in advance that starting the first of 1995, songs were going to be ranked by plays, I used the "play rank" numbers for the December 16, 1994 chart (the last one of the year) to make the interim chart. Songs 1-39 reflected what that chart would have looked like had it been ranked by plays, but number 40 had either fallen off the chart or wasn't yet on the chart, for "Get Ready For This" was ranked number 48 in plays. Since it was on the January 6 chart and it would make no sense for it to move 40-48-40, I just kept it at number 40, since I had no idea what the real number 40 most played song was. Before I close, I'd like to ask y'all for a little help. I don't have a years schedule for CHR Flashback developed yet. If you could give me the year that you'd like, or years for the next few weeks, that would make my job a lot easier. Thanks in advance.
EDIT: Someone bumped this old topic up and I just changed the topic title to include the year it was posted so people wouldn't get their hopes up that the feature was back. I haven't had time to work on the CHR Flashback of late, since I've been so busy, but I'll eventually resume with it.
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ct2874
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Post by ct2874 on Jan 11, 2004 15:40:49 GMT -5
Glad to see that this segment is back. Hopefully, there will be more responses from the other board members in the future. By the way, Chris, I've noticed that #37 isn't the only "mystery song" ;). I'll let you take a look and see if you catch what I mean.
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BillboardBoy
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Post by BillboardBoy on Jan 11, 2004 15:43:57 GMT -5
If you could give me the year that you'd like, or years for the next few weeks, that would make my job a lot easier.
I wouldn't mind seeing anything from 1989 to the present, since that's when I started taking notes.
Unfortunately, I didn't hear Casey or Rick at all that month, so I don't have a lot to offer.
• The Most Added single that week was "Strong Enough."
• There were 4 platinum singles: "Another Night," "Here Comes The Hotstepper," "All I Wanna Do" and "I'll Make Love To You."
• There were 6 gold singles: "Always," "You Want This," "100% Pure Love," "Creep," "Secret" and "When Can I See You."
• The oldest song in the Top 40 (not including the 2-week break) was "When Can I See You" at 27 weeks.
• The biggest mover was "Bang And Blame," up 10 notches (my favroite R.E.M. song).
• 27 of the top 40 songs on the list were also on Billboard's top 40 list.
• #1 on both the Euro and U.K. charts was "Cotton Eye Joe." :)
• #1 album was "The Hits."
• I could post the mystery song, but I'd be cheating since I have the list in front of me.
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Jan 11, 2004 15:55:25 GMT -5
Glad to see that this segment is back. Hopefully, there will be more responses from the other board members in the future. By the way, Chris, I've noticed that #37 isn't the only "mystery song" ;). I'll let you take a look and see if you catch what I mean. Oops. Yes, I did omit "You Want This". And no, I wasn't boycotting Janet Jackson for dropping her last name soon after (I believe it was sometime in 1996 or 1997 that Janet began going by her first name only).
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Slinky
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Post by Slinky on Jan 11, 2004 16:52:26 GMT -5
38's kind of a mystery too. I've never heard Green Day's version of "Get Ready For This".
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craig
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Post by craig on Jan 11, 2004 22:23:13 GMT -5
1978 or1980 would be great .nice to you the flashback back again. ps. my computer ate the old flashabacks you sent me from the old boards could you resend. and did you ever send out the ones from the down period of the start of this bord. thanks
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craig
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Post by craig on Jan 11, 2004 22:26:21 GMT -5
oh and i almost forgot mystery song when we dance -sting
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mst3k
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Post by mst3k on Jan 11, 2004 23:15:21 GMT -5
38's kind of a mystery too. I've never heard Green Day's version of "Get Ready For This". LMAO!
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ct2874
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Post by ct2874 on Jan 12, 2004 5:56:13 GMT -5
Oops. Yes, I did omit "You Want This". And no, I wasn't boycotting Janet Jackson for dropping her last name soon after (I believe it was sometime in 1996 or 1997 that Janet began going by her first name only). ...and, let's not forget 4PM's cover of "Sukiyaki"(#5) Never heard this song on radio, however some of the songs from this time period don't ring a bell to me for I was in the middle of a Med/Persian Gulf criuse while I was in the Navy.
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Jan 12, 2004 16:32:01 GMT -5
Boy, I sure garbled this one up, didn't I? And it was the only one I did this weekend. Oh well, that's life.
Looks like Slinky beat you to this one, Aaron (I remember when I made a mistake on my CHR Flashbacks, you'd make funny comments like my slip-ups. I was just going through my CHR Flashbacks last night and when I listed "Run-Around" as by Real McCoy (I was thinking of "Run Away"), you said, "urm..." I couldn't stop laughing.
