kingofpain
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You give me the sweetest taboo.
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Post by kingofpain on Mar 30, 2013 12:23:34 GMT -5
I think the worst offenders during that period were Soulja Boy and Shop Boyz.
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Arabella21
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Post by Arabella21 on Mar 30, 2013 12:27:44 GMT -5
I think the worst offenders during that period were Soulja Boy and Shop Boyz. Soulja Boy came along well after downloads were a part of the Hot 100 formula and Crank That was also pretty big virally, so its chart reign only would have been longer if Youtube had been part of the equation back then.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 12:29:33 GMT -5
Don't forget Lil Jon's Get Low. Quite possibly the most annoying thing I've ever heard.
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Enigma.
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Post by Enigma. on Mar 30, 2013 12:30:38 GMT -5
I think the worst offenders during that period were Soulja Boy and Shop Boyz. Yea, 7 weeks was more than enough for Crank That. Browsing through 2007, Akon's Don't Matter is one of most forgettable #1's ever (off topic..)
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forg
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Post by forg on Mar 30, 2013 12:37:48 GMT -5
The past years have been good in terms of variety in the charts. The mid-00s were really stale as the Hot 100 was almost identical with airplay with Idol coronation songs popping in every year then dropping quickly
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crystalphnx
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Post by crystalphnx on Mar 30, 2013 12:39:28 GMT -5
I think the worst offenders during that period were Soulja Boy and Shop Boyz. Yea, 7 weeks was more than enough for Crank That. Browsing through 2007, Akon's Don't Matter is one of most forgettable #1's ever (off topic..) aw, I loved "Don't Matter", and still do! it always seemed like such a perfect (unintentional) gay anthem: "nobody wanna see us together but it don't matter no cause I got you babe cause we gonna fight oh yes we gonna fight believe we gonna fight fight for our right to love, yeah..."
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Enigma.
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Post by Enigma. on Mar 30, 2013 12:45:21 GMT -5
Yea, 7 weeks was more than enough for Crank That. Browsing through 2007, Akon's Don't Matter is one of most forgettable #1's ever (off topic..) aw, I loved "Don't Matter", and still do! it always seemed like such a perfect (unintentional) gay anthem: "nobody wanna see us together but it don't matter no cause I got you babe cause we gonna fight oh yes we gonna fight believe we gonna fight fight for our right to love, yeah..."Hmm interesting point of view.. I did like I Wanna **** You at that time but never really got into Don't Matter. We really NEED that "reminiscing the Hot 100" topic
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 12:58:19 GMT -5
I think the worst offenders during that period were Soulja Boy and Shop Boyz. I am one of the ten people who bought Shop Boyz' entire album and I refuse to be ashamed. I still enjoy most of it, I don't care what anyone says! I was bummed that they were relegated to being a one-hit wonder, some of their other songs had potential. "Get Low" was also my jam. Almost any difference of opinion about the urban party music of the 00s vs the pop party music of today is going to come down to genre preference. It is/was all mindless music with not one lick of lyrical substance whatsoever, and a glut of anything will cause most songs to have a high burn rate. I've seen enough complaints about Flo Rida and Pitbull to gather that they're the respective Soulja Boy/Lil' Jon of this particular music era.
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jebsib
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Post by jebsib on Mar 30, 2013 12:59:19 GMT -5
CHR has also backed away from Hip-Hop, which brought the overall levels of rhythmic songs down. If this were 2001 - 2005, 2Chainz, Kendrick and Big Sean would have had huge Hot 100 hits; probably top 5s.
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Deleted
Joined: January 1970
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 12:59:51 GMT -5
Almost any difference of opinion about the urban party music of the 00s vs the pop party music of today is going to come down to genre preference. It is/was all mindless music with not one lick of lyrical substance whatsoever, and a glut of anything will cause most songs to have a high burn rate. I've seen enough complaints about Flo Rida and Pitbull to gather that they're the respective Soulja Boy/Lil' Jon of this particular music era. This. For the record, I don't like any of them.
