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Music buffs spark furious debate over 'best one hit wonder ever'
Daily Mail ^ | 9/25/24 | Emma Saletta

Posted on 09/25/2024 3:03:42 PM PDT by week 71

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To: OwenKellogg

The one hit wonder i remember best is Iron Butterfly’s Inna Godda Davita on their 1968 album. Big Hit Nothing else worth.


281 posted on 09/26/2024 5:38:14 AM PDT by Geostorm
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To: OwenKellogg

The one hit wonder i remember best is Iron Butterfly’s Inna Godda Davita on their 1968 album. Big Hit Nothing else worth.


282 posted on 09/26/2024 5:39:31 AM PDT by Geostorm
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To: Geostorm

Blue Cheer - Summertime Blues


283 posted on 09/26/2024 5:47:45 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: SunkenCiv

Also it can be a judgment call — e.g., The Easybeats hit with “Friday on My Mind”, but cowriter and band member George Young was the older brother of Malcolm and Angus of AC/DC and wound up producing a number of their albums.


Vanda and Young produced a lot of songs, like John Paul Young’s (no relation) “Love Is In The Air” (which is about as far from AC/DC as you can get).


284 posted on 09/26/2024 5:49:31 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: dfwgator

For songs I didn’t like, probably one of the quintessential one hit wonders were The Blues Magoos — charted once, plllt.


285 posted on 09/26/2024 7:08:36 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: week 71

Anybody mention You Light Up My Life by Debby Boone?

It was one of the biggest hit songs of the ‘70s.


286 posted on 09/26/2024 8:57:40 AM PDT by Dilbert San Diego
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To: week 71

Nick Gilder-— Hot Child In The City. 1978


287 posted on 09/26/2024 9:50:52 AM PDT by Pagey ( Valerie Jarrett IS A DEMON! )
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To: dayglored; dfwgator

“Another Brick in the Wall, pt 2” was the one hit I was referring to, going to #1, although a highly edited version of “Money” was also a minor hit (#13). In the U.K., they had a couple early significant Beatlesque hits with “Arnold Layne” (#10) and “See Emily Play,” (#6) two songs which could easily have fit in with Sargeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. Neither was released in the U.S.

Of course, the whole point was to note how sometimes the notion of “hit” is absurd. Pink Floyd simply didn’t release their songs as singles, as they rarely fit the singles format (2 to 4 1/2 minutes long). Instead, they were “Album-Oriented Rock,” (AOR) meaning that they were marketed in ways that fans were expected to buy the album, not just a single.

With the advent of CD singles, record companies began specific marketing album tracks to radio stations, and Pink Floyd had several radio-play hits on stations that had been considered AOR, including Learning to Fly, On the Turning Away, Take it Back, One Slip, Keep Talking and High Hopes. None of these were major hits on pop-music stations. They were not, however, marketed as singles to the public, instead to build interest in the albums, A Momentary Lapse of Reason and The Division Bell.


288 posted on 09/27/2024 6:48:04 AM PDT by dangus
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To: dangus; dfwgator
Yeah, I guess my perspective on Pink Floyd is somewhat non-mainstream, since they've been a favorite band of mine since Piper at the Gates of Dawn, not to mention being a musician who's covered their stuff in bands since Meddle. Being AOR they didn't benefit from the singles sales mentality.

Related note: I've always considered a "One-Hit Wonder" band to have two characteristics:

OTOH, if the band was around before the one hit, and kept going (e.g. in AOR-land) for years/decades after the one hit (like Floyd), I don't think it's the same thing at all. But that might just be my perspective.
289 posted on 09/27/2024 7:58:22 AM PDT by dayglored (This is the day which the LORD hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it. Psalms 118:24)
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To: dayglored

Pink Floyd is my favorite band, too. Piper at the Gates of Dawn was long before my time. Back when I first got into them in the 1980s, I was warded off from their pre-Dark Side stuff by being seriously underwhelmed by Masters of Rock: Pink Floyd’s Greatest Hits and Ummagumma, plus even the band’s own dismissiveness towards their early work. Just a few years ago, now that streaming means you can hear an album without deciding to buy, I’ve rediscovered their early stuff and become like a teenager about them.


290 posted on 09/27/2024 3:40:59 PM PDT by dangus
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To: dangus
Over the years, a few really great bands produced a monumental album which could arguably be called their "masterpiece", great writing, performance, engineering, production, etc. The following is just my opinion, of course.

For the Beatles, that was Abbey Road. For the Beach Boys, Pet Sounds. And for Pink Floyd, it was Dark Side of the Moon. Nothing can compare. The 1995 tour that produced the "Pulse" DVD/CD demonstrated that they could play that incredible stuff live, too, quite an achievement.

I only saw them live once (that I recall, anyway), at the Spectrum in Philly in the early 70's, and frankly don't remember a lot of details due to my state at the time, but I do recall the scream in "Careful With That Axe, Eugene" being accompanied by a huge explosion of fire in the center of the stadium ceiling where the huge scoreboard was suspended. Might have just been some really bright lights now that I think about it..... I and half the audience lost our collective minds. Ah, the good old days....

291 posted on 09/27/2024 4:23:51 PM PDT by dayglored (This is the day which the LORD hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it. Psalms 118:24)
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To: week 71

Sorry if I missed it, but I’d go with “Black Is Black” by Los Bravos as a good one.


292 posted on 09/27/2024 4:30:52 PM PDT by daler
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