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0016

 

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CONNIE FRANCIS

My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own

 

 

No. 1 Run: 30 September, 1960 - 7 October, 1960 (2 weeks)

 

.........UK Chart Peak: #3 (14 weeks on chart)

.........US Chart Peak: #1 (17 weeks on chart)

.........Release Date: 25 July, 1960 on MGM

.........Sales: 150k (est.)

 

From one female top hit to another for the first time in the chart and it's the lady who took the top spot first out of all ladies. Connie Francis graces the top spot for the second time with this beautiful ballad (something you'll come to see won't be happening all too often on this countdown). While I do prefer her first hit ("Everybody's Somebody's Fool") over this one this is very charming and Connie manages to convey the heartbreak quite well here. I will say though that her two chart toppers are rather similar so unless she changes things up a notch I don't think we'll be seeing a whole lot more of Connie in the future. At least not in the top spot.

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0017

 

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ROY ORBISON

Only the Lonely

 

 

No. 1 Run: 14 October, 1960 - 21 October, 1960 (2 weeks)

 

.........UK Chart Peak: #1 (23 weeks on chart)

.........US Chart Peak: #2 (21 weeks on chart)

.........Release Date: May 1960 on Monument 45-421

.........Sales: 180k (est.)

 

Roy Orbison really was quite different from other standard pop artists of the time and it does feel like this song easily stands out from a lot of the other songs of this year in that it feels a bit ahead of its time. That's not to say that it's necessarily my favorite song of the year - its sales show that this isn't the case - but it's just interesting for this matter. Roy Orbison is obviously best known for his massive song "Oh, Pretty Woman" but I've never really explored his discography beyond that so I was surprised to find a few songs that I like outside of that. Orbison unfortunately does not join the roster of still living artists to top my chart as he tragically died of a heart attack in 1988 at only 52 years old. Roy had an iconic look that utilised the famous saying that "less is more" quite well. Usually dressed in a cardigan or suit with his sunglasses on it was easy to spot the shy superstar whenever he was in the spotlight. It's quite morbidly interesting to note that he and both of his parents all died within a span of ten years with his father, Orbie Lee Orbison dying in 1984 and his mother, Nadine Vesta Shults, dying in 1992. Just an odd observation I noticed on his Wikipedia page.

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0018

 

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ELVIS PRESLEY

It's Now or Never

 

 

No. 1 Run: 28 October, 1960 (1 week)

 

.........UK Chart Peak: #1 (24 weeks on chart)

.........US Chart Peak: #1 (20 weeks on chart)

.........Release Date: July 5, 1960 on RCA Studio B

.........Sales: 175k (est.)

 

And now for the final song of the day it's finally happened: The king has arrived at the top spot! I'll admit I have never really been a huge Elvis fan but some of his songs are still definitely worthy of gracing the top spot and as much as I'd like this to be the only one there will undoubtedly be more but you won't see Elvis replicate his IRL success here with 50 number ones or whatever lol. They will be few but picked for reason. "It's Now or Never" is one of the few Presley ballads that I actually like. Listening to it I can see the similarities between Coco and Presley quite clearly (although Ernesto isn't based on Elvis according to Disney, which makes sense given that it's a Mexican film) and it's very much peak Elvis. This song obviously was huge in 1960 though and is one of Elvis' songs that got re-released in 2005 and nabbed the top spot in the UK again that year (ugh what an annoying year for number ones lol) and for some reason even managed to place 7th in the R&B chart which is very weird even for 1960. This is Elvis' biggest international single ever but it's definitely not my biggest Elvis single ever, that's still to come .. in a while.

 

To clutch the coveted top spot in its one week on top, "It's Now or Never" had to fight off some tough competition from The Everly Brothers. Their single "When Will I Be Loved" peaked at #3 this week and sold upwards of 115k in its 8 weeks on the chart.

Edited by diva thin muffin

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That Sam Cooke song is absolutely fantastic such a classic. As is Puppy Love, some great tracks in here, this countdown is a good idea. I know some of the melodies are simplistic but that's going to happen with the technology of he Day and tastes developing.

 

It really highlights how The Beatles really changed everything I mean can you imagine listening to Pick of the Pops in 1960 with these tracks and then all of a sudden 'She Loves Me' coming on or 'Satisfaction' by The Rolling Stones or 'My Generation' by The Who a few short years later, it really was a revolution when you think about it.