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Post by Rose "Payola" Nylund on Mar 30, 2013 13:06:54 GMT -5
There were plenty of jams from around the 2003 pop charts that I loved back in the day. If I didn't like anything from a particular period, I wouldn't have been able to maintain a personal chart. The thing that we look back on now is that there was a lot of one style of music from that period so we remember a lot of oversaturation in the same way I see people refer to 2008-2011 as another low point for pop music. Again, tons of great songs came from that period but so many of the hits from then were of the same genre. I'll be damned if I said I didn't love Freak A Leak!
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Post by trumandare on Mar 30, 2013 13:54:34 GMT -5
DARK ERA was in the end 90s and 2000s to 2009
in those times i was living in the us with my parents
us hot 100 were ruled by RNB + hip hop gods/godesses like Brandy, usher . toni braxton+ 50cent+ angelo etc
all that crap
for me a white boy who was interested in good music and alternative rock bands like depeche mode, coldplay, u2, prince. killers, franz ferdinand
it was a hard time
radio stations didn't play those songs by those good bands on mainstream stations
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 13:56:14 GMT -5
DARK ERA was in the end 90s and 2000s to 2009 in those times i was living in the us with my parents us hot 100 were ruled by RNB + hip hop gods/godesses like Brandy, usher . toni braxton+ 50cent+ angelo etc all that crap for me a white boy who was interested in good music and alternative rock bands like depeche mode, coldplay, u2, prince. killers, franz ferdinand it was a hard time radio stations didn't play those songs by those good bands on mainstream stations How sad that a "white boy" had to listen to black artists! :'(
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Post by nivekwriter1 on Mar 30, 2013 13:57:01 GMT -5
Because BCharts looks dead, here's Kworb's update for today. Kworb's updates are slightly different from the normal updates.
SATURDAY'S UPDATE from Kworb
TOP 20
1. BRUNO MARS - When I Was Your Man: 188.056 (+ 2.026) 2. JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE - Suit & Tie: 165.599 (+ 2.532) 3. MACKLEMORE & RYAN LEWIS - Thrift Shop f/Wanz: 156.925 (- 1.235) 4. MAROON 5 - Daylight: 144.877 (- 1.502) 5. TAYLOR SWIFT - I Knew You Were Trouble: 132.031 (+ 0.010) 6. Rihanna - Stay f/Mikky Ekko: 116.678 (+ 2.053) 7. CALVIN HARRIS - Sweet Nothing f/Florence Welch: 107.357 (- 0.050) 8. BRUNO MARS - Locked Out Of Heaven: 105.185 (- 0.904) 9. PITBULL - Feel This Moment f/Christina Aguilera: 98.820 (+ 1.805) 10. SWEDISH HOUSE MAFFIA - Don't You Worry Child: 97.901 (- 0.712) 11. THE LUMINEERS - Ho Hey: 92.551 (- 0.614) 12. WILL.I.AM & BRITNEY SPEARS - Scream & Shout: 87.609 (- 1.381) 13. MUMFORD & SONS - I Will Wait: 84.932 (- 0.085) 14. RIHANNA - Pour It Up: 79.944 (+ 0.391) 15. KELLY CLARKSON - Catch My Breath: 77.060 (- 0.908) 16. IMAGINE DRAGONS - It's Time: 76.752 (+ 0.039) 17. PINK - Just Give Me A Reason f/Nate Ruess: 72.113 (+ 2.708) 18. PINK - Try: 68.986 (- 0.613) 19. HUNTER HAYES - Somebody's Heartbreak: 64.306 (+ 0.033) 20. LEE BRICE - I Drive Your Truc...: 64.189 (+ 0.242)
Other songs:
DRAKE - Started From The Bottom: 63.946 (+ 0.077) FUN. - Carry On: 61.473 (+ 0.965) BLAKE SHELTON - Sure Be Cool If You Did: 61.090 (- 1.627) OF MONSTERS AND MEN - Little Talks: 59.547 (+ 0.089) A$AP ROCKY - F**kin Problems f/Drake: 59.527 (- 1.189) LADY ANTEBELLUM - Downtown: 59.370 (+ 0.564) LIL WAYNE - Love Me f/Drake & Future: 58.600 (+ 0.557) THOMPSON SQUARE - If I Didn't Have ...: 55.689 (+ 1.078) KENNY CHESNEY - Pirate Flag: 50.557 (+ 0.592) OLLY MURS - Troublemaker f/Flo Rida: 48.715 (+ 0.353) KREWELLA - Alive: 45.548 (+ 1.553) DEMI LOVATO - Heart Attack: 45.074 (+ 0.636) MUSE - Madness: 39.690 (- 0.149) TAYLOR SWIFT - 22: 34.670 (+ 0.822) MACKLEMORE & RYAN LEWIS - Can't Hold Us f/Ray Dalton: 33.377 (+ 1.407) RIHANNA - Loveeeeeee Song f/Future: 32.327 (+ 0.592) EMELI SANDE - Next To Me: 32.220 (+ 0.277) BRAD PAISLEY - Beat This Summer: 32.234 (+ 0.810) ICONA POP - I Love It f/Charli XCX: 30.275 (+ 0.763) JASON ALDEAN - 1994: 29.351 (+ 0.592) FALL OUT BOY - My Songs Know What You Did In The Dark: 28.416 (+ 0.497) THE BAND PERRY - Done: 24.509 (+ 0.887) JUSTIN BIEBER - All Around The World: 21.756 (+ 0.226) JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE - Mirrors: 19.292 (+ 2.688) KELLY ROWLAND - Kisses Down Low: 18.826 (+ 0.681) IMAGINE DRAGONS - Radioactive: 15.033 (- 0.061) PHILLIP PHILLIPS - Gone, Gone, Gone: 13.307 (+ 0.218) BLAKE SHELTON - Boys Around Here: 14.155 (+ 1.665) WILL.I.AM. - #thatPOWER - f/Justin Bieber: 10.967 (+ 1.485) ZEDD - Clarity f/Foxes: 8.619 (+ 0.471) THIRTY SECONDS TO MARS - Up In The Air: 7.430 (+ 0.340) MICHAEL BUBLE - It's A Beautiful Day: 6.017 (+ 0.438)
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jebsib
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Post by jebsib on Mar 30, 2013 13:57:36 GMT -5
Not sure about CHR charts, but I can speak as someone that has followed the Hot 100 weekly since the 1970s. The Rhythmic Hip-Hop stranglehold of the top 20 for four or so years was unlike anything seen in the history of popular music.
Even when rock & roll debuted, or at the height of the disco heyday, at least there was a steady balance of other types of songs populating the top 20. The unrelenting tidal wave of r&b product - some stellar, some forgettable from 2001 through 2005 was simply overwhelming.
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Post by nivekwriter1 on Mar 30, 2013 13:57:52 GMT -5
A lot of green updates today :)
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Enigma.
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Post by Enigma. on Mar 30, 2013 14:10:18 GMT -5
us hot 100 were ruled by RNB + hip hop gods/godesses like Brandy, usher . toni braxton+ 50cent+ angelo etc I was also annoyed by all the big Hot 100 hits D'Angelo had.
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SPRΞΞ
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Post by SPRΞΞ on Mar 30, 2013 15:44:45 GMT -5
Not sure about CHR charts, but I can speak as someone that has followed the Hot 100 weekly since the 1970s. The Rhythmic Hip-Hop stranglehold of the top 20 for four or so years was unlike anything seen in the history of popular music. Even when rock & roll debuted, or at the height of the disco heyday, at least there was a steady balance of other types of songs populating the top 20. The unrelenting tidal wave of r&b product - some stellar, some forgettable from 2001 through 2005 was simply overwhelming. luckily, I can barely remember any of it.
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NeRD
Diamond Member
RIHANNA NAVY
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Post by NeRD on Mar 30, 2013 15:45:27 GMT -5
JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE - Mirrors: 19.292 (+ 2.688)
This just might end up being my favorite JT song ever. This just has to be a multi-week #1.
