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All kinds of interesting things in this CHUM chart.
Two favourite arena/sports songs that you hear all the time Sugar Sugar and Sweet Caroline are #3 and #4 on the chart.
Andy Kim had two songs on the top ten. He wrote and sang Sugar Sugar.
Cat Mother's version of the Dave Clark Five Medley Good Ol' Rock and Roll was a #2 hit on CHUM, but the British bands earlier version only charted in Europe and not much in North America. Cat Mother had the bigger hit in Canada and US.
#18 Everyone Knows Matilda by Duke Baxter was banned by stations in Australia and Southern US because of sexual overtones in the lyrics.
Moms Mabley was the only senior citizen on the chart with her version of Abraham, Martin and John at #20.
CHUM had 6 cancon cuts on the top 30 this date in 1969.
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Paterson, I have to correct you on who sang lead on Sugar Sugar. It was Ron Dante who also sang lead on Tracy by the Cufflink who like the Archies were a studio concoction.
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Yes, Ron Dante sang lead on "Sugar, Sugar", with Kim and Toni Wine singing backup.
Members of Cat Mother & the All-Night News Boys wrote the original portion of "Good Old Rock 'N Roll", and they released it first in June 1969. DC5's cover version came out in November 1969, and as far as I know wasn't even released in North America.
Seven songs on the chart count as Cancon:
Sugar, Sugar
Baby I Love You
Laughing
Spinning Wheel
Where Do I Go
When I Die
Give Peace A Chance
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Lorne wrote:
Yes, Ron Dante sang lead on "Sugar, Sugar", with Kim and Toni Wine singing backup.
Members of Cat Mother & the All-Night News Boys wrote the original portion of "Good Old Rock 'N Roll", and they released it first in June 1969. DC5's cover version came out in November 1969, and as far as I know wasn't even released in North America.
Seven songs on the chart count as Cancon:
Sugar, Sugar
Baby I Love You
Laughing
Spinning Wheel
Where Do I Go
When I Die
Give Peace A Chance
Yes I wondered about the Cat Mother citation but I did a quick YT search before posting and saw that the DC5 had recorded a version. I probably have that on the DC5 greatest hits but don't remember it. I think my copy of the DC5 collection was released before Dave Clark made their material very hard to get.
One other thing that caught my attention on this chart was the fact that "Did You See Her Eyes" by the Illusion was a CHUM Charger. I had read about that group but never heard them until I obtained a tape of an air check of WWWW FM from Detroit where they play the song.
Also Ron Dante was a member of the Detergents who had a novelty hit with Leader of the Laundramat.
Last edited by Fitz (August 9, 2023 1:50 pm)
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Fitz wrote:
One other thing that caught my attention on this chart was the fact that "Did You See Her Eyes" by the Illusion was a CHUM Charger
For those curious about this relatively obscure tune. Written by Jeff Barry, a long time hitmaker.
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RadioActive wrote:
Fitz wrote:
One other thing that caught my attention on this chart was the fact that "Did You See Her Eyes" by the Illusion was a CHUM Charger
For those curious about this relatively obscure tune. Written by Jeff Barry, a long time hitmaker.
And to take this thread full circle, Barry also co-wrote "Sugar, Sugar" with Andy Kim.
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Well thank you Fitz and Lorne.
I thought all this time that Andy Kim did the vocals on Sugar Sugar. And I forgot that Give Peace a Chance would be cancon since it was recorded at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal.
Did You See Her Eyes by The Illusion, great tune and I remember hearing it back in 1969, thanks for posting RA.
Finally I glanced at wiki and took it that DC5 recorded Good Old Rock N Roll first and then Cat Mother, not the other way around.
Oh well...at least I got the date of the chart correct...
Fitz wrote:
Paterson, I have to correct you on who sang lead on Sugar Sugar. It was Ron Dante
In his biography, "My Life in Rock 'n Roll Radio", Bruce Morrow stated: " . . . biggest nongroup of all time, the Archies -- an animated amalgamation of recording-studio musicians brought together to create the sound of a cartoon show"
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The only songs on that chart that I don't remember are 8, 10, 18 and 24.
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mace wrote:
The only songs on that chart that I don't remember are 8, 10, 18 and 24.
you are probably better off not knowing # 8 by Shannon who was actually Marty Wilde. Some bubblegum is fine but not that one.
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paterson1 wrote:
Well thank you Fitz and Lorne.