I forgot to reply to these but thank you very much for the praise on this idea! I'm very excited to keep this going and hope you guys are hyped for it too! And you're right, The Beatles really did change everything. It's weird realising they come into this mix in just 2 years time here but their sound is so different from what's happening in 1960 but I do like songs from all these different genres of the time still.

 

Steve Lawrence was a big fave for me later on with his missus, I Just Want To Stay Here, but I didn;t know Footsteps until Showaddywaddy covered it :D Connie Francis is sweet, musically, and Neil Sedaka is a great songwriter (seen him in concert a couple of times too), Stairway To heaven is decent enough.

 

This is the ad that made the Sam Cooke track a hit. I can't speak for others but I certainly bought some 501's at the time, one of the few occasions when an advert worked on me :lol:

Ohh lol that's so interesting to read and I love seeing ads from that time :lol: ! Thank you for this input and your continued presence in this thread, I really appreciate your interest!

 

Oddly, The Twist never got the mass audience in the UK that Let's Twist Again did - I didn;t know this track until it featured on the other side of the airplay side hit double A side reissue in 1975, but Let's Twist Again was huge and I was aware from a very early age. Mum used to Twist to it (she would have been about 23 or 24), and so did I (about 4 or 5) :lol:

It's cool to see how The Twist and Lets Twist Again achieved such different degrees of success on each side of the pond lol. I will admit I'm also more familiar with Lets Twist Again and it may very well take up a week or two (or more) in 1961 on here!

 

Chain Gang isn;t one of my favest Sam Cooke tracks, but it is one I knew as a kid and liked. It's quite a clever track soundwise. That Brenda Lee track isnt one I know, and I like it! Very young Brenda, it's somewhere between rockin' Brenda and ballad Brenda and does it's own thing.

Great to see you agree with me on the Brenda track being good despite not being one we're familiar with. I'm excited to hear her growth over the decade sound-wise.

I didn't know that Connie Francis track either, nice enough I think.

 

Poor ol' Roy had a generally tragic life, his wife dying, shortly after his boys dying in a house fire in the late 60's, all very sad. You're in for a Roy Orbison treat, this is a very great song, but his classics are still to come :)

 

Elvis is a goodie, very Italian-ballad, he did better but he did much much worse too :lol:

 

I grew up with Roy & Elvis in the house loved by mum & dad - played them today for my mum in fact, she has advanced alzheimers, can't talk or do anything for herself, but they still make her happy and want to dance and happy emotional. The power of music lasts!

 

 

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I didn't know that Connie Francis track either, nice enough I think.

 

Poor ol' Roy had a generally tragic life, his wife dying, shortly after his boys dying in a house fire in the late 60's, all very sad. You're in for a Roy Orbison treat, this is a very great song, but his classics are still to come :)

 

Elvis is a goodie, very Italian-ballad, he did better but he did much much worse too :lol:

 

I grew up with Roy & Elvis in the house loved by mum & dad - played them today for my mum in fact, she has advanced alzheimers, can't talk or do anything for herself, but they still make her happy and want to dance and happy emotional. The power of music lasts!

Thank you so much for this! I'm intrigued about the info about Roy, sure sounds like his life was tragic from start to finish but what I am most thankful to read here is your story about your mom. I'm touched by what you wrote and it's definitely clear that music has immense power that we may never fully understand. I'm sorry to hear about the state she's in but I'm happy to hear that music can seemingly bring her to a happy place in the moment :heart:

Thank you so much for this! I'm intrigued about the info about Roy, sure sounds like his life was tragic from start to finish but what I am most thankful to read here is your story about your mom. I'm touched by what you wrote and it's definitely clear that music has immense power that we may never fully understand. I'm sorry to hear about the state she's in but I'm happy to hear that music can seemingly bring her to a happy place in the moment :heart:

 

Thanks Diva, that's very kind :heart: Music can literally be a life-saver helping people get through the rough stuff that life throws at you, sometimes even bringing people out of comas. We don't all have to like the same stuff, but if a piece of music is important to someone then that makes it worthy :)

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0019

 

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BOBBY RYDELL

Sway

 

 

No. 1 Run: 4 November, 1960 - 17 November, 1960 (2 weeks)

 

.........UK Chart Peak: #12 (12 weeks on chart)

.........US Chart Peak: #14 (12 weeks on chart)

.........Release Date: October 1960

.........Sales: 165k (est.)

