Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Jul 30, 2017 10:39:05 GMT -5
I definitely wondered why Cowboy Casanova didn't cross over. Not sure how Before He Cheats is 'less country' sounding than CC tho. If I Die Young is just a great song with insanely good lyrics. What I hear you're saying though is that pop radio is stuck in its 'genre' and won't branch out. Yeah, "Before He Cheats" was a bonafide fluke. It never got a real big push, never got a pop mix, it just... happened. Which is amazing, but it's since been the only country song to cross over on its own. I wouldn't really say it's pop radio that's suck because there's plenty of variety on the format. Hip-hop, rap, rock, and pop are all showcased in pop's top ten at the moment. The problem is how country music is viewed by those outside of the country market. The image, so to speak, isn't one that a lot of people can get behind. If only they would just try to release their music outside of the country market, I believe that image would drastically change. Though, a Thomas Rhett song was recently added to Spotify's Today's Top Hits, so that's a sign that maybe things are starting to change.
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NeRD
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Post by NeRD on Jul 30, 2017 10:45:21 GMT -5
I definitely wondered why Cowboy Casanova didn't cross over. Not sure how Before He Cheats is 'less country' sounding than CC tho. If I Die Young is just a great song with insanely good lyrics. What I hear you're saying though is that pop radio is stuck in its 'genre' and won't branch out. Yeah, "Before He Cheats" was a bonafide fluke. It never got a real big push, never got a pop mix, it just... happened. Which is amazing, but it's since been the only country song to cross over on its own.I wouldn't really say it's pop radio that's suck because there's plenty of variety on the format. Hip-hop, rap, rock, and pop are all showcased in pop's top ten at the moment. The problem is how country music is viewed by those outside of the country market. The image, so to speak, isn't one that a lot of people can get behind. If only they would just try to release their music outside of the country market, I believe that image would drastically change. Though, a Thomas Rhett song was recently added to Spotify's Today's Top Hits, so that's a sign that maybe things are starting to change. Don't think this is true?
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Jul 30, 2017 11:02:03 GMT -5
Yeah, "Before He Cheats" was a bonafide fluke. It never got a real big push, never got a pop mix, it just... happened. Which is amazing, but it's since been the only country song to cross over on its own.I wouldn't really say it's pop radio that's suck because there's plenty of variety on the format. Hip-hop, rap, rock, and pop are all showcased in pop's top ten at the moment. The problem is how country music is viewed by those outside of the country market. The image, so to speak, isn't one that a lot of people can get behind. If only they would just try to release their music outside of the country market, I believe that image would drastically change. Though, a Thomas Rhett song was recently added to Spotify's Today's Top Hits, so that's a sign that maybe things are starting to change. Don't think this is true? All other country songs to have crossed over successfully since "Before He Cheats" have gotten an actual push to do so. "Need You Now," "Wanted," "If I Die Young," all of Taylor's hits, "Body Like a Back Road," etc. There have been a few to get a little traction on their own, but they always fizzle out right as they near or barely enter the top 50 on pop, such as "Don't You Wanna Stay." I'm sure there have been a few to crossover decently to hot AC or AC on their own without a push, though probably not many.
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Leo ✔
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Post by Leo ✔ on Jul 30, 2017 11:09:42 GMT -5
Yeah I agree. The Fighter is a smash on its own, but without a push it wont be able to do something
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Post by kcdawg13 on Jul 30, 2017 11:34:39 GMT -5
Pop radio is too stuck in it's own world, they don't play anything slightly different, even if it's hitting everywhere. Black Beatles and Bad and Boujee were #1 back to back and Pop wouldn't play them, even though they were the biggest songs in the country. Just a few months ago Humble was #1 and Pop refused to play that song.
Let's take a look at two huge Country hits right now: The Fighter and Craving You. Both which have been doing quite a lot over at Country radio, but Pop refuses to play them. Why? Well, because the names. You can barely call those songs country, aside from an instrument, they are essentially pop songs. But because Urban, Underwood, Rhett, and Morris are connected to them, Pop won't play them. The programmers are afraid that those songs will get a really negative reaction because Country is such a polarizing genre, despite being the biggest in the country.
Even Body Like A Backroad, which has crossovered. I still can't hear without an ad right before talking about the hottest local country stations. It's really sad honestly, Pop radio is too scared to branch out from it's regular format, they'd rather play boring mush like Issues and Say You Won't Let Go all day and not the real hits.
