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Post by jlthorpe on Jun 10, 2013 14:00:17 GMT -5
I'm guessing that it was very rare for this to happen in the pre-1991 era with a true followup. Later, as the trend developed towards songs having extremely long chart runs, this may have become a bit more feasible. What was the story with "Atomic"? Was its just a relative flop compared to "Call Me", and came and went before the latter had a chance to fall out of the Top 40? "Call Me" was a soundtrack hit (from "American Gigolo"). I'm not sure, but I'm thinking "Atomic" was a cut from one of Blondie's albums, so maybe that's why it wasn't as big.
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Post by dukelightning on Jun 10, 2013 18:13:23 GMT -5
^Yes "Atomic" was the third single from their 'Eat to the Beat' Lp. The second only spent 3 weeks on the chart peaking at 84 and spending its last week on the chart the week that "Call Me" debuted. This is similar to what happened with Phil Collins' 'No Jacket Required' Lp in 1985-86 where the single releases were interrupted by another mov1e song, "Separate Lives" from 'White Knights'. Back to Blondie, the only real hit from 'Eat to the Beat' was "Dreaming".
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Post by jdelachjr2002 on Jun 22, 2013 6:58:48 GMT -5
Here's another example on Seacrest's AT40 (CHR). Taylor Swift's "22" falls out of the countdown this week while "I Knew You Were Trouble" is sill charting.
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Post by johnnywest on Jun 22, 2013 12:45:20 GMT -5
The first time this subject was brought to my attention was in 1990. Paul Grein in Billboard pointed out that "The Emperor's New Clothes" by Sinead O'Connor fell off the Hot 100 before "Nothing Compares 2" did. Of course the follow-up never made the Top 40.
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Post by Hervard on Jun 22, 2013 12:53:21 GMT -5
The first time this subject was brought to my attention was in 1990. Paul Grein in Billboard pointed out that "The Emperor's New Clothes" by Sinead O'Connor fell off the Hot 100 before "Nothing Compares 2" did. Of course the follow-up never made the Top 40. Earlier that year, "Principal's Office" by Young MC fell off the Hot 100 before "Bust A Move" - in the Chartbeat column, it was pointed out that the last time this happened was when "Solitude Standing" by Suzanne Vega fell off the Hot 100 while "Luka" was still on (circa October, 1987)
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Post by Deleted on Aug 2, 2014 17:43:42 GMT -5
It's on track to happen again on the current CHR show. "Birthday" by Katy Perry dives 12 to land at #32 this week while it's predecessor "Dark Horse" is still in at #30.
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Post by mkarns on Aug 2, 2014 19:25:02 GMT -5
It's on track to happen again on the current CHR show. "Birthday" by Katy Perry dives 12 to land at #32 this week while it's predecessor "Dark Horse" is still in at #30. Earlier this year Katy's "Unconditionally" fell off while its predecessor, "Roar", was still on. This seems to have happened quite a bit during the Seacrest era, with big hits staying on longer than less successful follow ups.
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Post by lasvegaskid on Feb 28, 2016 17:48:14 GMT -5
Looks like this might be happening again in the next few week's as Adele's When We Were Young will fall off before Hello.
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Post by lasvegaskid on Apr 17, 2017 12:00:34 GMT -5
Do That To Me One More Time and Love On A Shoestring both spent their final weeks on the panel 4/19/80, with Shoestring hanging on at #100 barely not dropping off its C&T predecessor.
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Post by lasvegaskid on Aug 29, 2018 11:23:12 GMT -5
It almost happened this week in 1981 as followup Jole Blon and This Little Girl simultaneously fell off the Hot 100 together for Gary US Bonds
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Post by johnnywest on Aug 30, 2018 6:59:06 GMT -5
Currently, "New Rules" by Dua Lipa has outlasted "IDGAF" and probably will outlast "One Kiss."
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Post by lasvegaskid on Oct 21, 2019 11:02:29 GMT -5
Though not a top 40, Here Comes the Night by Nick Gilder fell off the Hot 100 while predecessor Hot Child was still hanging on.
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Post by lasvegaskid on Oct 13, 2020 17:20:09 GMT -5
Similarly in the "other labels" section: Donna Summer's "Walk Away" was outlasted by "The Wanderer" in 1980. Actually Walk Away entered the Hot 100 9/13/80, a week before Wanderer.
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Post by OnWithTheCountdown on Oct 13, 2020 17:54:06 GMT -5
Similarly in the "other labels" section: Donna Summer's "Walk Away" was outlasted by "The Wanderer" in 1980. Actually Walk Away entered the Hot 100 9/13/80, a week before Wanderer. Actually, he is correct...if you omit any positions outside the top 40, which is the spirit in which this thread was created.
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Post by Michael1973 on Oct 16, 2020 12:48:22 GMT -5
I don't follow the current charts too closely anymore, but on Rick Dees' weekly top 40, this has happened to the Jonas Brothers and Billie Eilish recently. In fact, two Jonas songs that debuted after Only Human fell out before it did.
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