 

We've reached November 1960 and it's Bobby Rydell's third time showing up on the chart this year, although it's only his second time on top. This time he shows up with a cover of Dean Martin's iconic "Sway" and since Dean's version was released in the 50s I've decided to allow this to take the top spot even though it's not the version I'm most familiar with. I feel Bobby puts a cool spin on it although I kind of hate the backing vocals here lmao. It's a cool song and Bobby's version of it no doubt left a large number of swooning ladies in his wake after playing it as it's definitely quite flirtatious, especially for its time.

 

Onto a new feature.. While "Sway" stayed on top of my chart the US presidential elections took place where John F. Kennedy was elected president over Richard Nixon, Belgium threatens to leave the United Nations over criticism of its policy concerning the Republic of the Congo, a head-on train collision in Pardubice, Czechoslovakia kills 118 people and a Polaris missile is test-launched from Cape Canaveral in Florida.

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0020

 

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THE DRIFTERS

Save the Last Dance For Me

 

 

No. 1 Run: 18 November, 1960 - 1 December, 1960 (2 weeks)

 

.........UK Chart Peak: #2 (19 weeks on chart)

.........US Chart Peak: #1 (18 weeks on chart)

.........Release Date: August 1960 on Atlantic

.........Sales: 240k (est.)

 

Next up is a song that has been covered quite a few times in the past 60 years including country queen Dolly Parton, christmas king Michael Bublé (who's also covered the #1 before this, "Sway") and once by none other than Bruce Willis in 1989 lmao. Was certainly not expecting that! The Drifters continue the trend of recycled artists taking the top spot as they get their second number one of the year. It's a cute song and while it's been covered by so many different artists I admittedly don't recognise the song and don't think I have heard it before. Ben E. King was still on lead vocals here which works in The Drifters' favor because his voice is really great and it certainly worked since 'Save' managed to go top two in the UK and took the top spot in the US! No small feat. Interestingly Ben had already left The Drifters when this song was released but still his vocals were used in the single release.

 

While "Save the Last Dance For Me" was on top for two weeks a few things happened. On November 18, English singer Kim Wilde was born. On November 22, the United Nations supported the government led by president Joseph Kasavubu over the one led by Patrice Lumumba in the Republic of the Congo. Lumumba would be arrested and killed two months later. On November 24, National Basketball Association player Wilt Chamberlain of the Philadelphia 76ers gets 55 rebounds in a game versus the Boston Celtics.. whatever that means. On November 28, Mauritania becomes independent of France and on December 1, dogs Pcholka and Musha are launched into orbit in a Soviet satellite. Due to a malfunction the satellite sadly burns up during re-entry.

Edited by diva thin muffin

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0021

 

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BOB LUMAN

Let's Think About Living

 

 

No. 1 Run: 2 December, 1960 - 8 December, 1960 (1 week)

 

.........UK Chart Peak: #6 (17 weeks on chart)

.........US Chart Peak: #7 (16 weeks on chart)

.........Release Date: August 15, 1960

.........Sales: 155k (est.)

 

For the final song of the day and as we enter the last month of the year 1960 we have a newbie! It's rockabilly singer Bob Luman who pops up here with this somewhat humorous take on life and the teenage tragedy songs of the time. Bob manages to snatch one week on top with this song that I have indeed heard before going over this list and am actually quite surprised it's Wikipedia page is only one paragraph. Bob talks about how, if singers that sang about dying, a lot of famous singers would be dead and gives examples with Patti Page, Marty Robbins and the Everly Brothers. Bob Luman is sadly no longer with us, having died of pneumonia in 1978 at the young age of forty-one. I don't think he will show up on here again but you never know. This is definitely something of a surprise hit.

 

While "Let's Think About Living" was on top for one whole week a few things happened. On December 2, U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower authorizes the use of $1.0 million for the relief and resettlement of Cuban refugees, who had been arriving in Florida at the rate of about 1,000 per week. On December 4, The admission of Mauritania to the United Nations is vetoed by the Soviet Union. On December 5, in Boynton v. Virginia: The Supreme Court of the United States declares that segregation in public transportation is illegal in the United States. On December 7, the original Village of the Damned is released in theatres in the UK.