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Post by josh on Mar 30, 2013 16:13:04 GMT -5
No 3/29 update, only 3/30 which is this:
Keep in mind these are 2-day updates.
1. BRUNO MARS – When I Was Your Man: 183.769 (+3.339) 2. JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE – Suit & Tie f/JAY Z: 165.170 (+3.553) 3. MACKLEMORE & RYAN LEWIS – Thrift Shop f/Wanz: 151.187 (-3.405) 4. MAROON 5 – Daylight: 145.167 (-2.252) 5. TAYLOR SWIFT – I Knew You Were Trouble: 132.616 (-0.059) 6. RIHANNA – Stay f/Mikky Ekko: 115.037 (+3.800) 7. CALVIN HARRIS – Sweet Nothing f/Florence Welch: 103.579 (-0.596) 8. BRUNO MARS – Locked Out Of Heaven: 101.096 (-3.444) 9. PITBULL – Feel This Moment f/C. Aguilera: 94.452 (+4.747) 10. SWEDISH HOUSE MAFIA – Don’t You Worry Child: 94.439 (-2.098) 11. LUMINEERS – Ho Hey: 94.310 (-1.298) 12. MUMFORD & SONS – I Will Wait: 88.426 (+0.558) 13. WILL.I.AM & BRITNEY SPEARS – Scream And Shout: 85.683 (-3.308) 14. RIHANNA – Pour It Up: 80.155 (-0.350) 15. IMAGINE DRAGONS – It’s Time: 77.314 (+0.357) 16. KELLY CLARKSON – Catch My Breath: 77.259 (-1.136) 17. PINK – Just Give Me A Reason: 72.407 (+5.106) 18. PINK – Try: 69.350 (-1.044) 19. DRAKE – Started From The Bottom: 66.757 (+0.252) 20. HUNTER HAYES – Somebody’s Heartbreak: 64.334 (+0.607)
Others
LEE BRICE – I Drive Your Truck: 64.208 (+0.451) FUN. – Carry On: 61.663 (+1.331) BLAKE SHELTON – Sure Be Cool If You Did: 61.097 (-2.984) LIL WAYNE – Love Me f/Drake & Future: 60.276 (+1.163) OF MONSTERS AND MEN – Little Talks: 59.776 (-0.215) LADY ANTEBELLUM – Downtown: 59.382 (+1.348) DEMI LOVATO – Heart Attack: 46.781 (+1.348) (lol at these two) OLLY MURS – Troublemaker f/Flo Rida: 46.279 (+0.514) KREWELLA – Alive: 45.576 (+1.856) MUSE – Madness: 39.846 (+0.081) TAYLOR SWIFT – 22: 35.119 (+1.767) MACKLEMORE & RYAN LEWIS – Can’t Hold Us f/Ray Dalton: 33.784 (+2.823) EMELI SANDE – Next To Me: 33.358 (+1.007) BRAD PAISLEY – Beat This Summer: 31.241 (+1.509) ICONA POP – I Love It f/Charli XCX: 30.709 (+1.500) FALL OUT BOY – My Songs Know What You Did…: 29.192 (+0.828) JUSTIN BIEBER – All Around The World: 22.384 (+0.871) JUSTIN TIMBERLAKE – Mirrors: 19.899 (+5.651) PHILLIP PHILLIPS – Gone, Gone, Gone: 13.832 (+0.494) CHER LLOYD – With Ur Love f/Juicy J: 11.134 (+0.034) WILL.I.AM F/JUSTIN BIEBER – #thatpower: 10.801 (+2.792) LUMINEERS – Stubborn Love: 9.824 (-0.077) THIRTY SECONDS TO MARS – Up In The Air: 7.442 (+0.559)
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Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 16:15:47 GMT -5
Oh trumandare you really tried it.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 16:33:28 GMT -5
I love so many of the songs mentioned on the last two pages. Including Soulja Boy's albums. "Hey You There" is a flawless masterpiece and everyone will deal.
Past smashes of "Right Thurr" "Crank That" "Party Like a Rockstar" etc...