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NeRD
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Post by NeRD on Jul 30, 2017 11:40:53 GMT -5
Don't think this is true? All other country songs to have crossed over successfully since "Before He Cheats" have gotten an actual push to do so. "Need You Now," "Wanted," "If I Die Young," all of Taylor's hits, "Body Like a Back Road," etc. There have been a few to get a little traction on their own, but they always fizzle out right as they near or barely enter the top 50 on pop, such as "Don't You Wanna Stay." I'm sure there have been a few to crossover decently to hot AC or AC on their own without a push, though probably not many. I'll take your word for it.
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Soulsista
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Post by Soulsista on Jul 30, 2017 11:58:08 GMT -5
Billboard Top 10 from 55, 50, 45, and 40 years ago:
August 11, 1962
01 02 Breaking Up Is Hard To Do - Neil Sedaka (1st of 2 weeks at #1) 02 01 Roses Are Red - Bobby Vinton 03 04 The Wah Watusi - The Orlons 04 08 The Loco-Motion - Little Eva 05 05 Ahab, The Arab - Ray Stevens 06 06 Speedy Gonzales - Pat Boone 07 03 Sealed With a Kiss - Brian Hyland 08 13 You'll Lose a Good Thing - Barbara Lynn 09 16 Things - Bobby Darin 10 09 The Stripper - David Rose & His Orchestra
August 12, 1967
01 01 Light My Fire - The Doors (3rd and final week at #1) 02 03 All You Need Is Love - The Beatles 03 02 I Was Made To Love Her - Stevie Wonder 04 09 Pleasant Valley Sunday - The Monkees 05 07 Mercy, Mercy, Mercy - The Buckinghams 06 06 Can't Take My Eyes Off Of You - Frankie Valli 07 05 A Whiter Shade Of Pale - Procol Harum 08 04 Windy - The Association 09 16 Carrie Ann - The Hollies 10 11 A Girl Like You - The Young Rascals
August 12, 1972
01 01 Alone Again (Naturally) - Gilbert O'Sullivan (3rd of 6 weeks at #1) 02 02 Brandy (You're a Fine Girl) - Looking Glass 03 03 (If Loving You Is Wrong) I Don't Want To Be Right - Luther Ingram 04 04 Daddy Don't You Walk So Fast - Wayne Newton 05 06 Where Is The Love - Roberta Flack & Donny Hathaway 06 09 Long Cool Woman (In a Black Dress) - The Hollies 07 15 I'm Still In Love With You - Al Green 08 05 Too Late To Turn Back Now - The Cornelius Brothers & Sister Rose 09 08 How Do You Do - Mouth & MacNeal 10 07 School's Out - Alice Cooper
August 13, 1977
01 01 I Just Want To Be Your Everything - Andy Gibb (3rd of 4 weeks at #1) 02 02 I'm In You - Peter Frampton 03 03 Best Of My Love - The Emotions 04 07 (Your Love Has Lifted Me) Higher And Higher - Rita Coolidge 05 05 Do You Wanna Make Love - Peter McCann 06 04 My Heart Belongs To Me - Barbra Streisand 07 08 Easy - The Commodores 08 09 Whatcha Gonna Do - deleted Cruise 09 10 You And Me - Alice Cooper 10 11 You Made Me Believe In Magic - The Bay City Rollers
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Soulsista
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Post by Soulsista on Jul 30, 2017 12:20:39 GMT -5
Billboard Top 10 from 35, 30, 25, and 20 years ago:
August 14, 1982
01 01 Eye Of The Tiger - Survivor (4th of 6 weeks at #1) 02 02 Hurts So Good - John (Cougar) Mellencamp 03 03 Abracadabra - The Steve Miller Band 04 04 Hold Me - Fleetwood Mac 05 05 Hard To Say I'm Sorry - Chicago 06 07 Even The Nights Are Better - Air Supply 07 08 Keep The Burnin' - REO Speedwagon 08 06 Rosanna - Toto 09 12 Vacation - The Go-Go's 10 11 Wasted On The Way - Crosby, Stills & Nash
August 15, 1987
01 01 I Still Haven't Found What I'm Looking For - U2 (2nd and final week at #1) 02 07 Who's That Girl - Madonna 03 02 I Want Your Sex - George Michael 04 05 Luka - Suzanne Vega 05 11 La Bamba - Los Lobos 06 04 Heart And Soul - T'Pau 07 12 Don't Mean Nothing - Richard Marx 08 08 Cross My Broken Heart - The Jets 09 13 Only In My Dreams - Debbie Gibson 10 06 Rhythm Is Gonna Get You - Gloria Estefan & The Miami Sound Machine