Edited by diva thin muffin

Sway is a great song, though I don't know this version :o

 

Talking about Kim Wilde, I had tickets to her 60th birthday tour gig which has now been postponed to be her 61st birthday tour due to Covid!

 

Save The Last Dance For Me and Think About Living were both tracks I knew in the 60's, and liked, and in the years since I like them even more - but did I like them enough to top in my Kiddie chart rundown for 1960? Answer soon :D

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0022

 

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JOHNNY TILLOTSON

Poetry In Motion

 

 

No. 1 Run: 9 December, 1960 - 15 December, 1960 (1 week)

 

.........UK Chart Peak: #1 (16 weeks on chart)

.........US Chart Peak: #2 (15 weeks on chart)

.........Release Date: 1960 on Cadence

.........Sales: 165k (est.)

 

The second-to-last song of the year is from a new artist in the top spot but one that joins the group of artists that are still living thankfully. Johnny Tillotson is an American singer but he managed to snatch the UK top spot with this song while he failed to do so in the US. "Poetry in Motion" is a fun song and Johnny does a nice delivery of it despite it being a bit similar to a few number ones I've gotten already in 1960 lol (namely the ones by Bobby Rydell and Neil Sedaka) which I guess isn't all that surprising since they all seem to have been teen idols at the time. Fun fact: Johnny Tillotson appeared in the 1966 movie "The Fat Spy" which was later featured in the 2004 documentary The 50 Worst Movies Ever Made. Johnny managed to claw his way to the top and fight off competition from Brian Hyland's "Itsy Bitsy Teenie Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini" which looked likely to take the top spot initially. Brian's comedy track only spent 6 weeks on the chart which listed some 20 songs at the time.

 

While "Poetry in Motion" was on top for one whole week a few things happened.

  • On December 9, French President Charles de Gaulle's visit to Algeria is bloodied by European and Muslim rioters, in Algeria's largest cities. These riots cause 127 deaths.
  • Also on December 9, the classic British TV soap opera Coronation Street premieres. Planned as a 13-part drama, it becomes such a success among viewers it will continue past its 10,000th episode in its 60th anniversary year, being shown six times a week.
  • On December 12, the Supreme Court of the United States upholds a lower Federal Court ruling that the State of Louisiana's racial segregation laws are unconstitutional, and overturns them.
  • On December 13, while Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia visits Brazil, his Kebur Zabagna (Imperial Bodyguard) leads a military coup against his rule, proclaiming that the emperor's son, Crown Prince Asfaw Wossen Taffari, is the new emperor.
  • On December 14, Antoine Gizenga proclaims in the Democratic Republic of the Congo that he has taken over as the country's premier.
  • Author

0023

 

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MAURICE WILLIAMS AND THE ZODIACS

Stay

 

 

No. 1 Run: 16 December, 1960 - 19 January, 1961 (5 weeks)

 

.........UK Chart Peak: #14 (9 weeks on chart)

.........US Chart Peak: #1 (20 weeks on chart)

.........Release Date: August 1960 on Herald

.........Sales: 430k (est.)

 

Fittingly enough the final song of the year is also the best selling one. Maurice Williams, a singer I have absolutely never heard of and seemingly a one-or-two-hit-wonder in the UK and US, managed to bring in this classic just before the year's end! While this is probably not my favourite version of the song it's heaps and bound above anything else released in this year and easily becomes the year's top track, even managing more than half a month on top in the new year too. Now there isn't a lot of info on Maurice or The Zodiacs on Wikipedia but their legacy has lived quite well in this song as it's since been covered by a number of artists including The Hollies and The Four Seasons. Personally this song reminds me of my childhood for some reason even though it was released 30 years before I was born lol. I always used to hear some cover of it on the TV so when I heard this song while looking at potential number ones it was a no-brainer that it took the lead for a few weeks. The lack of competition helped but this was always going to take at least a week on top no matter what. While Maurice & The Zodiacs stayed on top a contender tried and failed to overthrow the doo-wop band: Bobby Vee with his song "Rubber Ball" which wound up having to settle for peaking at No. 3.

 

While "Stay" was on top for five weeks a few things happened.

