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Post by jlthorpe on Oct 13, 2024 9:18:17 GMT -5
From the album Sleeps with Angels, the over 14-minute "Change Your Mind" by Neil Young and Crazy Horse dropped from #19 to #26 on the October 15, 1994 Album Rock Tracks chart, having reached #18 two weeks earlier.
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Post by dth1971 on Oct 13, 2024 20:10:07 GMT -5
For Halloween month, here's a Lost 1990's Classic chosen by me: This is Alice Cooper with a track from his 1994 CD "The Last Temptation" that may be Halloween leaning called "Sideshow": www.youtube.com/watch?v=oEoB3CgrYRY
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Post by jlthorpe on Oct 16, 2024 20:07:03 GMT -5
Peter Gabriel took "Shock the Monkey" to #29 on the Hot 100 in 1983; in 1999, a cover by Coal Chamber featuring Ozzy Osbourne made the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. Debuting at #35 the week of October 16, it went to #26.
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Post by jlthorpe on Oct 20, 2024 9:13:19 GMT -5
Holding at its peak of #51 on the Top 40 Radio Monitor chart for October 24, 1992 was ABBA's "Take a Chance on Me" done by Erasure (with an additional toast by MC Kinky), who not only duplicate the song but also, in the video, the look of ABBA's Agnetha Fältskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad as well.
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Post by jlthorpe on Oct 23, 2024 18:12:59 GMT -5
It was up #53 to #45 on the Hot 100 Airplay chart for October 26, 1996, but #45 would be the highest that "Angels of the Silences" by Counting Crows would ascend. From their album Recovering the Satellites.
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Post by jlthorpe on Oct 27, 2024 9:46:11 GMT -5
"Get the Funk Out" by Extreme debuted on the October 26, 1991 Album Rock Tracks chart at #43; its peak position on the chart would end up reversing those two numbers - #34.
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Post by jlthorpe on Oct 30, 2024 18:14:27 GMT -5
It spent 2 weeks total on the Hot 100; in its second week (November 1, 1997), "(Always Be My) Sunshine" by Jay-Z featuring Foxy Brown and Babyface dropped from its #95 peak to #98.
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Post by jlthorpe on Nov 3, 2024 10:25:34 GMT -5
Holding at #28 on the November 6, 1993 Album Rock Tracks chart, "Thunder Kiss '65" by White Zombie previously peaked at #26 and came from the band's third album La Sexorcisto: Devil Music Volume One.
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Post by dth1971 on Nov 3, 2024 11:30:06 GMT -5
Holding at #28 on the November 6, 1993 Album Rock Tracks chart, "Thunder Kiss '65" by White Zombie previously peaked at #26 and came from the band's third album La Sexorcisto: Devil Music Volume One. White Zombie featured Rob Zombie as a member. White Zombie even did in 1996 a cover of K.C. and the Sunshine Band's "I'm Your Boogie Man": www.youtube.com/watch?v=of141N-VRZ4
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Post by dth1971 on Nov 4, 2024 7:19:11 GMT -5
In memory of Quincy Jones, who passed away at age 91, here's a Lost 1990's Classic chosen by me - This is the title track to the 1990 biopic movie "Listen Up - The Lives of Quincy Jones" simply titled "Listen Up" credited as by Quincy Jones and Various Artists: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bt3uQcBnfL4
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Post by jlthorpe on Nov 6, 2024 19:23:29 GMT -5
Down at the cellar position of #75 in its 16th week, "In the Blood" by Better Than Ezra reached a high of #48 on the Hot 100 Airplay chart in mid-September. Despite being at the bottom of the chart this week in 1995, the song would still chart for another four weeks.
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Post by jlthorpe on Nov 10, 2024 19:17:28 GMT -5
Climbing from #93 to its peak of #90 in its second week on the Hot 100 (November 10, 1990), "Doin' the Do" by British dance singer Betty Boo performed much better on the singles chart in her native country, reaching #7 there.
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Post by dth1971 on Nov 10, 2024 21:57:34 GMT -5
Climbing from #93 to its peak of #90 in its second week on the Hot 100 (November 10, 1990), "Doin' the Do" by British dance singer Betty Boo performed much better on the singles chart in her native country, reaching #7 there. Betty Boo had a follow up that made #4 in the UK in September 1990 called "Where Are You Baby?": www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4iWgsGgBiY
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Post by jlthorpe on Nov 13, 2024 20:04:20 GMT -5
Two songs from Alice in Chains' Unplugged release were on the November 16, 1996 Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.
First, at #16, was the former #4 "Over Now", originally from the band's self-titled 1995 album and which is considered a commentary on the band's then-imminent demise.
And the studio version of "Would?" was just posted here in August; this week in 1996 the Unplugged version was up to #31 and would go to #19.
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Post by dth1971 on Nov 17, 2024 16:38:15 GMT -5
Here's a Lost 1990's Classic chosen for this week by me: From the 1993 Bob Rivers Christmas CD "I Am Santa Claus" this is Bob Rivers with Twisted Radio featuring Grant Goodeve (Yes, the same former actor named Grant Goodeve who was a cast member on "Eight is Enough") with their take on "Do You Hear What I Hear" called "Didn't I Get This Last Year?": www.youtube.com/watch?v=68nhyYgK_Gk
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