of the top 25 One Hit Wonders... www.wral.com - look for the "weekend slide show" or something like that. Left side, about 1 screen's worth down, I think. See how many of them you know. Of the 25, Long Suffering Husband said there were about a dozen that he didn't know - I didn't know 6 of them (either rap or from the 1970s). Long Suffering Husband thought it was really funny that MWH/Safety Dance was #25. He pointed out that MWH and a couple of the others on the list had been on the Simpsons, "so I guess that makes them famous." I refrained from smackin him upside the head. ;-) :-) Laura in NC Master Ian Barrow CBX (cute baby excellent) ATX (adorable toddler excellent) PPX (precious preschooler excellent) (human) SHR Plus R Stroke of Luck JH CGC "Buddy" (Lab) Doctor Pepper CGC "Doc" (Canaan Dog) Mustard CGC (Chinook) S'more DSPP (Norwegian Forest Cat) Cocoa 1993ish - June 17, 2006 - Thanks for the great run, big guy __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway. Pet peeve I guess. Andrew On 7/22/06, Laura Kramer <cocoanlk@yahoo.com> wrote:
of the top 25 One Hit Wonders...
www.wral.com - look for the "weekend slide show" or something like that. Left side, about 1 screen's worth down, I think.
See how many of them you know. Of the 25, Long Suffering Husband said there were about a dozen that he didn't know - I didn't know 6 of them (either rap or from the 1970s).
Long Suffering Husband thought it was really funny that MWH/Safety Dance was #25. He pointed out that MWH and a couple of the others on the list had been on the Simpsons, "so I guess that makes them famous." I refrained from smackin him upside the head. ;-)
:-) Laura in NC
Master Ian Barrow CBX (cute baby excellent) ATX (adorable toddler excellent) PPX (precious preschooler excellent) (human)
SHR Plus R Stroke of Luck JH CGC "Buddy" (Lab) Doctor Pepper CGC "Doc" (Canaan Dog) Mustard CGC (Chinook) S'more DSPP (Norwegian Forest Cat)
Cocoa 1993ish - June 17, 2006 - Thanks for the great run, big guy
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-- Andrew Werling http://blog.myspace.com/nitesead
For me, too. I'm contemplating writing to the TV station & tell them they were wrong. Before I get into too high a dudgeon, anyone know offhand if Billboard keeps an archive online (& how far back it goes)? :-) L --- Andrew <awerling@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway.
Pet peeve I guess.
Andrew
On 7/22/06, Laura Kramer <cocoanlk@yahoo.com> wrote:
of the top 25 One Hit Wonders... Long Suffering Husband thought it was really funny that MWH/Safety Dance was #25.
Master Ian Barrow CBX (cute baby excellent) ATX (adorable toddler excellent) PPX (precious preschooler excellent) (human) SHR Plus R Stroke of Luck JH CGC "Buddy" (Lab) Doctor Pepper CGC "Doc" (Canaan Dog) Mustard CGC (Chinook) S'more DSPP (Norwegian Forest Cat) Cocoa 1993ish - June 17, 2006 - Thanks for the great run, big guy __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com
The station is using the term "one-hit wonder" the way the always do...to be cutesy. Paula Cole had more than one hit too, but maybe not on the regular singles chart. I stopped after ten of the songs because I was getting annoyed LOL. Usually the "one hit wonder" thing bugs me because it seems to me that they are just minimizing the strength of the song, even if it was their only hit. Dexy's Midnight Runners is my favorite example...in the U.S., "Come on Eileen" was their only hit, but it was one of my personal favorite songs, probably ever. In England, they had many hits! It's very U.S.-centric and, like I said, cutesy. About as deep as an Academy-Awards preshow red-carpet show about who has the prettiest dress on. ;-) I don't know about archives...there are books out there, and I'm sure Billboard has their own archive. They have a website (billboard.com), so maybe there are details there, but they will charge money for access. Andrew ----- Original Message ----- From: Laura Kramer To: You can dance, if you want to. Sent: Sunday, July 23, 2006 5:05 AM Subject: Re: [Men Without Hats] local tv station's "weekend list" ... For me, too. I'm contemplating writing to the TV station & tell them they were wrong. Before I get into too high a dudgeon, anyone know offhand if Billboard keeps an archive online (& how far back it goes)? :-) L --- Andrew <awerling@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway.
Pet peeve I guess.
Andrew
On 7/22/06, Laura Kramer <cocoanlk@yahoo.com> wrote:
of the top 25 One Hit Wonders... Long Suffering Husband thought it was really funny that MWH/Safety Dance was #25.