I thought all this time that Andy Kim did the vocals on Sugar Sugar. And I forgot that Give Peace a Chance would be cancon since it was recorded at the Queen Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal.
Did You See Her Eyes by The Illusion, great tune and I remember hearing it back in 1969, thanks for posting RA.
Finally I glanced at wiki and took it that DC5 recorded Good Old Rock N Roll first and then Cat Mother, not the other way around.
Oh well...at least I got the date of the chart correct...
Sly Stone must have been not too happy that The Illusion ripped off the Ah Ya Ya Ya Ya's from his Sing A simple song.
Regarding bubblegum. I quite enjoy the more rocking versions of it such as the Music Explosion's Little Bit of Soul or some songs by Tommy James and the Shondells and Paul Revere and the Raiders and more.
The 60's version of the genre gained more acceptance by the less stuck up people who were part of the punk/new wave movement.
Anyway yesterday I posted some pics of some of my rock books and here is another. Jeff Barry, The Archies, Ron Dante and many more get covered:
Last edited by Fitz (August 9, 2023 8:08 pm)
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But was "Give Peace a Chance" actually considered CanCon? The CHUM Chart Book by Ron Hall doesn't recognize it as such, and I thought in those pre-MAPL days a song had to have at least a Canadian singer, musician or songwriter to qualify as that?
PJ
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Paul Jeffries wrote:
But was "Give Peace a Chance" actually considered CanCon? The CHUM Chart Book by Ron Hall doesn't recognize it as such, and I thought in those pre-MAPL days a song had to have at least a Canadian singer, musician or songwriter to qualify as that?
PJ
Here's your answer:
from
How does the MAPL system work?To qualify as Canadian content, a musical selection must generally fulfil at least two of the following conditions:
Last edited by Fitz (August 9, 2023 8:42 pm)
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Thanks for the clarification, Fitz!
I'm also curious too, as I was only a little shaver when the official CanCon regs came into effect (I was 5 years old in 1972): Were Canadian stations still expected (or encouraged) to play a certain amount of CanCon as part of their condition of license before 1972? Or was playing Canadian music just something that earned a station brownie points with the federal regulator, like, when their license came up for renewal?
PJ
Last edited by Paul Jeffries (August 9, 2023 8:53 pm)
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This may help fill in some background. It's a Billboard article from 1970.
But did you know this CanCon controversy goes back as early as 1960? Check out this article from that year when radio was still regulated by the BBG, the Board of Broadcast Governors. And surprise! The broadcasters were against it back then, too.
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It's risky to post old articles like the Billboard 1970 above. It has a few errors and I have noticed that some of the old RPM articles initially had some information wrong about cancon and other regulations. Some of these articles were written well before the regs actually came in and were not accurate. Or in a few cases the CRTC changed something after the article was written.
The Billboard article reads like 30% cancon came in October 1 1970 with songs only needing to meet one part of the MAPL criteria. Then in October 1 1971 30% of the songs needed to be two parts MAPL. This is not correct. Any of the songs that were one part MAPL and were cancon prior still would be, and part of the 30% total.
Cancon came in on January 18, 1971 and AM radio stations were to play 30% cancon. In the beginning a song only needed to meet one area or more of MAPL to qualify. The criteria became two parts or more in January 1972. It is still two parts or more today, and songs that were one part are still cancon. Another early Billboard article said that songs would eventually need to be three and four parts to qualify which is incorrect.
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Of course the articles don't list the final rules. They were still in development.
What's interesting to me - and why I thought it was worth posting - is how they were being conceived until they formed the final regulations as we know them today. There's nothing wrong with seeing what those in charge were thinking about in the early going and how they eventually turned out. This is a contemporary record of their thoughts at the time.
I know you love to disagree with nearly everything I post, but this seems a bit over the top in this case. This was the state of the planning at the time. That's what makes it worth a second look - to see how it started and where it eventually went. Call it a history lesson if you want. But it's not wrong because that was what they were considering back in 1970.
As for the second piece, I found it amazing that this stuff was going on as far back as 1960. I had no idea the debate had been happening way back then. Without this article, I suspect it would have been lost for good. CanCon was apparently an obsession with the government even as far back as a decade or more before they officially brought the final rules in. It's part of Canadian radio history. What is the harm of discovering that?
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Fitz wrote:
One other thing that caught my attention on this chart was the fact that "Did You See Her Eyes" by the Illusion was a CHUM Charger. I had read about that group but never heard them until I obtained a tape of an air check of WWWW FM from Detroit where they play the song.