Oh, and "When We Dance" was indeed the mystery song.
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mst3k
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Post by mst3k on Jan 12, 2004 16:48:01 GMT -5
And ct2874 beat me to the punch on the missing #5... I was all set to post a reference to "Who's Johnny" from the movie Short Circuit. Ah, well...
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Jan 12, 2004 18:55:38 GMT -5
And ct2874 beat me to the punch on the missing #5... I was all set to post a reference to "Who's Johnny" from the movie Short Circuit. Ah, well... What does "Who's Johnny" have to do with this week's chart?
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mst3k
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Post by mst3k on Jan 12, 2004 20:29:49 GMT -5
The robot in Short Circuit was called "Number Five" (and later, Johnny). Obscure reference, I admit. :)
"No disassemble Stephanie!"
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Jan 13, 2004 16:33:58 GMT -5
The robot in Short Circuit was called "Number Five" (and later, Johnny). Obscure reference, I admit. :) Well, I never saw "Short Circuit" (but I liked the video where the scene kept changing and that old woman would pop out from out of nowhere to sing, "Who is Johnny?") And, what a coincidence that Johnny was originally called "Number Five" since that's exactly where "Who's Johnny" peaked on the R&R charts in Summer, 1986.
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ct2874
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Post by ct2874 on Jan 13, 2004 18:09:54 GMT -5
Well, I never saw "Short Circuit" (but I liked the video where the scene kept changing and that old woman would pop out from out of nowhere to sing, "Who is Johnny?") And, what a coincidence that Johnny was originally called "Number Five" since that's exactly where "Who's Johnny" peaked on the R&R charts in Summer, 1986. Not to go off the board here, but I only seem to remem- ber that there was only one scene in the "Who's Johnny" video, and that was in a courtroom. I guess I'll have to look for it on VH-1 Classic sometime. I do know it had a rather funny ending to it.
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Jan 13, 2004 18:26:05 GMT -5
Yeah, I remember a fan started up and papers were blowing all around and everyone in the courtroom was dancing, I think. Maybe what I remember were different angles of the courtroom being shot, but there was always a lady popping up in front of the camera singing, "Who is Johnny?"
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johnnywest
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Post by johnnywest on Jan 14, 2004 10:27:22 GMT -5
1994 was an interesting year. How about that for a future flashback? The year that the Crash Test Dummies went "MmmMmmMmmMmm," Mariah Carey couldn't live "Without You," Ace of Base saw "The Sign" and The Breeders gave us one helluva "Cannonball."
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Jan 14, 2004 16:26:09 GMT -5
1994 was an interesting year. How about that for a future flashback? The year that the Crash Test Dummies went "MmmMmmMmmMmm," Mariah Carey couldn't live "Without You," Ace of Base saw "The Sign" and The Breeders gave us one helluva "Cannonball." That sounds like a good idea. It won't be within the next few weeks, however, since it was about this time last year that I did a 1994 Flashback. Maybe I'll do the one before the PPW era started, since I've already done the one from the week of the PPW era.
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Mar 2, 2004 20:06:49 GMT -5
OK, now for the January 17 edition of CHR Flashback. This time, we fire up the way-back machine and go all the way back to the year that Celine Dion insisted My Heart Will Go On, but Boyz II Men didn't know about that, as they were going through 4 Seasons Of Loneliness, but that could be because they were Breakin' All The Rules like She Moves, or they said to their love No Tengo Dinero. Los Umbrellos knows that means "I don't have any money", but who needs that - as the Notorious B.I.G says, "Mo Money Mo Problems"! It was 1998, and here are is the CHR/Pop Top 50 chart from January 16, 1998:
LC TC wc SONG/ARTIST 01 01 16 Tubthumping/Chumbawamba (8th week #1) 02 02 13 Truly Madly Deeply/Savage Garden 03 03 19 Walking On The Sun/Smash Mouth 05 04 13 As Long As You Love Me/Backstreet Boys 04 05 18 Show Me Love/Robyn 08 06 09 3am/Matchbox Twenty 07 07 15 You Make Me Wanna.../Usher 06 08 24 Fly/Sugar Ray 11 09 12 Together Again/Janet 10 10 12 I Do/Lisa Loeb 24 11 06 My Heart Will Go On/Celine Dion 09 12 22 All Cried Out/Allure 12 13 27 I Don't Wanna Wait/Paula Cole 13 14 13 What Would Happen/Meredith Brooks 14 15 07 Back To You/Bryan Adams 18 16 11 How's It Gonna Be/Third Eye Blind 21 17 06 Time Of Your Life (Good Riddance)/Green Day 20 18 11 Heaven/Nu Flavor 15 19 31 If You Could Only See/Tonic 19 20 18 Love You Down/INOJ 16 21 30 Push/Matchbox Twenty 29 22 05 Kiss The Rain/Billie Myers 23 23 10 Light In Your Eyes/Blessid Union 27 24 07 Sweet Surrender/Sarah McLachlan 30 25 08 Pink/Aerosmith 28 26 10 My Love Is The Shhh.../Somethin' For The People 22 27 18 Criminal/Fiona Apple 26 28 27 Foolish Games/Jewel 31 29 10 32 Flavors/Alana Davis 34 30 10 The Mummer's Dance/Loreena McKennitt 25 31 15 Breakin' All The Rules/She Moves 33 32 22 Mo' Money Mo' Problems/The Notorious B.I.G. 37 33 06 Gettin' Jiggy Wit' It/Will Smith 38 34 07 Happy/Sister Hazel XX 35 01 I Know Where It's At/All Saints 32 36 19 Something About The Way You Look Tonight/Elton John 35 37 21 4 Seasons Of Loneliness/Boyz II Men 36 38 08 Suger Cane/Space Monkeys 40 39 06 Feel So Good/Mase 43 40 04 No Tengo Dinero/Los Umbrellos 42 41 04 I Don't Ever Want To See You Again/Uncle Sam 44 42 02 A Song For Mama/Boyz II Men 39 43 16 I Will Come To You/Hanson 41 44 07 You're Not Alone/Olive 47 45 02 Magazine/Lauren Christy 48 46 20 Legend Of A Cowgirl/Imani Coppola 45 47 25 Building A Mystery/Sarah McLachlan XX 48 01 Ain't That Just The Way/Lutricia McNeal XX 49 01 Too Much/The Spice Girls 49 50 06 L-L-Lies/Diana King
Droppers: From #17: How Do I Live/LeAnn Rimes (28 weeks) From #46: Takes A Little Time/Amy Grant (22 weeks) From #50: I Believe/Jai (3 weeks)
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Mar 3, 2004 21:25:00 GMT -5
Now, we take the trip back to the year that Michel'le insisted No More Lies.while Michael Damian asked Was It Nothing At All? But Richard Marx said that it's Too Late To Say Goodbye because, according to Whitesnake, The Deeper The Love, the stronger the emotion. Don't worry, advises Taylor Dayne, because Love Will Lead You Back, and when it does, I'll Be Good To You, say Chaka Khan and Ray Charles, and The Cover Girls know We Can't Go Wrong. It was 1990. Yeah, I know that there are three 1990s Flashbacks in a row, but originally, I had placed a 1977 chart in early January, the same weekend I had done that year back in 2002. And I had to make the changes at the last minute (AT40 Flashback, anyone?) Meanwhile, here is the chart for the weekend of January 26, 1990:
LC TC wc SONG/ARTIST 02 01 10 Downtown Train/Rod Stewart 04 02 06 Opposites Attract/Paula Abdul w/The Wild Pair 03 03 10 Two To Make It Right/Seduction 01 04 12 How Am I Supposed To Live Without You/Michael Bolton 07 05 07 What Kind Of Man Would I Be/Chicago 05 06 12 Everything/Jody Watley 18 07 03 Escapade/Janet Jackson 08 08 08 Peace In Our Time/Eddie Money 11 09 08 Janie's Got A Gun/Aerosmith 16 10 04 All Or Nothing/Milli Vanilli 14 11 06 Dangerous/Roxette 06 12 13 Just Between You And Me/Lou Gramm 17 13 07 Tell Me Why/Expose 09 14 11 Free Fallin'/Tom Petty 19 15 06 Here We Are/Gloria Estefan 21 16 04 Price Of Love/Bad English 12 17 09 I Remember You/Skid Row 23 18 06 We Can't Go Wrong/The Cover Girls 10 19 13 Pump Up The Jam/Technotronic f/Felly 15 20 08 Tender Lover/Babyface 26 21 03 Roam/The B-52's 27 22 03 I Go To Extremes/Billy Joel 20 23 08 Was It Nothing At All/Michael Damian 13 24 14 Another Day In Paradise/Phil Collins 32 25 03 Too Late To Say Goodbye/Richard Marx 31 26 04 C'mon & Get My Love/D'Mob f/Cathy Dennis 22 27 11 When The Night Comes/Joe Cocker 36 28 02 Sometimes She Cries/Warrant 33 29 04 No More Lies/Michel'le 24 30 12 Love Song/Tesla XX 31 01 Love Will Lead You Back/Taylor Dayne 30 32 06 Kickstart My Heart/Motley Crue XX 33 01 Black Velvet/Alannah Myles 40 34 02 No Myth/Michael Penn XX 35 01 The Deeper The Love/Whitesnake XX 36 01 All My Life/Linda Ronstadt f/Aaron Neville 29 37 15 With Every Beat Of My Heart/Taylor Dayne 28 38 09 I'll Be Good To You/Quincy Jones f/Ray Charles and Chaka Khan 25 39 12 Rhythm Nation/Janet Jackson 34 40 17 Don't Know Much/Linda Ronstadt f/Aaron Neville
Droppers: From #35: Back To Life/Soul II Soul f/Caron Wheeler (14 weeks) From #37: We Didn't Start The Fire/Billy Joel (15 weeks) From #38: Just Like Jesse James/Cher (12 weeks) From #39: This One's For The Children/New Geeks On The Block (10 weeks)
(Please note: The holiday break (which was only one week back then) was figured into the weeks on chart tally, so each song older than four weeks has one more week to their credit than R&R gave them.)