Master Ian Barrow CBX (cute baby excellent) ATX (adorable toddler excellent) PPX (precious preschooler excellent) (human) SHR Plus R Stroke of Luck JH CGC "Buddy" (Lab) Doctor Pepper CGC "Doc" (Canaan Dog) Mustard CGC (Chinook) S'more DSPP (Norwegian Forest Cat) Cocoa 1993ish - June 17, 2006 - Thanks for the great run, big guy __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com _______________________________________________ Men-Without-Hats mailing list Men-Without-Hats@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/men-without-hats Report list abuse to list-abuse at studio-nibble.com
On 22/7/06 10:19 PM, "Andrew" <awerling@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway.
Pet peeve I guess.
it amazes me who are classed as 'one hit wonders'... the biggest one that annoys me is gary numan. maybe he had one big hit over here in the US but has had 20+ albums in europe and a bucket full of chart singles... and is still going 28 years later! 'right said fred' on this list had 4 or 5 uk hits... cant remember any others.
Maybe we can just blame MtV and everything will be okay again! LOL On 7/23/06, moose <moose@pigpendigital.com> wrote:
On 22/7/06 10:19 PM, "Andrew" <awerling@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway.
Pet peeve I guess.
it amazes me who are classed as 'one hit wonders'... the biggest one that annoys me is gary numan. maybe he had one big hit over here in the US but has had 20+ albums in europe and a bucket full of chart singles... and is still going 28 years later!
'right said fred' on this list had 4 or 5 uk hits... cant remember any others.
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-- Andrew Werling http://blog.myspace.com/nitesead
I've got some issues with that list myself. Granted, some songs got more play in non-U.S. markets, but it's a U.S. radio station, so I can let them focus on U.S. hits. From a wide perspective, you could look at top-40 hits, and define a one-hit wonder as any group that only had one top 40 hit. If you do that, only 13 of the 31 artist qualify (and that's letting Ace slide in, even tough Paul Carrack would have later hits with Mike + the Mechanics): Sir Mix-A-Lot, Bobby McFerrin, Right Said Fred, Nena, M, Proclaimers, Deep Blue Something, Ace*, Nick Gilder, Marcy Playground, Crash Test Dummies, Minnie Ripperton, and Rembrants. However, looking at the bands' other songs that charted, many of them were in the lower half of the chart, and I haven't heard a lot of them. So, I'd be willing to broaden the criteria and say any band with only one top-ten hit could qualify, which would add the following artists to the list: Tommy Tutone, Chirs DeBurgh, Paula Cole, Snow, Mr. Big, Alannah Miles, Bob Welch, Matthew Wilder, and Men Without Hats (sorry!), which lets in 22 of their 31 artists. Of course, by that measure, the Rembrants should fall out, because their song only reached #17, but, whatever. The real issues come in with the other 9 artists. First of all, two of them (Weather Girls and Trio) never charted in the top 40 at all. "Raining Men" peaked at # 46, and I can't find any information that "Da Da Da" charted in the U.S. at all. Of course, you could argue that "Raining Men" was a big dance number, or that everyone knows "Da Da Da" from that commercial, but somehow a hit has to be a hit. Even worse, the remaining seven bands not only had other charting hits, they had more than one top ten hit: Nelson, Kris Kross, Jesus Jones, Escape Club, Cutting Crew, C&C Music Factory, and Martika. It's clear to me that WRAL's list is purely arbitrary. I guess it attempts to be a list of bands that most people will only remember one song from, but it's imprecise and faulty even to that end. I know the hits by Nelson & Cutting Crew, even though I don't much care for them. The ultimate irony in WRALs list, though, is that one artist is actually on their one-hit-wonders list TWICE: Martha Wash sings on both C&C Music Factory's "Gonna Make You Sweat" and on Weather Girls' "Raining Men." If that doesn't sum up the inadequacies of their list, I don't know what does. Here's all the gritty details, if anyone cares to look them over: Except where noted, all information is from the 7th Edition of Joel Whitburn's _The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits_, which is current up to 1999 (and a great book to own Ive had an edition of the book on my shelf since 1987). 1. Tommy Tutone is listed for "867-5309/Jenny" (#4 1982); they had previously charted with "Angel Say No" (#38 1980). 2. Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back" (#1 1992) is his only top 40 hit. 3. Paula Cole is listed for "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" (#8 1997); she also charted with "I Don't Want To Wait" (# 11 1998) and "Me" (#35 1998). 4. Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry Be Happy" (#1 1988) is his only top 40 hit. 5. Right Said Fred's "I'm Too Sexy" (# 1 1992) is their only top 40 hit. 6. Chris DeBurgh is listed for "The Lady In Red" (#3 1987); he previously charted with "Don't Pay the Ferryman" (#34 1983). 