16 37 I Just Can't Stop Loving You - Michael Jackson & Siedah Garrett
August 15, 1992
01 04 End Of The Road - Boyz II Men (1st of 13 weeks at #1) 02 03 Baby-Baby-Baby - TLC 03 01 This Used To Be My Playground - Madonna 04 02 Baby Got Back - Sir Mix-A-Lot 05 05 November Rain - Guns N' Roses 06 07 Just Another Day - Jon Secada 07 08 Life Is a Highway - Tom Cochrane 08 09 Giving Him Something He Can Feel - En Vogue 09 06 Achy Breaky Heart - Billy Ray Cyrus 10 14 Move This - Technotronic feat. Ya Kid K
11 12 Come And Talk To Me - Jodeci 15 39 Humpin' Around - Bobby Brown
August 9, 1997
01 01 I'll Be Missing You - Puff Daddy & Faith Evans feat. 112 (9th of 11 weeks at #1) 02 04 Mo Money Mo Problems - The Notorious B.I.G. feat. Puff Daddy & Mase 03 03 Quit Playing Games (With My Heart) - The Backstreet Boys 04 05 Semi-Charmed Life - Third Eye Blind 05 02 Bitch - Meredith Brooks 06 27 Not Tonight - Lil' Kim feat. Da Brat, Left Eye, Missy Elliott & Angie Martinez 07 07 Do You Know (What It Takes) - Robyn 08 08 Sunny Came Home - Shawn Colvin 09 12 How Do I Live - LeAnn Rimes 10 NE Never Make a Promise - Dru Hill
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Soulsista
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Post by Soulsista on Jul 30, 2017 12:43:07 GMT -5
Billboard Top 10 Flashback:
August 10, 2002
01 01 Hot In Herre - Nelly (7th and final week at #1) 02 03 Dilemma - Nelly feat. Kelly Rowland 03 02 Complicated - Avril Lavigne 04 04 I Need a Girl (Part 2) - P. Diddy & Ginuwine feat. Loon, Mario Winans & Tammy Ruggieri 05 07 Just a Friend 2002 - Mario 06 05 Hero - Chad Kroeger feat. Josey Scott 07 08 Down 4 U - Irv Gotti presents The Inc. feat. Ja Rule, Ashanti, Charli Baltimore & Vita 08 11 Heaven - DJ Sammy & Yanou feat. Do 09 06 Without Me - Eminem 10 19 Nothin' - N.O.R.E.
August 11, 2007
01 23 Beautiful Girls - Sean Kingston (1st of 4 weeks at #1) 02 01 Hey There Delilah - The Plain White T's 03 02 Big Girls Don't Cry - Fergie 04 03 Umbrella - Rihanna feat. Jay-Z 05 04 The Way I Are - Timbaland feat. Keri Hilson 06 10 Bartender - T-Pain feat. Akon 07 05 Party Like a Rockstar - The Shop Boyz 08 09 Buy U a Drank (Shawty Snappin') - T-Pain feat. Yung Joc 09 11 Make Me Better - Fabolous feat. Ne-Yo 10 08 A Bay Bay - Hurricane Chris
August 11, 2012
01 01 Call Me Maybe - Carly Rae Jepsen (8th of 9 weeks at #1) 02 03 Wide Awake - Katy Perry 03 02 Payphone - Maroon 5 feat. Wiz Khalifa 04 06 Whistle - Flo Rida 05 04 Lights - Ellie Goulding 06 05 Somebody That I Used To Know - Gotye feat. Kimbra 07 07 Where Have You Been - Rihanna 08 08 Titanium - David Guetta feat. Sia 09 09 Scream - Usher 10 10 Blow Me (One Last Kiss) - P!nk
August 13, 2016
01 01 Cheap Thrills - Sia feat. Sean Paul (2nd of 4 weeks at #1) 02 NE Cold Water - Major Lazer feat. Justin Bieber & MØ 03 02 One Dance - Drake feat. Wizkid & Kyla 04 03 This Is What You Came For - Calvin Harris feat. Rihanna 05 04 Can't Stop The Feeling! - Justin Timberlake 06 05 Don't Let Me Down - The Chainsmokers feat. Daya 07 06 Ride - Twenty One Pilots 08 07 Needed Me - Rihanna 09 10 Send My Love (To Your New Lover) - Adele 10 09 Panda - Desiigner
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renfield75
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Post by renfield75 on Jul 30, 2017 12:45:03 GMT -5
Billboard Top 10 from 35, 30, 25, and 20 years ago: August 15, 199201 04 End Of The Road - Boyz II Men (1st of 13 weeks at #1)I was watching the charts when this happened (yeah, I'm old). It was the beginning of an incredibly exciting couple of months as Boyz II Men went on to break the record for longest running number one in Hot 100 history...kinda like the excitement everyone has now watching to see if "Despacito" can break the record. Of course Boyz II Men broke a decades old record only to have Whitney Houston snatch it away from them just a few months later! But then the Boyz (and Mariah) came back to reclaim the title...