Two artists debuted with new hits as their old songs were about to step off the survey. First, we had Taylor Dayne at number 37 with her number three song from December, "With Every Beat Of My Heart". But she was just debuting with her new song, a beautiful ballad called "Love Will Lead You Back". The song moved modestly up the chart (although making a huge move in the Top Ten in March) all the way up to number one where she stayed for two weeks. It would wind up as the number ten song for the year. Then, barely clinging onto the survey was Linda Ronstadt's first duet with Aaron Neville. And what a song it was, peaking at number four around the decade change and spending seventeen weeks on the chart, which was an impressive feat back then (although, R&R would beg to differ with that cumulative week total). But four steps above them, they were debuting with their second duet, which would turn out to be their last to hit the Top 40 (in early summer, they had an A/C only hit called "When Something Is Wrong With My Baby"). "All My Life" climbed up the chart slowly, running out of gas at number 12. But it had earned enough points to rank on the Top 90 of 1990. I forget exactly where it finished for the year - somewhere around number 86, I believe. Both of the above songs were moving down the chart slowly, which is more than can be said for Janet Jackson's title track from her Rhythm Nation CD. It wasted no time peaking at number two, then fell faster than a hocker off the John Hancock building. It was this week's biggest fall and, with it being only her second hit from the Rhythm Nation album, many Janet Jackson fans were probably thinking that she was done with that album, but they had another think coming. Maybe the fast fall was due to her prematurely releasing the next single, "Escapade", which was making the biggest jump on the chart, moving from 18 to 7. That song would end up spending four weeks on top and for awhile it looked like it was going to become the top song of the year, which would have been awesome, seeing as she had topped the 1989 year end chart with her first song from Rhythm Nation, "Miss You Much". She would have been the first artist in R&R history to accomplish the feat. However, it was not to be; in September, "Vision Of Love" by Mariah Carey beat the song by three points, but that was cool, too, since Mariah was the first artist in over ten years to have the number one song of the year with her debut single. Back to Janet Jackson; she would become the first (and so far only) artist to have an album spawning eight Top Five smashes, although, in order for the album to sell better, the last of those, "State Of The World" was not released as a single, but that didn't stop it from peaking at number four on the R&R chart, her lowest peaking hit from the album, but that's not bad at all. The number one song of this week, "Downtown Train" by Rod Stewart, was the first of a handful of songs in 1990 to top the R&R chart, but not the Billboard/AT40 chart. Other R&R exclusive #1's included "Don't Wanna Fall In Love" by Jane Child, "U Can't Touch This" by MC Hammer, "Come Back To Me" by Janet Jackson, and "Something Happened On The Way To Heaven" by Phil Collins. However, Billboard had a few exclusive #1's in 1990, too. These included "Black Velvet" by Alannah Myles, "I'll Be Your Everything" by Tommy Page (which I understand just barely topped the Billboard chart, ruling over Jane Child by a paper-thin margin), "Hold On" by Wilson Phillips, "Blaze Of Glory" by Bon Jovi, "Love And Affection" by Nelson, and "Close To You" by Maxi Priest. Well, I gotta go post the next January Flashback. BTW, as soon as I'm all caught up, I'll resume with the "Mystery Song".