7. Nena's "99 Luftballons" (#2 1984) is their only top 40 hit. 8. Nelson is listed for "Love and Affection" (#1 1990); they also charted with "After the Rain" (#6 1991). 9. M's "Pop Muzik" (#1 1979) is his only top 40 hit. 10. Kris Kross is listed for "Jump" (#1 1992); they also charted with "Warm It Up" (#13 1992), "Alright" (#19 1993), and "Tonite's Tha Night" (#12 1996) 11. The Rembrandts are listed for "I'll Be There For You" (#17 1995); they had previously charted with "Just The Way It Is, Baby" (#14 1991) 12. The Proclaimers' "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)" (#3 1993) is their only top 40 hit. 13. Jesus Jones is listed for "Right Here, Right Now" (#2 1991); they also charted with "Real, Real, Real" (#4 1991). 14. The Escape Club is listed for "Wild, Wild West" (#1 1988); they also charted with "Shake for the Sheik" (#28 1989) and "I'll Be There" (#8 1991) 15. Deep Blue Something's "Breakfast at Tiffany's" (#5 1996) is their only top 40 hit. 16. Cutting Crew is listed for "I Just Died In Your Arms" (#1 1987); they also charted with "One for the Mockingbird" (#38 1987) and "I've Been in Love Before" (#9 1987). 17. C&C Music Factory is listed for "Make You Sweat" (#1 1991); they also charted with "Here We Go (#3 1991), "Things That Make You Go Hmmm" (#4 1991), and "Do You Wanna Get Funky" (#40 1994). 18. Ace's "How Long" (#3 1975) is the band's only top-40 hit; vocalist Paul Carrack would later chart 4 times (including 3 top tens) with Mike + The Mechanics. 19. Snow is listed for "The Informer" (#1 1993); he also charted with "Girl, I've Been Hurt" (#19 1993) 20. Mr. Big is listed for "To Be With You" (#1 1992); they also charted with "Just Take My Heart" (#16 1992) and "Wild World" (#27 1993). 21. Nick Gilder's "Hot Child In the City" (#1 1978) is his only top 40 hit. 22. Alannah Miles is listed for "Black Velvet" (#1 1990); she also charted with "Love Is" (#36 1990) 23. Marcy Playground's "Sex and Candy" (#8 1998) is their only top 40 hit. 24. Crash Test Dummies' "Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm" (#4 1994) is their only top 40 hit. 25. Bob Welch is listed for "Sentimental Lady" (#8 1978); he also charted with "Ebony Eyes" (#14 1978), "Hot Love, Cold World" (#31 1978), and "Precious Love" (#19 1979). 26. The Weather Girls' "It's Raining Men" did not make the top 40 (according to Wikipedia, it peaked at #46 1982). 27. Matthew Wilder's is listed for "Break My Stride" (#5 1984); he also charted with "The Kid's American" (#33 1984). 28. Men Without Hats are listed for "Safety Dance" (#3 1983); they also charted with "Pop Goes the World" (#20 1988). 29. Trio's "Da Da Da" does not seem to have made the top 40 in the U.S. (according to Wikipedia it was a chart hit in the U.K. and Germany in the 1980s, and was "popular" in the U.S. in 1997 after its inclusion in a commercial). 30. Minnie Ripperton's "Lovin' You" (#1 1975) is her only top 40 hit. 31. Martika is listed for "Toy Soldiers" (#1 1989); she also charted with "More Than You Know" (#18 1989), "I Feel The Earth Move" (#25 1989), and "Love... Thy Will Be Done" (#10 1991). - Kevin Lentz (859) 948-5159 http://www.toymania.com/334archives/ojshut
From: Andrew <awerling@gmail.com> Reply-To: "You can dance,if you want to." <men-without-hats@mailman.xmission.com> To: "You can dance, if you want to." <men-without-hats@mailman.xmission.com> Subject: Re: [Men Without Hats] local tv station's "weekend list" ... Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2006 11:02:59 -0600
Maybe we can just blame MtV and everything will be okay again! LOL
On 7/23/06, moose <moose@pigpendigital.com> wrote:
On 22/7/06 10:19 PM, "Andrew" <awerling@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway.
Pet peeve I guess.
it amazes me who are classed as 'one hit wonders'... the biggest one that annoys me is gary numan. maybe he had one big hit over here in the US but has had 20+ albums in europe and a bucket full of chart singles... and is still going 28 years later!
'right said fred' on this list had 4 or 5 uk hits... cant remember any others.
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You obviously have too much time on your hands, Kevin! ;-) Steve Kevin Lentz wrote:
I've got some issues with that list myself. Granted, some songs got more play in non-U.S. markets, but it's a U.S. radio station, so I can let them focus on U.S. hits. From a wide perspective, you could look at top-40 hits, and define a one-hit wonder as any group that only had one top 40 hit. If you do that, only 13 of the 31 artist qualify (and that's letting Ace slide in, even tough Paul Carrack would have later hits with Mike + the Mechanics): Sir Mix-A-Lot, Bobby McFerrin, Right Said Fred, Nena, M, Proclaimers, Deep Blue Something, Ace*, Nick Gilder, Marcy Playground, Crash Test Dummies, Minnie Ripperton, and Rembrants.