  • On December 16, a United Airlines DC-8 collides in mid-air with a TWA Lockheed Constellation over Staten Island in New York City. All 128 passengers and crewmembers on the two airliners, and six people on the ground, are killed.
  • On December 17, troops loyal to Emperor Haile Selassie in Ethiopia overcome the coup that began on December 13, returning the reins to the Emperor upon his return from a trip to Brazil. The Emperor absolves his own son of any guilt.
  • On December 19, fire sweeps through the USS Constellation, to become the U.S. Navy's largest aircraft carrier, while she is under construction at the Brooklyn Navy Yard; killing 50 workers and injuring 150.
  • On December 27, France sets off its third A-bomb test at its nuclear weapons testing range near Reggane, Algeria.
  • On December 31, last day on which the farthing, a coin first minted in England in the 13th century, is legal tender in the United Kingdom.
  • On January 3, United States President Dwight D. Eisenhower announces that the United States has severed diplomatic and consular relations with Cuba.
  • Also on January 3, on approach to Vaasa Airport in Finland a Finnish airline Aero crashes near Kvevlax killing all 25 on board, due to pilot error: an investigation finds that the captain and first officer were both exhausted for lack of sleep, and had taken excessive alcohol at the time of the crash. It remains the deadliest air disaster to occur in the country.
  • On January 5, Italian sculptor Alfredo Fioravanti marches into the U.S. Consulate in Rome, and confesses that he was part of the team that forged the Etruscan terracotta warriors in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  • On January 7, following a four-day conference in Casablanca, five African chiefs of state announce plans for a NATO-type African organization to ensure common defense. The Charter of Casablanca involves the Casablanca Group: Morocco, the United Arab Republic, Ghana, Guinea, and Mali.
  • On January 9, British authorities announce they have uncovered a large Soviet spy ring, the Portland Spy Ring, in London.
  • On January 15, Motown Records signs American female singing group The Supremes.
  • On January 17, Patrice Lumumba of the Republic of Congo is assassinated.

Poetry In Motion is still a fun pop song, I always enjoy that one. Stay is a good song too - I wish I knew the original more than I do! I was aware of The Hollies version in the 70's, but it was Jackson browne's 1978 hit version that I associate most with it, and bought. You're right though, it kind of just turns up in the background of your musical consciousness and has that 50's feel to it :D

 

The most important event was 3rd January. I turned 3 and was living in Germany :lol:

  • Author

1960 in Review

 

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Now that the year's been covered we can look over which songs were most popular and sold most and it was quite an easy victory for Maurice Williams here who takes the Year-End top spot over Chubby Checker. Take note that these "sales" are a) fictional and b) based on YTD sales and not just within the physical year of 1960. If that were the case then Chubby Checker would have topped the chart as "Stay" only topped the chart in the final month of the year.

 

There's five songs here that failed to top the chart with the highest one being Neil Sedaka's "One Way Ticket" which is interesting to say the least as the song it stalled behind on the chart is directly above it so really had it been entering my chart in the same week as any of the number ones that aren't above it here it definitely would have topped the chart. Also interesting to note about this is the fact that both of Neil's number ones are below it lol. "One Way Ticket" will resurface in the 70s when it was covered by a British disco band but and it'll be interesting to see if it suffers the same fate as Neil's version or if it manages to top the chart. Another notable non-number one here is Brook Benton and Dinah Washington's R&B bop "Baby (You've Got What It Takes)" which stalled behind Bobby Rydell's "Wild One" for two weeks but still somehow managed to outsell it (Bobby didn't even manage to place in the top 20 and places No. 26 in the year-end chart). Jimmy Jones and The Shadows also chart here despite never even going top 2 and Brenda Lee adds a second song in the Year-End top 20 but fails to do so with one of her two number ones, "I'm Sorry" which is at No. 30.