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Mar 3, 2004 22:24:15 GMT -5
Now, for the next CHR Flashback, and guess what decade it's from? R-r-right, the 1990's. But the last one was early 1990s - early as possible, that is, and this one is from the last year of that decade. This is the chart from January 29, 1999 (my 27th birthday!)
LC TC wc SONG/ARTIST 04 01 18 Slide/The Goo Goo Dolls 03 02 15 Have You Ever/Brandy 01 03 27 Save Tonight/Eagle-Eye Cherry 02 04 19 Lullaby/Shawn Mullins 07 05 17 ...Baby One More Time/Britney Spears 09 06 13 Angel/Sarah McLachlan 06 07 13 (God Must Have Spent) A Little More Time On You/'N Sync 05 08 16 Hands/Jewel 08 09 24 Jumper/Third Eye Blind 10 10 13 Miami/Will Smith 11 11 15 Lately/Divine 13 12 09 All I Have To Give/Backstreet Boys 12 13 12 You Get What You Give/New Radicals 20 14 08 Believe/Cher 16 15 08 It's All Been Done/Barenaked Ladies 17 16 12 Take Me There/Blackstreet & Mya f/Mase & Blinky Blink 18 17 17 Back To Good/Matchbox Twenty 23 18 04 Every Morning/Sugar Ray 14 19 24 Inside Out/Eve 6 19 20 10 Pretty Fly (For A White Guy)/Offspring 15 21 15 I'm Your Angel/R. Kelly & Celine Dion 32 22 03 Unsent/Alanis Morissette 21 23 20 Touch It/Monifah 22 24 22 My Favorite Mistake/Sheryl Crow 28 25 07 Angel Of Mine/Monica 27 26 13 Father Of Mine/Everclear 26 27 23 Because Of You/98 Degrees 25 28 21 From This Moment On/Shania Twain 34 29 07 No Mercy/Khaleel 36 30 08 Fly Away/Lenny Kravitz 29 31 16 Doo Wop (That Thang)/Lauryn Hill 30 32 19 Luv Me Luv Me/Shaggy f/Janet 37 33 03 At The Stars/Better Than Ezra 33 34 09 How Do I Deal/Jennifer Love Hewitt 24 35 10 Big Big World/Emilia 31 36 28 One Week/Barenaked Ladies 35 37 24 Are You That Somebody/Aaliyah 49 38 02 I Still Believe/Mariah Carey 38 39 10 Crush/Dave Matthews Band 41 40 04 Changes/2 Pac XX 41 01 Stay The Same/Joey McIntyre XX 42 01 Malibu/Hole XX 43 01 Run/Collective Soul 46 44 03 Nobody's Supposed To Be Here/Deborah Cox 42 45 25 Hooch/Everything 39 46 18 Thank U/Alanis Morissette XX 47 01 What It's Like/Everlast XX 48 01 C'est La Vie/B*Witched 47 49 03 Hard Knock Life/Jay-Z 40 50 15 Fire Escape/Fastball
Droppers: From #43: This Kiss/Faith Hill (27 weeks) From #44: Never There/Cake (10 weeks) From #45: When You Believe/Whitney Houston & Mariah Carey From #48: Goodbye/The Spice Girls (3 weeks) From #50: Got You (Where I Want You)/The Flys (1 week)
And so ends the January, 2004 leg of the Flashback series. I promise - February has absolutely NO 1990's Flashbacks!
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BillboardBoy
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Post by BillboardBoy on Jan 12, 2006 12:42:09 GMT -5
This 1999 chart is around the time that the "alternative phase" was beginning to be edged out by "pop," as Britney Spears was making her way up the chart.
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JCMF3
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Post by JCMF3 on Jan 12, 2006 18:20:43 GMT -5
How come One Week was still on the chart? I thought the recurrent rule was 20 weeks on and below #26 during that time...
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Hervard
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Post by Hervard on Jan 12, 2006 19:07:35 GMT -5
How come One Week was still on the chart? I thought the recurrent rule was 20 weeks on and below #26 during that time... Actually, it was 26 weeks on and below #25. "One Week" was still on in its 28th week because R&R didn't count the holiday weeks in their weeks on tally while I did count them. Therefore, the song was spending its final week on the chart, thank God! "One Week" was one of the worst songs of the 1990s, IMO. Thank God the playing time of the song was under three minutes long! BTW, I apologize for not posting the CHR Flashbacks for awhile. November and December were very busy months for me.
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johnnywest
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Post by johnnywest on Dec 1, 2014 9:43:15 GMT -5
I like the charts from the early 90s because it's fun to see how fast the songs moved up and down. Too bad they don't do that anymore.
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