However, looking at the bands' other songs that charted, many of them were in the lower half of the chart, and I haven't heard a lot of them. So, I'd be willing to broaden the criteria and say any band with only one top-ten hit could qualify, which would add the following artists to the list: Tommy Tutone, Chirs DeBurgh, Paula Cole, Snow, Mr. Big, Alannah Miles, Bob Welch, Matthew Wilder, and Men Without Hats (sorry!), which lets in 22 of their 31 artists. Of course, by that measure, the Rembrants should fall out, because their song only reached #17, but, whatever.
The real issues come in with the other 9 artists. First of all, two of them (Weather Girls and Trio) never charted in the top 40 at all. "Raining Men" peaked at # 46, and I can't find any information that "Da Da Da" charted in the U.S. at all. Of course, you could argue that "Raining Men" was a big dance number, or that everyone knows "Da Da Da" from that commercial, but somehow a hit has to be a hit.
Even worse, the remaining seven bands not only had other charting hits, they had more than one top ten hit: Nelson, Kris Kross, Jesus Jones, Escape Club, Cutting Crew, C&C Music Factory, and Martika.
It's clear to me that WRAL's list is purely arbitrary. I guess it attempts to be a list of bands that most people will only remember one song from, but it's imprecise and faulty even to that end. I know the hits by Nelson & Cutting Crew, even though I don't much care for them.
The ultimate irony in WRALÂ’s list, though, is that one artist is actually on their one-hit-wonders list TWICE: Martha Wash sings on both C&C Music Factory's "Gonna Make You Sweat" and on Weather Girls' "Raining Men." If that doesn't sum up the inadequacies of their list, I don't know what does.
Here's all the gritty details, if anyone cares to look them over: Except where noted, all information is from the 7th Edition of Joel Whitburn's _The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits_, which is current up to 1999 (and a great book to ownÂ… IÂ’ve had an edition of the book on my shelf since 1987).
1. Tommy Tutone is listed for "867-5309/Jenny" (#4 1982); they had previously charted with "Angel Say No" (#38 1980). 2. Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back" (#1 1992) is his only top 40 hit. 3. Paula Cole is listed for "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" (#8 1997); she also charted with "I Don't Want To Wait" (# 11 1998) and "Me" (#35 1998). 4. Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry Be Happy" (#1 1988) is his only top 40 hit. 5. Right Said Fred's "I'm Too Sexy" (# 1 1992) is their only top 40 hit. 6. Chris DeBurgh is listed for "The Lady In Red" (#3 1987); he previously charted with "Don't Pay the Ferryman" (#34 1983). 7. Nena's "99 Luftballons" (#2 1984) is their only top 40 hit. 8. Nelson is listed for "Love and Affection" (#1 1990); they also charted with "After the Rain" (#6 1991). 9. M's "Pop Muzik" (#1 1979) is his only top 40 hit. 10. Kris Kross is listed for "Jump" (#1 1992); they also charted with "Warm It Up" (#13 1992), "Alright" (#19 1993), and "Tonite's Tha Night" (#12 1996) 11. The Rembrandts are listed for "I'll Be There For You" (#17 1995); they had previously charted with "Just The Way It Is, Baby" (#14 1991) 12. The Proclaimers' "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)" (#3 1993) is their only top 40 hit. 13. Jesus Jones is listed for "Right Here, Right Now" (#2 1991); they also charted with "Real, Real, Real" (#4 1991). 14. The Escape Club is listed for "Wild, Wild West" (#1 1988); they also charted with "Shake for the Sheik" (#28 1989) and "I'll Be There" (#8 1991) 15. Deep Blue Something's "Breakfast at Tiffany's" (#5 1996) is their only top 40 hit. 16. Cutting Crew is listed for "I Just Died In Your Arms" (#1 1987); they also charted with "One for the Mockingbird" (#38 1987) and "I've Been in Love Before" (#9 1987). 17. C&C Music Factory is listed for "Make You Sweat" (#1 1991); they also charted with "Here We Go (#3 1991), "Things That Make You Go Hmmm" (#4 1991), and "Do You Wanna Get Funky" (#40 1994). 18. Ace's "How Long" (#3 1975) is the band's only top-40 hit; vocalist Paul Carrack would later chart 4 times (including 3 top tens) with Mike + The Mechanics. 19. Snow is listed for "The Informer" (#1 1993); he also charted with "Girl, I've Been Hurt" (#19 1993) 20. Mr. Big is listed for "To Be With You" (#1 1992); they also charted with "Just Take My Heart" (#16 1992) and "Wild World" (#27 1993). 