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Post by 1finemrg on Nov 24, 2014 15:44:39 GMT -5
Ambrosia peaked at #3 with 2 consecutive AT 40 hits, "How Much I Feel" and "Biggest Part Of Me" Joe Simon peaked at #11 consecutively with "Drowning In The Sea Of Love" and "Power Of Love". John Mellencamp charted at #6 twice in a row, "Lonely Ol' Night" and "Small Town". Supremes hit #16 with "Nathan Jones" and "Floy Joy".
In some cases, there may have been songs peaking outside the top 40 in between, but consecutive AT 40 hits is ambiguous. Does it mean back-to-back hot 100 singles, or back-to-back top 40 singles?
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Post by jmack19 on Nov 24, 2014 16:02:11 GMT -5
It turns out that lots of acts peaked @ the same position twice outside of the top 2 spots more frequently than you would think. Genesis did it twice on the same album(2 #4s & 2 #3s). The B52s hit #3 with first 2 Top 40 hits. The Osmonds followed 2 #14 songs with 2 #36 peaks. Donny Osmond had 2 #13 songs. Donny & Marie last 2 top 40 songs peak @ 38.
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Post by 1finemrg on Nov 24, 2014 19:14:56 GMT -5
Boz Scaggs: #14 with "Look What You've Done To Me" and "Miss Sun". They both charted for 17 weeks in the Hot 100.
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Post by seminolefan on Nov 24, 2014 19:22:55 GMT -5
Expose hit #5 in 1987 with "Come Go With Me" and "Point Of No Return"
Taylor Dayne hit #7 in 1988 with "Tell It To My Heart" and "Prove Your Love"
Michael Jackson hit #10 in 1980 with "Off The Wall" and "She's Out Of My Life"
Whitney Houston hit #4 on the Hot 100 in 1993 with "I'm Every Woman" and "I Have Nothing", then again in 1999-2000 with "It's Not Right But It's Okay" and "My Love Is Your Love"
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