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Post by superdroid73 on Jul 30, 2017 15:22:21 GMT -5
Pop radio is too stuck in it's own world, they don't play anything slightly different, even if it's hitting everywhere. Black Beatles and Bad and Boujee were #1 back to back and Pop wouldn't play them, even though they were the biggest songs in the country. Just a few months ago Humble was #1 and Pop refused to play that song. Let's take a look at two huge Country hits right now: The Fighter and Craving You. Both which have been doing quite a lot over at Country radio, but Pop refuses to play them. Why? Well, because the names. You can barely call those songs country, aside from an instrument, they are essentially pop songs. But because Urban, Underwood, Rhett, and Morris are connected to them, Pop won't play them. The programmers are afraid that those songs will get a really negative reaction because Country is such a polarizing genre, despite being the biggest in the country. Even Body Like A Backroad, which has crossovered. I still can't hear without an ad right before talking about the hottest local country stations. It's really sad honestly, Pop radio is too scared to branch out from it's regular format, they'd rather play boring mush like Issues and Say You Won't Let Go all day and not the real hits. I really don't get why it's like this now, it didn't use to be like that. I remember back in the 90s and 2000s, rap would normally cross over. Now, it's almost impossible to hear a pure rap song on pop stations. If Bad and Boujee, Black Beatles and HUMBLE hit #1, pop radio should play them. Ignoring those songs simply because they're different from what they normally play is stupid and pretty biased.
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Bhad Bill
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Post by Bhad Bill on Jul 30, 2017 15:31:07 GMT -5
All other country songs to have crossed over successfully since "Before He Cheats" have gotten an actual push to do so. "Need You Now," "Wanted," "If I Die Young," all of Taylor's hits, "Body Like a Back Road," etc. There have been a few to get a little traction on their own, but they always fizzle out right as they near or barely enter the top 50 on pop, such as "Don't You Wanna Stay." I'm sure there have been a few to crossover decently to hot AC or AC on their own without a push, though probably not many. I'll take your word for it. What about some of Shania's early singles? Were all of them pushed to pop? I could have sworn she was the "original" country crossover in the 1990s.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Jul 30, 2017 15:54:31 GMT -5
No way! If Drake doesn't release anything asap, he won't have a song on Hot 100. I'm certain they will write a whole article about this
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jebsib
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Post by jebsib on Jul 30, 2017 15:57:43 GMT -5
No Country songs were pushed to Pop in the 1990s before Shania's "Come On Over" album EXCEPT:
- Achy Breaks Heart - Billy Ray Cyrus - When She Cries - Restless Heart - What Might Have Been - Little Texas - How Do I Live - LeAnn Rimes
Then the Faith Hill, Martina McBride, Lonestar, Lee Ann Womack floodgates opened. Then everything kind of stopped until Taylor Swift.
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atg
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Post by atg on Jul 30, 2017 16:05:18 GMT -5
No way! If Drake doesn't release anything asap, he won't have a song on Hot 100. I'm certain they will write a whole article about this Yeah i think it's finally time for it to be over. There's no singles crossing over from more life and his recent song "signs" isn't doing well either
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Gary
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Post by Gary on Jul 30, 2017 16:20:36 GMT -5
Drake Watch ---- Yeah guess it is time keep an eye on this. He has 3 charting, one more than the prior week but none higher than 74
The Billboard Hot 100 2009-05-23
92 NEW 1 Best I Ever Had, Drake 92
The Billboard Hot 100 2017-08-05
74 67 51 18 Passionfruit, Drake 88 83 54 4 Signs, Drake 100 0 Re-Entry 3 No Complaints, Metro Boomin Featuring Offset & Drake
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Post by Golden Bluebird on Jul 30, 2017 16:34:52 GMT -5
The programmers are afraid that those songs will get a really negative reaction because Country is such a polarizing genre, despite being the biggest in the country. I agree with a lot of your post, but I disagree with this one part. Sure, country is one of the biggest music genres in the US, but the biggest? Aren't genres like R&B/hip-hop and rock bigger though?