21. Nick Gilder's "Hot Child In the City" (#1 1978) is his only top 40 hit. 22. Alannah Miles is listed for "Black Velvet" (#1 1990); she also charted with "Love Is" (#36 1990) 23. Marcy Playground's "Sex and Candy" (#8 1998) is their only top 40 hit. 24. Crash Test Dummies' "Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm" (#4 1994) is their only top 40 hit. 25. Bob Welch is listed for "Sentimental Lady" (#8 1978); he also charted with "Ebony Eyes" (#14 1978), "Hot Love, Cold World" (#31 1978), and "Precious Love" (#19 1979). 26. The Weather Girls' "It's Raining Men" did not make the top 40 (according to Wikipedia, it peaked at #46 1982). 27. Matthew Wilder's is listed for "Break My Stride" (#5 1984); he also charted with "The Kid's American" (#33 1984). 28. Men Without Hats are listed for "Safety Dance" (#3 1983); they also charted with "Pop Goes the World" (#20 1988). 29. Trio's "Da Da Da" does not seem to have made the top 40 in the U.S. (according to Wikipedia it was a chart hit in the U.K. and Germany in the 1980s, and was "popular" in the U.S. in 1997 after its inclusion in a commercial). 30. Minnie Ripperton's "Lovin' You" (#1 1975) is her only top 40 hit. 31. Martika is listed for "Toy Soldiers" (#1 1989); she also charted with "More Than You Know" (#18 1989), "I Feel The Earth Move" (#25 1989), and "Love... Thy Will Be Done" (#10 1991).
-
Kevin Lentz (859) 948-5159 http://www.toymania.com/334archives/ojshut
From: Andrew <awerling@gmail.com> Reply-To: "You can dance,if you want to." <men-without-hats@mailman.xmission.com> To: "You can dance, if you want to." <men-without-hats@mailman.xmission.com> Subject: Re: [Men Without Hats] local tv station's "weekend list" ... Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2006 11:02:59 -0600
Maybe we can just blame MtV and everything will be okay again! LOL
On 7/23/06, moose <moose@pigpendigital.com> wrote:
On 22/7/06 10:19 PM, "Andrew" <awerling@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway.
Pet peeve I guess.
it amazes me who are classed as 'one hit wonders'... the biggest one that annoys me is gary numan. maybe he had one big hit over here in the US but has had 20+ albums in europe and a bucket full of chart singles... and is still going 28 years later!
'right said fred' on this list had 4 or 5 uk hits... cant remember any others.
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-- Andrew Werling http://blog.myspace.com/nitesead
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Well... it's like they say: There are 3 good reasons to teach public school... June, July, and August! Had this discussion come up in, say, February, I probalby would have been less dedicated to my reply... - Kevin Lentz (859) 948-5159 http://www.toymania.com/334archives/ojshut
You obviously have too much time on your hands, Kevin! ;-)
Steve
Kevin Lentz wrote:
I've got some issues with that list myself. Granted, some songs got more play in non-U.S. markets, but it's a U.S. radio station, so I can let them focus on U.S. hits. From a wide perspective, you could look at top-40 hits, and define a one-hit wonder as any group that only had one top 40 hit. If you do that, only 13 of the 31 artist qualify (and that's letting Ace slide in, even tough Paul Carrack would have later hits with Mike + the Mechanics): Sir Mix-A-Lot, Bobby McFerrin, Right Said Fred, Nena, M, Proclaimers, Deep Blue Something, Ace*, Nick Gilder, Marcy Playground, Crash Test Dummies, Minnie Ripperton, and Rembrants.
However, looking at the bands' other songs that charted, many of them were in the lower half of the chart, and I haven't heard a lot of them. So, I'd be willing to broaden the criteria and say any band with only one top-ten hit could qualify, which would add the following artists to the list: Tommy Tutone, Chirs DeBurgh, Paula Cole, Snow, Mr. Big, Alannah Miles, Bob Welch, Matthew Wilder, and Men Without Hats (sorry!), which lets in 22 of their 31 artists. Of course, by that measure, the Rembrants should fall out, because their song only reached #17, but, whatever.
The real issues come in with the other 9 artists. First of all, two of them (Weather Girls and Trio) never charted in the top 40 at all. "Raining Men" peaked at # 46, and I can't find any information that "Da Da Da" charted in the U.S. at all. Of course, you could argue that "Raining Men" was a big dance number, or that everyone knows "Da Da Da" from that commercial, but somehow a hit has to be a hit.
Even worse, the remaining seven bands not only had other charting hits, they had more than one top ten hit: Nelson, Kris Kross, Jesus Jones, Escape Club, Cutting Crew, C&C Music Factory, and Martika.
