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Post by jlthorpe on Aug 28, 2024 18:39:59 GMT -5
On the Triple-A Airplay (better known now as Adult Alternative Airplay) chart for the week ending August 29, 1998 (according to the Billboard website; the corresponding Rock Airplay Monitor issue which contained the chart contains a different date - August 21), Crowded House's Neil Finn was holding at #16 with "Sinner", which reached #12 the next week.
The song came from his debut solo album Try Whistling This, which also contained "She Will Have Her Way" (with its Attack of the 50 Foot Woman-inspired video).
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Post by lasvegaskid on Aug 31, 2024 20:07:14 GMT -5
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Post by jlthorpe on Sept 1, 2024 14:03:15 GMT -5
Dropping from #11 (where it peaked) to #13 on the Album Rock Tracks chart for September 1, 1990, "Twice As Hard" by The Black Crowes came from the band's debut album Shake Your Money Maker.
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Post by jlthorpe on Sept 4, 2024 18:17:17 GMT -5
Queens hip-hop act Lost Boyz debuted at #78 with "Jeeps, Lex Coups, Bimaz and Benz" this week in 1995; spending 11 weeks on the Hot 100, it got as high as #67.
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Post by jlthorpe on Sept 8, 2024 9:27:45 GMT -5
In its last of six weeks on the Album Rock Tracks chart for September 11, 1993, "No Man's Land" by Billy Joel (from River of Dreams) was at #34, after having reached #18 three weeks earlier.
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Post by dth1971 on Sept 8, 2024 16:11:38 GMT -5
Since 10,000 Maniacs' cover of Cat Stevens' "Peace Train" was posted on the This Week's Lost 80's Classic thread, here's a 1997 dance cover of "Peace Train" done by country singer Dolly Parton: www.youtube.com/watch?v=73180QDIbV8
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Post by jlthorpe on Sept 11, 2024 19:03:08 GMT -5
The lead single from Oasis' Be Here Now - "D'You Know What I Mean?" - dropped from #59 to #64 on the September 13, 1997 Hot 100 Airplay chart. It reached #49 four weeks earlier, an underwhelming peak considering the band's massive success with their prior album (What's the Story) Morning Glory?, and Be Here Now would also be considered a disappointment in the long run.
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Post by jlthorpe on Sept 15, 2024 14:48:31 GMT -5
On the Hot Country Singles and Tracks chart for September 14, 1991, Travis Tritt dropped from #23 to #27 with "Here's a Quarter (Call Someone Who Cares)", a song he took to #2 in August.
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