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Envoirment
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Post by Envoirment on Jul 30, 2017 17:05:27 GMT -5
Pop radio is too stuck in it's own world, they don't play anything slightly different, even if it's hitting everywhere. Black Beatles and Bad and Boujee were #1 back to back and Pop wouldn't play them, even though they were the biggest songs in the country. Just a few months ago Humble was #1 and Pop refused to play that song. Let's take a look at two huge Country hits right now: The Fighter and Craving You. Both which have been doing quite a lot over at Country radio, but Pop refuses to play them. Why? Well, because the names. You can barely call those songs country, aside from an instrument, they are essentially pop songs. But because Urban, Underwood, Rhett, and Morris are connected to them, Pop won't play them. The programmers are afraid that those songs will get a really negative reaction because Country is such a polarizing genre, despite being the biggest in the country. Even Body Like A Backroad, which has crossovered. I still can't hear without an ad right before talking about the hottest local country stations. It's really sad honestly, Pop radio is too scared to branch out from it's regular format, they'd rather play boring mush like Issues and Say You Won't Let Go all day and not the real hits. Black Beatles got to #13, Humble #26 and Bad and Boujee to #31 on Pop radio. So it isn't as if they refused to outright play them. I don't think you have a valid point in regards to country. One of the biggest reasons pop radio doesn't play country songs is because hardly any ever get pushed to pop raido. Neither of the songs you named have had an adds date for pop radio or are under cool new music. You could say it's the labels fault for not pushing country songs to pop. I mean "Body Like A Back Road" got a push to pop radio and it's doing very well, it's a very pop-leaning country song though. Pop radio is more diverse than it has been in recents years. All sorts of songs have been getting play, particularly more R&B/Hip-hop songs. If you think the state of pop radio is bad today, you obviously haven't lived through the 2009-2011 Dance/Pop phase of pop radio (I really enjoyed that, but song diversity was very low).
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imbondz
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Post by imbondz on Jul 30, 2017 18:50:10 GMT -5
No Country songs were pushed to Pop in the 1990s before Shania's "Come On Over" album EXCEPT: - Achy Breaks Heart - Billy Ray Cyrus - When She Cries - Restless Heart - What Might Have Been - Little Texas - How Do I Live - LeAnn Rimes Then the Faith Hill, Martina McBride, Lonestar, Lee Ann Womack floodgates opened. Then everything kind of stopped until Taylor Swift. All those were huge hits.
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jayhawk1117
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Post by jayhawk1117 on Jul 30, 2017 18:56:35 GMT -5
So over or under 13 for Mi Gente, the first song to capitalize in a post Despacito world. It's top 10 on Us Spotify only 3 weeks in, pretty amazing YouTube and pretty high sales for a brand new Spanish song.
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Au$tin
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Post by Au$tin on Jul 30, 2017 20:06:09 GMT -5
I'll take your word for it. What about some of Shania's early singles? Were all of them pushed to pop? I could have sworn she was the "original" country crossover in the 1990s. Well, those would all be before "Before He Cheats," so it wouldn't change the validity of my comment.
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Post by Baby Yoda Hot100Fan on Jul 30, 2017 20:24:50 GMT -5
So over or under 13 for Mi Gente, the first song to capitalize in a post Despacito world. It's top 10 on Us Spotify only 3 weeks in, pretty amazing YouTube and pretty high sales for a brand new Spanish song. I'll grant you that it is impressive having it in the top 10 of Spotify. On YouTube, those numbers are worldwide. According to YouTube insights, it's not even in the top 20 for last week in the US. It might get there, eventually. It seems that people in Latin American countries do like to stream their music on YouTube much more than in Spotify. BTW, Subeme la Radio debuted in this week's UK Official Singles Chart top 100 thanks to a Sean Paul and Matt Terry. It'll be interesting to see if that remix eventually helps it in the US and whether remixing Latin Songs with English lyrics by known artists helps those songs achieve success the way it happened with Despacito.