The good ole days. :'(
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Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 16:39:39 GMT -5
Not sure about CHR charts, but I can speak as someone that has followed the Hot 100 weekly since the 1970s. The Rhythmic Hip-Hop stranglehold of the top 20 for four or so years was unlike anything seen in the history of popular music. Even when rock & roll debuted, or at the height of the disco heyday, at least there was a steady balance of other types of songs populating the top 20. The unrelenting tidal wave of r&b product - some stellar, some forgettable from 2001 through 2005 was simply overwhelming. I don't know, the late 70's was nearly just as oversaturated with disco as I recall, I mean it was everywhere.
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Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 16:41:45 GMT -5
DARK ERA was in the end 90s and 2000s to 2009 in those times i was living in the us with my parents us hot 100 were ruled by RNB + hip hop gods/godesses like Brandy, usher . toni braxton+ 50cent+ angelo etc all that crap for me a white boy who was interested in good music and alternative rock bands like depeche mode, coldplay, u2, prince. killers, franz ferdinand it was a hard time radio stations didn't play those songs by those good bands on mainstream stations How sad that a "white boy" had to listen to black artists! :'( ...so it's racist to say that you don't like R&B/Hip Hop music? ???
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Envoirment
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Posts: 13,710
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Post by Envoirment on Mar 30, 2013 16:44:08 GMT -5
How sad that a "white boy" had to listen to black artists! :'( ...so it's racist to say that you don't like R&B/Hip Hop music? ??? I think it's the capitalisation of "DARK ERA" too. If it wasn't for that, I wouldn't see anything wrong with the post. Although I think I may be looking too much into it too.
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Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 16:44:49 GMT -5
he didn't call him a racist boo he called him out for his foolery...you don't start post with DARK ERA and then bash a slew of black artists and take the foolery home with sayin "for me a white boy who was interested in good music"......state your opinions on what you like but leave the racial undertones at home cause we don't play that. This pop /rock elitist bullshit can stop
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Ballroom Blitzed
Charting
It doesn't really mean anything!
Joined: September 2012
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Post by Ballroom Blitzed on Mar 30, 2013 16:45:04 GMT -5
DARK ERA was in the end 90s and 2000s to 2009 in those times i was living in the us with my parents us hot 100 were ruled by RNB + hip hop gods/godesses like Brandy, usher . toni braxton+ 50cent+ angelo etc all that crap for me a white boy who was interested in good music and alternative rock bands like depeche mode, coldplay, u2, prince. killers, franz ferdinand it was a hard time radio stations didn't play those songs by those good bands on mainstream stations </repostedYouTubecomments> Even when rock & roll debuted, or at the height of the disco heyday, at least there was a steady balance of other types of songs populating the top 20. I think if one was to ask somebody what the defining sound of the period (for example) 1976-1980 was, some people will say it was disco, some will say it was singer-songwriter pop, some will say it was punk, some will say it was arena rock. It really depends on what kind of fan you're talking to.
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jdanton2
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Post by jdanton2 on Mar 30, 2013 16:53:00 GMT -5
i would rather have some of the Hip Hop songs mentioned on top back in the early 2000's instead of some of the durge by Nickleback and acts with similar sounds .
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Deleted
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Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Mar 30, 2013 16:53:23 GMT -5
I didn't notice the capitalized DARK ERA. That kind of changes things but I still don't think he meant bad... Even one of the "good artists" he listed was black.
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Verisimilitude
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'90s Zealot
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Post by Verisimilitude on Mar 30, 2013 16:53:45 GMT -5
Not sure about CHR charts, but I can speak as someone that has followed the Hot 100 weekly since the 1970s. The Rhythmic Hip-Hop stranglehold of the top 20 for four or so years was unlike anything seen in the history of popular music. Even when rock & roll debuted, or at the height of the disco heyday, at least there was a steady balance of other types of songs populating the top 20. The unrelenting tidal wave of r&b product - some stellar, some forgettable from 2001 through 2005 was simply overwhelming. I don't know, the late 70's was nearly just as oversaturated with disco as I recall, I mean it was everywhere. It wasn't really everywhere until 1978, by 1979 middle America couldn't stand it anymore.
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