leonagwen
Diamond Member
#LiteralLegender
Joined: November 2011
Posts: 15,284
|
Post by leonagwen on Dec 13, 2017 2:23:55 GMT -5
December 1963(Oh What A Night) by The 4 Seasons reached #1 in 1976 and also peaked at #14 in 1993.Any other songs?
|
|
Deleted
Joined: January 1970
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Dec 13, 2017 3:50:29 GMT -5
The Twist
|
|
irice22
9x Platinum Member
listening to Kesha. Always.
Joined: October 2003
Posts: 9,213
|
Post by irice22 on Dec 13, 2017 3:59:10 GMT -5
"Bohemian Rhapsody" went to #9 in 1975, and then #2 in 1992.
|
|
ry4n
7x Platinum Member
Joined: November 2014
Posts: 7,233
My Charts
Pronouns: he/him
|
Post by ry4n on Dec 13, 2017 6:27:21 GMT -5
Stand By Me Unchained Melody
|
|
Harx
5x Platinum Member
Joined: August 2016
Posts: 5,049
|
Post by Harx on Dec 13, 2017 7:08:49 GMT -5
Songs that got popular again for a while after artist's death (I Will Always Love You, Purple Rain, etc)
|
|
Leo ✔
Diamond Member
Julia Michaels Stan
Happy happy happy ♪
Joined: June 2016
Posts: 74,627
My Charts
Pronouns: He/him/his
|
Post by Leo ✔ on Dec 13, 2017 12:16:38 GMT -5
Sail.
|
|
rainie
8x Platinum Member
what else is in the teaches of peaches ?
Joined: February 2016
Posts: 8,743
Pronouns: they / them
|
Post by rainie on Dec 13, 2017 12:34:47 GMT -5
Multiple Taylor Swift songs, Rockstar by Nickelback, Radioactive by Imagine Dragons, and for a more recent example, Love by Kendrick Lamar.
|
|
|
Post by truemusicreviews on Dec 13, 2017 16:30:07 GMT -5
Blackbear - "Do Re Mi"
|
|
Gary
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2014
Posts: 45,843
|
Post by Gary on Dec 13, 2017 18:22:01 GMT -5
It was off the 7 weeks between its "1st chart run" and "2nd chart run"
|
|
Gary
Diamond Member
Joined: January 2014
Posts: 45,843
|
Post by Gary on Dec 13, 2017 18:24:21 GMT -5
General question for this thread, if a song such as something by Taylor Swift makes a debut due to a digital release, then it re-enters when the album comes out, is that two chart runs?
Or if a song debuts at #95, falls out for 2 weeks then re-enters, is that two chart runs?
In that case there are hundreds of examples.
|
|
garrettlen
Gold Member
Joined: April 2017
Posts: 882
|
Post by garrettlen on Dec 13, 2017 19:09:12 GMT -5
The Beatles - "Twist and Shout" - their cover version of a song originally done by the Top Notes (who? Yeah, exactly), and then more famously the Isley Brothers, became a big hit for the Beatles when their version that was originally recorded for their first UK album in 1963, was released as a standalone single in the early rush of Beatlemania in early 1964.
The single reached #2 on the Hot 100. It was kept out of the #1 spot by the Beatles' own "Can't Buy Me Love."
It recharted in 1986 due to two movies that were released that summer prominently featuring it; "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" where star Matthew Broderick lip synced to the Beatles' version of it, and "Back to School" where star Rodney Dangerfield sang his own version that was based on the version done by the Beatles.
This time the single reached #23 on the Hot 100.
|
|
someguy
Diamond Member
Joined: October 2003
Posts: 16,145
|
Post by someguy on Dec 13, 2017 19:23:41 GMT -5
Dolly Parton took "I Will Always Love You" to #1 twice. First in 1974, and then again in 1982 (with a re-recording). She also recorded it as a duet with Vince Gill, which reached #14 in 1995.
|
|
|
Post by truemusicreviews on Dec 13, 2017 23:42:15 GMT -5
I agree...we need to establish a minimum time between the chart runs.
|
|
|
Post by Naos on Dec 14, 2017 3:25:36 GMT -5
How about a lot of the Christmas music like songs from Mariah Carey and Pentatonix? I know it's the obvious choice.
|
|