  • Author
Poetry In Motion is still a fun pop song, I always enjoy that one. Stay is a good song too - I wish I knew the original more than I do! I was aware of The Hollies version in the 70's, but it was Jackson browne's 1978 hit version that I associate most with it, and bought. You're right though, it kind of just turns up in the background of your musical consciousness and has that 50's feel to it :D

 

The most important event was 3rd January. I turned 3 and was living in Germany :lol:

Haha I'll try to remember to make note of your birthday once I reach 1962 ;)

  • Author
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Next in line is obviously the very next fiscal year: 1961! A tiny bit more varied than the previous year this year had twenty-five number ones (as opposed to 1960 which had twenty-three), but that is if you include "Stay" which stayed on top for the first two weeks of 1961. The hits are still quite lacking in female representation as the males outnumber them I think nineteen to six which is still better than the previous year which had only three female-led songs out of a total of twenty-three songs. We're getting to the equator slowly but surely. In 1961 there are a few big names charting in my top 20 for the first time including Etta James, Patsy Cline, Ray Charles, Cliff Richard and Ben E. King although not all of them managed to get their first number one within these twelve months.

What happened in 1961?
Lets take a look at some of the biggest news stories that were prominent in this year.
  • John F. Kennedy's is sworn in as the 35th President of the United States.
  • Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin becomes the first human in space, orbiting the Earth once before parachuting to the ground.
  • Sierra Leone becomes independent from the United Kingdom.
  • The Fantastic Four make their comic book debut.
  • Construction of the Berlin Wall begins, restricting movement between East Berlin and West Berlin, and forming a clear boundary between West Germany and East Germany, as well as Western Europe and Eastern Europe.
  • American involvement in the Vietnam War officially begins, as the first American helicopters arrive in Saigon, along with 400 U.S. personnel.
  • The Bay of Pigs Invasion of Cuba begins on April 17; it fails by April 19.
  • The Soviet Union detonates a 58-megaton yield hydrogen bomb known as Tsar Bomba, over Novaya Zemlya (it remains the largest ever man-made explosion).
  • West Side Story is adapted for the big screen, and will go on to win Oscars for Best Picture, Supporting Actor, Supporting Actress, and Directing.
  • Audrey Hepburn delights as Holly Golightly in Breakfast at Tiffany's, but Henry Mancini emerges as the real star. He won two Oscars and four Grammy Awards for the score, which included the hit "Moon River."
  • Among others Eddie Murphy, George Clooney, Princess Diana, Barack Obama, Ricky Gervais, Susan Boyle and Meg Ryan are born this year.
  • Carl Jung and Ernest Hemingway are among the most famous people who passed away this year. Carl Jung died from a short disease at an old age while Hemingway took his own life.

Edited by diva thin muffin

1960 in Review

 

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Now that the year's been covered we can look over which songs were most popular and sold most and it was quite an easy victory for Maurice Williams here who takes the Year-End top spot over Chubby Checker. Take note that these "sales" are a) fictional and b) based on YTD sales and not just within the physical year of 1960. If that were the case then Chubby Checker would have topped the chart as "Stay" only topped the chart in the final month of the year.

 

There's five songs here that failed to top the chart with the highest one being Neil Sedaka's "One Way Ticket" which is interesting to say the least as the song it stalled behind on the chart is directly above it so really had it been entering my chart in the same week as any of the number ones that aren't above it here it definitely would have topped the chart. Also interesting to note about this is the fact that both of Neil's number ones are below it lol. "One Way Ticket" will resurface in the 70s when it was covered by a British disco band but and it'll be interesting to see if it suffers the same fate as Neil's version or if it manages to top the chart. Another notable non-number one here is Brook Benton and Dinah Washington's R&B bop "Baby (You've Got What It Takes)" which stalled behind Bobby Rydell's "Wild One" for two weeks but still somehow managed to outsell it (Bobby didn't even manage to place in the top 20 and places No. 26 in the year-end chart). Jimmy Jones and The Shadows also chart here despite never even going top 2 and Brenda Lee adds a second song in the Year-End top 20 but fails to do so with one of her two number ones, "I'm Sorry" which is at No. 30.

 

Some fantastic stuff here, particularly Summer Place, your No.1 Stay and Poetry In Motion. Love that you've included sales in your EOY list. Fascinating to read. Looking forward to the rest! :wub:

  • Author
Some fantastic stuff here, particularly Summer Place, your No.1 Stay and Poetry In Motion. Love that you've included sales in your EOY list. Fascinating to read. Looking forward to the rest! :wub:

Aww thank you! It makes me happy to hear that you find this fascinating to ready. Gives me motivation to keep on going! Same goes for PCF, your continued support is always appreciated! :heart:

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