|
Post by johnnywest on Nov 15, 2018 7:46:21 GMT -5
"When I Fall In Love" by Donny Osmond in 1974 and then by Celine Dion & Clive Griffin in 1993.
|
|
|
Post by johnnywest on Mar 1, 2022 18:17:59 GMT -5
Probably the only remake that Ryan Seacrest counted down by 2 artists was "Beggin." First it was a remake for Madcon in 2009, and then again for Maneskin in 2021-22.
And "Do It To It" deserves a mention. It was first a hit for Cherish in 2006 and then a remixed version by Acraze f/Cherish charted in 2022.
|
|
|
Post by Mike on Mar 1, 2022 18:51:04 GMT -5
I'm not sure if the original appeared on AT40, but "Ooh Child" by The Five Stairsteps was on the charts - not sure if it was in the late 1960s or early 1970s. Dino remade the song in 1993, peaking at #4, and was also Dino's biggest hit in his career. A great way for Dino to close off his appearances on AT40 for sure! Some interesting trivia regarding this one. It only appeared on CT40 (briefly at that), but 2Pac's "Keep Ya Head Up", released a few months after Dino's remake, uses the chorus of "Ooh Child" as its own. Had AT40 stuck with the Top 40 Radio Monitor - re-constituted to Hot 100 Airplay by then - then 2Pac and Dino would have even shared countdown space for one week (11/6/93; Dino was down to #37, while 2Pac leaped into the top 40 at #35). That certainly would have been one for the countdown trivia books.
|
|
|
Post by mrjukebox on Mar 2, 2022 19:29:22 GMT -5
Speaking of "Ooh Child",the group Soul Station does a killer version-Soul Station is a side project of Kiss founding member Paul Stanley-You can catch the video on You Tube.
|
|
|
Post by dth1971 on Mar 2, 2022 21:58:50 GMT -5
For the 1988-2004 Casey revival: Does "I Need a Girl" Parts 1 and 2 count?
|
|
|
Post by laura on Mar 3, 2022 1:35:28 GMT -5
For the 1988-2004 Casey revival: Does "I Need a Girl" Parts 1 and 2 count? I don't think so because both parts are completely different from each other.
|
|
|
Post by Mike on Mar 3, 2022 6:29:35 GMT -5
Yeah, in terms of compositions, that would be more analogous to the two "I'm Real"s and two "Ain't it Funny"s each by Jennifer Lopez solo and with Ja Rule - despite the narrative that they and Sony/Epic tried to push at that time.
|
|