It's clear to me that WRAL's list is purely arbitrary. I guess it attempts to be a list of bands that most people will only remember one song from, but it's imprecise and faulty even to that end. I know the hits by Nelson & Cutting Crew, even though I don't much care for them.
The ultimate irony in WRALs list, though, is that one artist is actually on their one-hit-wonders list TWICE: Martha Wash sings on both C&C Music Factory's "Gonna Make You Sweat" and on Weather Girls' "Raining Men." If that doesn't sum up the inadequacies of their list, I don't know what does.
Here's all the gritty details, if anyone cares to look them over: Except where noted, all information is from the 7th Edition of Joel Whitburn's _The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits_, which is current up to 1999 (and a great book to own Ive had an edition of the book on my shelf since 1987).
1. Tommy Tutone is listed for "867-5309/Jenny" (#4 1982); they had previously charted with "Angel Say No" (#38 1980). 2. Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back" (#1 1992) is his only top 40 hit. 3. Paula Cole is listed for "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" (#8 1997); she also charted with "I Don't Want To Wait" (# 11 1998) and "Me" (#35 1998). 4. Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry Be Happy" (#1 1988) is his only top 40 hit. 5. Right Said Fred's "I'm Too Sexy" (# 1 1992) is their only top 40 hit. 6. Chris DeBurgh is listed for "The Lady In Red" (#3 1987); he previously charted with "Don't Pay the Ferryman" (#34 1983). 7. Nena's "99 Luftballons" (#2 1984) is their only top 40 hit. 8. Nelson is listed for "Love and Affection" (#1 1990); they also charted with "After the Rain" (#6 1991). 9. M's "Pop Muzik" (#1 1979) is his only top 40 hit. 10. Kris Kross is listed for "Jump" (#1 1992); they also charted with "Warm It Up" (#13 1992), "Alright" (#19 1993), and "Tonite's Tha Night" (#12 1996) 11. The Rembrandts are listed for "I'll Be There For You" (#17 1995); they had previously charted with "Just The Way It Is, Baby" (#14 1991) 12. The Proclaimers' "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)" (#3 1993) is their only top 40 hit. 13. Jesus Jones is listed for "Right Here, Right Now" (#2 1991); they also charted with "Real, Real, Real" (#4 1991). 14. The Escape Club is listed for "Wild, Wild West" (#1 1988); they also charted with "Shake for the Sheik" (#28 1989) and "I'll Be There" (#8 1991) 15. Deep Blue Something's "Breakfast at Tiffany's" (#5 1996) is their only top 40 hit. 16. Cutting Crew is listed for "I Just Died In Your Arms" (#1 1987); they also charted with "One for the Mockingbird" (#38 1987) and "I've Been in Love Before" (#9 1987). 17. C&C Music Factory is listed for "Make You Sweat" (#1 1991); they also charted with "Here We Go (#3 1991), "Things That Make You Go Hmmm" (#4 1991), and "Do You Wanna Get Funky" (#40 1994). 18. Ace's "How Long" (#3 1975) is the band's only top-40 hit; vocalist Paul Carrack would later chart 4 times (including 3 top tens) with Mike + The Mechanics. 19. Snow is listed for "The Informer" (#1 1993); he also charted with "Girl, I've Been Hurt" (#19 1993) 20. Mr. Big is listed for "To Be With You" (#1 1992); they also charted with "Just Take My Heart" (#16 1992) and "Wild World" (#27 1993). 21. Nick Gilder's "Hot Child In the City" (#1 1978) is his only top 40 hit. 22. Alannah Miles is listed for "Black Velvet" (#1 1990); she also charted with "Love Is" (#36 1990) 23. Marcy Playground's "Sex and Candy" (#8 1998) is their only top 40 hit. 24. Crash Test Dummies' "Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm" (#4 1994) is their only top 40 hit. 25. Bob Welch is listed for "Sentimental Lady" (#8 1978); he also charted with "Ebony Eyes" (#14 1978), "Hot Love, Cold World" (#31 1978), and "Precious Love" (#19 1979). 26. The Weather Girls' "It's Raining Men" did not make the top 40 (according to Wikipedia, it peaked at #46 1982). 27. Matthew Wilder's is listed for "Break My Stride" (#5 1984); he also charted with "The Kid's American" (#33 1984). 28. Men Without Hats are listed for "Safety Dance" (#3 1983); they also charted with "Pop Goes the World" (#20 1988). 29. Trio's "Da Da Da" does not seem to have made the top 40 in the U.S. (according to Wikipedia it was a chart hit in the U.K. and Germany in the 1980s, and was "popular" in the U.S. in 1997 after its inclusion in a commercial). 30. Minnie Ripperton's "Lovin' You" (#1 1975) is her only top 40 hit. 31. Martika is listed for "Toy Soldiers" (#1 1989); she also charted with "More Than You Know" (#18 1989), "I Feel The Earth Move" (#25 1989), and "Love... Thy Will Be Done" (#10 1991).