CKLW got interested in the track before it became a single. Believe it was almost 7-minutes long but Rosalie
felt it could be a hit if a part or parts were deleted.
Hugh Turnbull in Production worked his razor blade magic, prior to the tune’s 45 release and the record company may have even used his edit.
Rosie was right, of course. The song went top 10 in Windsor/Detroit, peaking at #7 July 8, 1969 on the
Big 30.
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Here's the seven minute version.
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RadioActive wrote:
Of course the articles don't list the final rules. They were still in development.
What's interesting to me - and why I thought it was worth posting - is how they were being conceived until they formed the final regulations as we know them today. There's nothing wrong with seeing what those in charge were thinking about in the early going and how they eventually turned out. This is a contemporary record of their thoughts at the time.
I know you love to disagree with nearly everything I post, but this seems a bit over the top in this case. This was the state of the planning at the time. That's what makes it worth a second look - to see how it started and where it eventually went. Call it a history lesson if you want. But it's not wrong because that was what they were considering back in 1970.
As for the second piece, I found it amazing that this stuff was going on as far back as 1960. I had no idea the debate had been happening way back then. Without this article, I suspect it would have been lost for good. CanCon was apparently an obsession with the government even as far back as a decade or more before they officially brought the final rules in. It's part of Canadian radio history. What is the harm of discovering that?
Now RA, let's not get into a "thing" here.
First off, no I don't love to disagree with nearly everything you post. I don't comment on most of your posts. I only do when you get overly opinionated or one sided on a topic, ignore facts, or have said something wrong or misleading.
I make mistakes in my posts as well. Look at my CHUM chart posting from yesterday. I was wrong about a lot of things and appreciated the corrections. When I get opinionated it is usually with you or Aaron, and I have been off base and unclear too.
Maybe I didn't explain very well. Even though the Billboard article was a bit of history, it was also incorrect and adds to confusion for anyone here who isn't overly familiar with the cancon regs. SOWNY has 1,473 users and of this group maybe about 40-50 post something. Some of the large group that don't post may not be in broadcasting at all or weren't around when the regs came in.
The second article from 1960 was fine and actually more historic than what was in Billboard. The Billboard article reads like the regs, criteria and dates had all been set. But this wasn't the case, or they were later changed. So it might be worthwhile to point out in the preamble that the article was from 1970 and some of the information contained is incorrect. If you want to point out the inaccuracies is up to you.
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mike marshall wrote:
Fitz wrote:
One other thing that caught my attention on this chart was the fact that "Did You See Her Eyes" by the Illusion was a CHUM Charger. I had read about that group but never heard them until I obtained a tape of an air check of WWWW FM from Detroit where they play the song.
CKLW got interested in the track before it became a single. Believe it was almost 7-minutes long but Rosalie
felt it could be a hit if a part or parts were deleted.
Hugh Turnbull in Production worked his razor blade magic, prior to the tune’s 45 release and the record company may have even used his edit.
Rosie was right, of course. The song went top 10 in Windsor/Detroit, peaking at #7 July 8, 1969 on the
Big 30.
On CHUM, the song never made it past "Charger"
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Fitz wrote:
mace wrote:
The only songs on that chart that I don't remember are 8, 10, 18 and 24.
you are probably better off not knowing # 8 by Shannon who was actually Marty Wilde. Some bubblegum is fine but not that one.
I listened to #8 Abergavanny this morning. It truly is a dreadful tune.
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mace wrote:
Fitz wrote:
mace wrote:
The only songs on that chart that I don't remember are 8, 10, 18 and 24.
you are probably better off not knowing # 8 by Shannon who was actually Marty Wilde. Some bubblegum is fine but not that one.
I listened to #8 Abergavanny this morning. It truly is a dreadful tune.
Yup right up there with Leapy Lee's Little Arrows which was on the CHUM CHART a month or two later.
Marty Wilde ( Shannon) had a few hits earlier in the UK under his own name and he is also the father of Kim Wilde of Kids in America fame.
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I'm somewhat embarrassed to say I don't hate either of these tunes as much as some, although I could live with not hearing either of them again.
For the record, Abergavenny is a real place in Wales.
And Leapy Lee's actual life story is far more interesting than his one hit wonder. He was framed for a stabbing that took place in a bar and spent three years in jail, effectively ending his recording career. And the case involved a famous actress, who helped cover up the crime.
Never mind Little Arrows. This was Slings and Arrows.
The story here.