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85la
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Post by 85la on Jul 30, 2017 20:53:49 GMT -5
Pop radio is too stuck in it's own world, they don't play anything slightly different, even if it's hitting everywhere. Black Beatles and Bad and Boujee were #1 back to back and Pop wouldn't play them, even though they were the biggest songs in the country. Just a few months ago Humble was #1 and Pop refused to play that song. Let's take a look at two huge Country hits right now: The Fighter and Craving You. Both which have been doing quite a lot over at Country radio, but Pop refuses to play them. Why? Well, because the names. You can barely call those songs country, aside from an instrument, they are essentially pop songs. But because Urban, Underwood, Rhett, and Morris are connected to them, Pop won't play them. The programmers are afraid that those songs will get a really negative reaction because Country is such a polarizing genre, despite being the biggest in the country. Even Body Like A Backroad, which has crossovered. I still can't hear without an ad right before talking about the hottest local country stations. It's really sad honestly, Pop radio is too scared to branch out from it's regular format, they'd rather play boring mush like Issues and Say You Won't Let Go all day and not the real hits. Black Beatles got to #13, Humble #26 and Bad and Boujee to #31 on Pop radio. So it isn't as if they refused to outright play them. I don't think you have a valid point in regards to country. One of the biggest reasons pop radio doesn't play country songs is because hardly any ever get pushed to pop raido. Neither of the songs you named have had an adds date for pop radio or are under cool new music. You could say it's the labels fault for not pushing country songs to pop. I mean "Body Like A Back Road" got a push to pop radio and it's doing very well, it's a very pop-leaning country song though. Pop radio is more diverse than it has been in recents years. All sorts of songs have been getting play, particularly more R&B/Hip-hop songs. If you think the state of pop radio is bad today, you obviously haven't lived through the 2009-2011 Dance/Pop phase of pop radio (I really enjoyed that, but song diversity was very low).I would actually say pop radio then was more diverse than it is now. True, dance pop was the biggest genre then, but there was a still a fair amount of R&B/hip-hop songs - Beyonce, Usher, Nicki Minaj, Eminem, etc., and a fair amount of rock songs as well. If you want to talk about a time when pop radio wasn't diverse, it was the mid-2000's circa 2003-2007. Then it was R&B/hip-hop all day, all the time, around the clock.
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Post by superdroid73 on Jul 30, 2017 21:31:37 GMT -5
If you want to hear a diverse pop station, you have to tune in to the AMP radio stations. They play some pure hip hop and even play some Latin music to go with the pop, and is more reflective of what's actually big on the charts.
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Envoirment
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Post by Envoirment on Jul 30, 2017 21:36:08 GMT -5
Black Beatles got to #13, Humble #26 and Bad and Boujee to #31 on Pop radio. So it isn't as if they refused to outright play them. I don't think you have a valid point in regards to country. One of the biggest reasons pop radio doesn't play country songs is because hardly any ever get pushed to pop raido. Neither of the songs you named have had an adds date for pop radio or are under cool new music. You could say it's the labels fault for not pushing country songs to pop. I mean "Body Like A Back Road" got a push to pop radio and it's doing very well, it's a very pop-leaning country song though. Pop radio is more diverse than it has been in recents years. All sorts of songs have been getting play, particularly more R&B/Hip-hop songs. If you think the state of pop radio is bad today, you obviously haven't lived through the 2009-2011 Dance/Pop phase of pop radio (I really enjoyed that, but song diversity was very low).I would actually say pop radio then was more diverse than it is now. True, dance pop was the biggest genre then, but there was a still a fair amount of R&B/hip-hop songs - Beyonce, Usher, Nicki Minaj, Eminem, etc., and a fair amount of rock songs as well. If you want to talk about a time when pop radio wasn't diverse, it was the mid-2000's circa 2003-2007. Then it was R&B/hip-hop all day, all the time, around the clock. I wouldn't really say that. Nicki's songs were very pop-leaning and she got backlash from it. Eminem only did as well as he did on Pop radio thanks to Rihanna. Beyonce's I Am...Sasha Fierce is her most pop album. Usher was releasing pop songs as well. Usher's "OMG"/"Dj Got Us Falling In Love"/"Without You" were bang on the dance/pop trend. I didn't have internet back in the early-mid 00s when R&B/Hip-hop was dominating so can't really comment on that (I'm from the UK). Pop is playing a good range of songs. "Body Like A Back Road"/"Believer"/"Wild Moments"/"Stay"/"Unforgettable"/"Redbone"/"Versace on the Floor"/"That's What I Like"/"Castle on the Hill"/"Mi Gente"/"Despacito". Good range of songs there - Rock, Latin, R&B, Hip-hop, country, dance/electronic & pop/AC (likely more genres covered than I've highlighted). I'm surprised "Redbone" and "Believer" are doing so well on pop radio. I don't think either would have been touched a few years ago.
