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Post by michaelcasselman on Dec 4, 2023 15:15:10 GMT -5
Yes. Thankfully.
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Post by mkarns on Dec 4, 2023 22:21:46 GMT -5
This week's optional extras:
December 6, 1975:
Hour #1: "Love To Love You Baby" - Donna Summer (#55; highest debut) Hour #2: "Evil Woman" - Electric Light Orchestra (#49) Hour #3: "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" - Joan Baez (original AT40 extra)
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Post by SFGuy on Dec 5, 2023 4:11:38 GMT -5
Oh I edited the post. For WPNC commercial, theyre advertising charismusicgroup collection for AT40 Casey Kasem era. I hope I made it clear.
It is also a link on WPNC's website. I clicked it. It's a listed on ebay for $1500. Sounds expensive on the surface but the amount of episodes it breaks down to just over $1 a show.
I ended up buying it. I think it is worth the investment getting the show as originally intended without edits and the network commercials still intact. After I ordered it, I had second guessed it but listening to some of the shows, it was worth it.
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Post by dth1971 on Dec 5, 2023 7:24:48 GMT -5
This week's optional extras: December 6, 1975:Hour #1: "Love To Love You Baby" - Donna Summer (#55; highest debut) Hour #2: "Evil Woman" - Electric Light Orchestra (#49) Hour #3: "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" - Joan Baez (original AT40 extra) Of course, not one of these 12/6/1975 OPTIONAL EXTRAS features a tribute to the late Dwight Twilley who hit AT40 that 1975 year with "I'm on Fire".
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Post by michaelcasselman on Dec 5, 2023 9:06:18 GMT -5
Good.
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Post by secretman on Dec 6, 2023 6:03:48 GMT -5
It is also a link on WPNC's website. I clicked it. It's a listed on ebay for $1500. Sounds expensive on the surface but the amount of episodes it breaks down to just over $1 a show.
I ended up buying it. I think it is worth the investment getting the show as originally intended without edits and the network commercials still intact. After I ordered it, I had second guessed it but listening to some of the shows, it was worth it.
You mean programs with mistakes; or those with the Dr. Pepper mention at the beginning of Hour 3 (i guess from 1984), never restored on the premiere version; what about that program with the lost final hour; and what about the premiere edited, and never restored to the original condition, version of 10-08-1977 which contains some skips at number 20, “Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue”? What Does it mean "the show as originally intended without edits"? Thanks.
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Post by dth1971 on Dec 6, 2023 6:53:36 GMT -5
I ended up buying it. I think it is worth the investment getting the show as originally intended without edits and the network commercials still intact. After I ordered it, I had second guessed it but listening to some of the shows, it was worth it.
You mean programs with mistakes; or those with the Dr. Pepper mention at the beginning of Hour 3 (i guess from 1984), never restored on the premiere version; what about that program with the lost final hour; and what about the premiere edited, and never restored to the original condition, version of 10-08-1977 which contains some skips at number 20, “Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue”? What Does it mean "the show as originally intended without edits"? Thanks. 10-8-1977 was guest hosted by Mark Elliott.
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Post by secretman on Dec 6, 2023 9:24:16 GMT -5
You mean programs with mistakes; or those with the Dr. Pepper mention at the beginning of Hour 3 (i guess from 1984), never restored on the premiere version; what about that program with the lost final hour; and what about the premiere edited, and never restored to the original condition, version of 10-08-1977 which contains some skips at number 20, “Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue”? What Does it mean "the show as originally intended without edits"? Thanks. 10-8-1977 was guest hosted by Mark Elliott. Yes, it was. But that show is also commercialized by Premiere, that version contains the above mentioned skips. So, the $1500 purchase Does not include the guest hosted shows? ![8-|](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/nerd.png)
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Post by mitchm on Dec 6, 2023 13:00:34 GMT -5
All the AT40 and CT40 shows that can be purchased from Charis do include all the guest-hosted shows.
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Post by SFGuy on Dec 6, 2023 13:52:34 GMT -5
I ended up buying it. I think it is worth the investment getting the show as originally intended without edits and the network commercials still intact. After I ordered it, I had second guessed it but listening to some of the shows, it was worth it.
You mean programs with mistakes; or those with the Dr. Pepper mention at the beginning of Hour 3 (i guess from 1984), never restored on the premiere version; what about that program with the lost final hour; and what about the premiere edited, and never restored to the original condition, version of 10-08-1977 which contains some skips at number 20, “Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue”? What Does it mean "the show as originally intended without edits"? Thanks.
Yes. All of this.
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Post by at40petebattistini on Dec 6, 2023 17:27:38 GMT -5
Chart trivia for December 6, 1975… The bad news: At least one single from this week’s show – “Lyin’ Eyes” by the Eagles (peaked at #2 for two weeks) – straddled two chart years and fell victim to Billboard’s tabulation deadline, never gaining year-end notoriety. The good news: Even with a November 1, 1975 cut-off, there were two singles among this week’s Top 40 (Neil Sedaka’s “Bad Blood”, Morris Albert’s “Feelings”) that earned enough chart points to be included in the year’s Top 100. Let the countdown begin!
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Post by seminolefan on Dec 7, 2023 10:54:02 GMT -5
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Post by mrjukebox on Dec 7, 2023 14:09:21 GMT -5
Premiere should never have deleted the offensive word from "Bad Blood"-It wasn't necessary.
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Post by pizzzzza on Dec 7, 2023 19:10:51 GMT -5
Chart trivia for December 6, 1975… The bad news: At least one single from this week’s show – “Lyin’ Eyes” by the Eagles (peaked at #2 for two weeks) – straddled two chart years and fell victim to Billboard’s tabulation deadline, never gaining year-end notoriety. The good news: Even with a November 1, 1975 cut-off, there were two singles among this week’s Top 40 (Neil Sedaka’s “Bad Blood”, Morris Albert’s “Feelings”) that earned enough chart points to be included in the year’s Top 100. Let the countdown begin! Hi Pete Long time since I've talked with you - hope you and your family are well this holiday season! To me, it's still unbelievable after all these years that "Lyin' Eyes" didn't make the 1975 year end. I'm assuming it was near the end of its' chart run when it appears at #39 on this week's countdown. It couldn't have possibly garnered that many more points before it fell off? (I'm too lazy to look to see what happened after this week and how many points were not credited to 1975 - I'm assuming there would be enough to just make the top 100) And since it was falling and ending its chart run, I doubt it even had any chance of making 1976 year end chart. Edited to add: just noticed the November 1 cutoff - and since this was December 6 - that would be 5 weeks not counted towards the 1975 chart, so I can see where it's possible now.....such bad luck! Curious now ...does anyone know how many points "Lyin Eyes" missed the 1975 year countdown by? (Just like Papa Was A Rolling Stone the previous year - if memory serves me correctly - didn't make any year end countdowns either)
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Post by mga707 on Dec 7, 2023 19:14:22 GMT -5
Not only was 'Volare' a debut song on this week's 40, but in December 1975 it was also a brand-new 'family' of Plymouth cars, available at your local Chrysler-Plymouth dealer! Available as a 2-dr coupe, 4-dr sedan, or station wagon. It lasted for five model years, 1976-80. Unlike its Dodge Aspen 'clone', neither Chrysler Corp. nor its successors Daimler-Chrysler, Fiat-Chrysler, and (currently) Stellantis has to date resurrected the model name. 'Aspen' came back as a short-lived Chrysler-badged 2nd-gen Dodge Durango during the 2007-09 model years.
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