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Kevin Lentz (859) 948-5159 http://www.toymania.com/334archives/ojshut
From: Andrew <awerling@gmail.com> Reply-To: "You can dance,if you want to." <men-without-hats@mailman.xmission.com> To: "You can dance, if you want to." <men-without-hats@mailman.xmission.com> Subject: Re: [Men Without Hats] local tv station's "weekend list" ... Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2006 11:02:59 -0600
Maybe we can just blame MtV and everything will be okay again! LOL
On 7/23/06, moose <moose@pigpendigital.com> wrote:
On 22/7/06 10:19 PM, "Andrew" <awerling@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway.
Pet peeve I guess.
it amazes me who are classed as 'one hit wonders'... the biggest one that annoys me is gary numan. maybe he had one big hit over here in the US but has had 20+ albums in europe and a bucket full of chart singles... and is still going 28 years later!
'right said fred' on this list had 4 or 5 uk hits... cant remember any others.
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I thought Sir Mix-a-Lot had other top 40 hits...or maybe he was just bigger in my hometown than he was elsewhere. Thank you for all of that information! On 7/23/06, Kevin Lentz <kevinlentz@hotmail.com> wrote:
I've got some issues with that list myself. Granted, some songs got more play in non-U.S. markets, but it's a U.S. radio station, so I can let them focus on U.S. hits. From a wide perspective, you could look at top-40 hits, and define a one-hit wonder as any group that only had one top 40 hit. If you do that, only 13 of the 31 artist qualify (and that's letting Ace slide in, even tough Paul Carrack would have later hits with Mike + the Mechanics): Sir Mix-A-Lot, Bobby McFerrin, Right Said Fred, Nena, M, Proclaimers, Deep Blue Something, Ace*, Nick Gilder, Marcy Playground, Crash Test Dummies, Minnie Ripperton, and Rembrants.
However, looking at the bands' other songs that charted, many of them were in the lower half of the chart, and I haven't heard a lot of them. So, I'd be willing to broaden the criteria and say any band with only one top-ten hit could qualify, which would add the following artists to the list: Tommy Tutone, Chirs DeBurgh, Paula Cole, Snow, Mr. Big, Alannah Miles, Bob Welch, Matthew Wilder, and Men Without Hats (sorry!), which lets in 22 of their 31 artists. Of course, by that measure, the Rembrants should fall out, because their song only reached #17, but, whatever.
The real issues come in with the other 9 artists. First of all, two of them (Weather Girls and Trio) never charted in the top 40 at all. "Raining Men" peaked at # 46, and I can't find any information that "Da Da Da" charted in the U.S. at all. Of course, you could argue that "Raining Men" was a big dance number, or that everyone knows "Da Da Da" from that commercial, but somehow a hit has to be a hit.
Even worse, the remaining seven bands not only had other charting hits, they had more than one top ten hit: Nelson, Kris Kross, Jesus Jones, Escape Club, Cutting Crew, C&C Music Factory, and Martika.
It's clear to me that WRAL's list is purely arbitrary. I guess it attempts to be a list of bands that most people will only remember one song from, but it's imprecise and faulty even to that end. I know the hits by Nelson & Cutting Crew, even though I don't much care for them.
The ultimate irony in WRAL's list, though, is that one artist is actually on their one-hit-wonders list TWICE: Martha Wash sings on both C&C Music Factory's "Gonna Make You Sweat" and on Weather Girls' "Raining Men." If that doesn't sum up the inadequacies of their list, I don't know what does.
Here's all the gritty details, if anyone cares to look them over: Except where noted, all information is from the 7th Edition of Joel Whitburn's _The Billboard Book of Top 40 Hits_, which is current up to 1999 (and a great book to own… I've had an edition of the book on my shelf since 1987).