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Post by superdroid73 on Jul 30, 2017 22:58:51 GMT -5
I would actually say pop radio then was more diverse than it is now. True, dance pop was the biggest genre then, but there was a still a fair amount of R&B/hip-hop songs - Beyonce, Usher, Nicki Minaj, Eminem, etc., and a fair amount of rock songs as well. If you want to talk about a time when pop radio wasn't diverse, it was the mid-2000's circa 2003-2007. Then it was R&B/hip-hop all day, all the time, around the clock. I wouldn't really say that. Nicki's songs were very pop-leaning and she got backlash from it. Eminem only did as well as he did on Pop radio thanks to Rihanna. Beyonce's I Am...Sasha Fierce is her most pop album. Usher was releasing pop songs as well. Usher's "OMG"/"Dj Got Us Falling In Love"/"Without You" were bang on the dance/pop trend. I didn't have internet back in the early-mid 00s when R&B/Hip-hop was dominating so can't really comment on that (I'm from the UK). Pop is playing a good range of songs. "Body Like A Back Road"/"Believer"/"Wild Moments"/"Stay"/"Unforgettable"/"Redbone"/"Versace on the Floor"/"That's What I Like"/"Castle on the Hill"/"Mi Gente"/"Despacito". Good range of songs there - Rock, Latin, R&B, Hip-hop, country, dance/electronic & pop/AC (likely more genres covered than I've highlighted). I'm surprised "Redbone" and "Believer" are doing so well on pop radio. I don't think either would have been touched a few years ago. Nah. Actually, Eminem got played on the radio at the time because of how big he was in the 2000s and because of his appeal with audiences at the time, not Rihanna. Not Afraid was played on pop radio before Love The Way You Lie, and that was without Rihanna (The Monster, however, was definitely because of Rihanna, by then his popularity among the pop crowd had fallen off). Being a white rapper also helps. Also, rap and R&B was constantly crossing over during the early and mid-2000s, but there was definitely some pop and rock in between, so diversity wasn't lacking in the 2000s. The pop stations are still reluctant to play anything that isn't from their genre regardless of how big they get (which is frustrating), but at least they're more diverse than they were at the beginning of the decade.
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Harx
5x Platinum Member
Joined: August 2016
Posts: 5,049
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Post by Harx on Jul 30, 2017 23:21:37 GMT -5
It's appropriate for Drake to end his streak of presence on Hot 100 right now because I feel like the whole Drake hype from the past couple of years has mostly faded away. He's still obviously a huge star but he might have peaked in 2016 in terms of chart success. Now he kind of stopped caring about keeping up his status of the biggest rapper alive and people's attention is moving towards other rappers, part of why did we have so many mainstream breakthroughs this year (Migos, Kendrick Lamar, Future).
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forg
2x Platinum Member
Joined: May 2009
Posts: 2,356
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Post by forg on Jul 30, 2017 23:30:18 GMT -5
I hope Symphony can at least crack a single week on the Hot 100 after those months at bubbling under!
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Post by kcdawg13 on Jul 30, 2017 23:52:52 GMT -5
It's appropriate for Drake to end his streak of presence on Hot 100 right now because I feel like the whole Drake hype from the past couple of years has mostly faded away. He's still obviously a huge star but he might have peaked in 2016 in terms of chart success. Now he kind of stopped caring about keeping up his status of the biggest rapper alive and people's attention is moving towards other rappers, part of why did we have so many mainstream breakthroughs this year (Migos, Kendrick Lamar, Future). I think it's time for Drake to take a break, he's been doing music non-stop for over a decade now. And the public seems to be sick of him, he needs to take at least 1 or 2 years off and get away from the music scene and make his comeback late 2018/2019. It's the appropriate time.
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Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Jul 30, 2017 23:53:45 GMT -5
Drakes songs keeps getting worse and worse IMO, especially in his features as well. Although Passionfruit was ok.
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