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Post by davewollenberg on Sept 7, 2019 7:03:25 GMT -5
Graig, WW1 cut off Bob's outro of the #20-#11 hour. HATE it, when they do that!
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Post by briguy52748 on Sept 7, 2019 9:14:26 GMT -5
The ACC aircheck from August 1987 had a calendar feature on Bob Dylan’s connection to country music, with a song by Flatt & Scruggs used as their example.
Hard to believe at this point his first No. 1 country hit as a songwriter was still 11 years off: “To Make You Feel My Love” by Garth Brooks, from August 1998.
In the spring of 2013, Dylan had his second songwriting No. 1 hit (with Ketch Secor) on the Country chart, with Darius Rucker’s cover of the Old Crow Medicine Show’s “Wagon Wheel.”
Brian
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Post by mellongraig on Sept 14, 2019 5:08:19 GMT -5
It's unfortunate when they have to cram in more commercial time when they cut off the outro and other things on the show.
Anyway though, this week they are going back to September 9, 2000, a little odd though as the chart closest to it would come from September 16th. It's possible there may have been a guest host but on the other hand it may not have been but they just didn't get to it this year.
Hopefully this will be a sign that December 2000 will be in play this year...
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Post by mellongraig on Sept 21, 2019 6:50:52 GMT -5
Since Billboard is now being paywalled for the country charts now, it made it tough to figure out what show they were playing. But with the help of the quick escape and archives they store, this week they are going back to September 19, 1992, which now they finally have a September 1992 show aired.
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Post by OnWithTheCountdown on Sept 22, 2019 8:31:14 GMT -5
That now leaves 1997 and 1999 as the only untapped years for September shows, with the latter likely waiting another year with the 8/14 airing.
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Post by davewollenberg on Sept 28, 2019 7:02:23 GMT -5
WW1 chopped off not only the outro to 'We believe in happy endings' but also Bob's signoff, for the hour. WW1 must be addin' more commercial time.
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Post by mellongraig on Sept 28, 2019 7:18:38 GMT -5
Looks like those will have to wait for at least another year, but the year that we did overlook that hasn't been featured yet this month is 2002. And this week they are going back to September 28, 2002. Despite this being a later year, WW1 still continues to cut outro/end-of-hour themes and replace it with the 2003 ACC closing theme (which in reality should be used for March 2003-May 2004 shows at the end). Hopefully one day 2003-2005 will resurface at some point...
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Post by mellongraig on Sept 28, 2019 7:20:14 GMT -5
WW1 chopped off not only the outro to 'We believe in happy endings' but also Bob's signoff, for the hour. WW1 must be addin' more commercial time. And why have them replace it with the 2003 ACC closing theme is beyond me, they should keep themes intact as originally broadcast.
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Post by davewollenberg on Sept 28, 2019 8:27:49 GMT -5
I agree, Graig. Nothin' wrong with the 'My kind of country, my kind of music' jingles. Also, comin' out of the break, with the ACC split logo.
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Post by OnWithTheCountdown on Sept 28, 2019 10:24:05 GMT -5
WW1 chopped off not only the outro to 'We believe in happy endings' but also Bob's signoff, for the hour. WW1 must be addin' more commercial time. And why have them replace it with the 2003 ACC closing theme is beyond me, they should keep themes intact as originally broadcast. That reminds me of Premiere's version of the AT40 year-end from 1983. After #32, there was a glitch in the outro jingle, and Premiere replaced it with a 1984 outro jingle. Sounded a bit out of place, as that jingle package didn't debut until the 1/14/1984 show. Close enough, I guess...but still sounding a bit strange. This is the second featuring of 2002 this year, with 6/8 being the previous show.
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Post by mellongraig on Oct 1, 2019 10:16:49 GMT -5
Here's a new ACC aircheck, this time from 10/3/98 (with scoped ads, and all themes remaining intact). That could be a future rewind broadcast down the road (unlikely this year but you never know).
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Post by mellongraig on Oct 5, 2019 5:29:14 GMT -5
Now to this week's show at hand and it is from October 8, 1994, where Bob mentions that Sawyer Brown celebrated 10 years in the business (they would continue for several more years chart wise, but still active in the music business today). Around this time during the fall 1994 period, the ACC archives from #1 A-Z would change from 1966-1990 to #1's from the 80s and 90s by title.
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Post by davewollenberg on Oct 5, 2019 8:12:18 GMT -5
Graig, there must've been some loopin' goin'on. Vince Gill's what the cowgirls do had Vince's guitar solo repeated, as well as his singin' comin' out of it.
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Post by mellongraig on Oct 5, 2019 16:28:25 GMT -5
It possibly could be the original broadcast that might have also done the instance of a repeated loop from time to time. Usually though when time is short or a song is falling from the charts, songs are usually cut down.
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Post by briguy52748 on Oct 11, 2019 10:41:38 GMT -5
WW1 chopped off not only the outro to 'We believe in happy endings' but also Bob's signoff, for the hour. WW1 must be addin' more commercial time. Sure this wasn’t the original broadcast that did this as well? It wasn’t jnheard of to early fade songs and/or Bob to talk over the last few seconds of a cold-ending song where he didn’t normally. Brian
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