1. Tommy Tutone is listed for "867-5309/Jenny" (#4 1982); they had previously charted with "Angel Say No" (#38 1980). 2. Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back" (#1 1992) is his only top 40 hit. 3. Paula Cole is listed for "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?" (#8 1997); she also charted with "I Don't Want To Wait" (# 11 1998) and "Me" (#35 1998). 4. Bobby McFerrin's "Don't Worry Be Happy" (#1 1988) is his only top 40 hit. 5. Right Said Fred's "I'm Too Sexy" (# 1 1992) is their only top 40 hit. 6. Chris DeBurgh is listed for "The Lady In Red" (#3 1987); he previously charted with "Don't Pay the Ferryman" (#34 1983). 7. Nena's "99 Luftballons" (#2 1984) is their only top 40 hit. 8. Nelson is listed for "Love and Affection" (#1 1990); they also charted with "After the Rain" (#6 1991). 9. M's "Pop Muzik" (#1 1979) is his only top 40 hit. 10. Kris Kross is listed for "Jump" (#1 1992); they also charted with "Warm It Up" (#13 1992), "Alright" (#19 1993), and "Tonite's Tha Night" (#12 1996) 11. The Rembrandts are listed for "I'll Be There For You" (#17 1995); they had previously charted with "Just The Way It Is, Baby" (#14 1991) 12. The Proclaimers' "I'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)" (#3 1993) is their only top 40 hit. 13. Jesus Jones is listed for "Right Here, Right Now" (#2 1991); they also charted with "Real, Real, Real" (#4 1991). 14. The Escape Club is listed for "Wild, Wild West" (#1 1988); they also charted with "Shake for the Sheik" (#28 1989) and "I'll Be There" (#8 1991) 15. Deep Blue Something's "Breakfast at Tiffany's" (#5 1996) is their only top 40 hit. 16. Cutting Crew is listed for "I Just Died In Your Arms" (#1 1987); they also charted with "One for the Mockingbird" (#38 1987) and "I've Been in Love Before" (#9 1987). 17. C&C Music Factory is listed for "Make You Sweat" (#1 1991); they also charted with "Here We Go (#3 1991), "Things That Make You Go Hmmm" (#4 1991), and "Do You Wanna Get Funky" (#40 1994). 18. Ace's "How Long" (#3 1975) is the band's only top-40 hit; vocalist Paul Carrack would later chart 4 times (including 3 top tens) with Mike + The Mechanics. 19. Snow is listed for "The Informer" (#1 1993); he also charted with "Girl, I've Been Hurt" (#19 1993) 20. Mr. Big is listed for "To Be With You" (#1 1992); they also charted with "Just Take My Heart" (#16 1992) and "Wild World" (#27 1993). 21. Nick Gilder's "Hot Child In the City" (#1 1978) is his only top 40 hit. 22. Alannah Miles is listed for "Black Velvet" (#1 1990); she also charted with "Love Is" (#36 1990) 23. Marcy Playground's "Sex and Candy" (#8 1998) is their only top 40 hit. 24. Crash Test Dummies' "Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm" (#4 1994) is their only top 40 hit. 25. Bob Welch is listed for "Sentimental Lady" (#8 1978); he also charted with "Ebony Eyes" (#14 1978), "Hot Love, Cold World" (#31 1978), and "Precious Love" (#19 1979). 26. The Weather Girls' "It's Raining Men" did not make the top 40 (according to Wikipedia, it peaked at #46 1982). 27. Matthew Wilder's is listed for "Break My Stride" (#5 1984); he also charted with "The Kid's American" (#33 1984). 28. Men Without Hats are listed for "Safety Dance" (#3 1983); they also charted with "Pop Goes the World" (#20 1988). 29. Trio's "Da Da Da" does not seem to have made the top 40 in the U.S. (according to Wikipedia it was a chart hit in the U.K. and Germany in the 1980s, and was "popular" in the U.S. in 1997 after its inclusion in a commercial). 30. Minnie Ripperton's "Lovin' You" (#1 1975) is her only top 40 hit. 31. Martika is listed for "Toy Soldiers" (#1 1989); she also charted with "More Than You Know" (#18 1989), "I Feel The Earth Move" (#25 1989), and "Love... Thy Will Be Done" (#10 1991).
-
Kevin Lentz (859) 948-5159 http://www.toymania.com/334archives/ojshut
From: Andrew <awerling@gmail.com> Reply-To: "You can dance,if you want to." <men-without-hats@mailman.xmission.com> To: "You can dance, if you want to." <men-without-hats@mailman.xmission.com> Subject: Re: [Men Without Hats] local tv station's "weekend list" ... Date: Sun, 23 Jul 2006 11:02:59 -0600
Maybe we can just blame MtV and everything will be okay again! LOL
On 7/23/06, moose <moose@pigpendigital.com> wrote:
On 22/7/06 10:19 PM, "Andrew" <awerling@gmail.com> wrote:
Of course, Men Without Hats wasn't a "one-hit wonder." "Pop Goes the World" made it into the top thirty in the U.S. anyway.
Pet peeve I guess.
it amazes me who are classed as 'one hit wonders'... the biggest one that annoys me is gary numan. maybe he had one big hit over here in the US but has had 20+ albums in europe and a bucket full of chart singles... and is still going 28 years later!
'right said fred' on this list had 4 or 5 uk hits... cant remember any others.
_______________________________________________ Men-Without-Hats mailing list Men-Without-Hats@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/men-without-hats Report list abuse to list-abuse at studio-nibble.com
-- Andrew Werling http://blog.myspace.com/nitesead
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participants (5)
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Andrew -
Kevin Lentz -
Laura Kramer -
moose -
Steve Jackson