https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=snZKnES4ng4
#16 | “Jenny Take A Ride” by Mitch Ryder & The Detroit Wheels
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Debuted #100 week-ending December 11, 1965, “Jenny Take A Ride” peaks at #7 (2 weeks) on the Hot 100, week-ending, January 29, 1966. Having charted 11 weeks overall — on its final week on Billboard, the single drops out at #35 for the week-ending, February 26, 1966.
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Source: The Billboard Hot 100 Pop Singles Charts [1966]
#24 | A Well Respected Man” by The Kinks
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Debuted #84 week-ending December 4, 1965, “A Well Respected Man” peaks at #13 on the Hot 100, week-ending, February 12, 1966. Having charted 14 weeks overall — on its final week on Billboard, the single drops out at #38 for the week-ending, March 5, 1966.
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Source: The Billboard Hot 100 Pop Singles Charts [1966]
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Debuted #72 week-ending November 13, 1965, “Fever” peaks at #7 (2 weeks) on the Hot 100, week-ending, December 25, 1965. Having charted 11 weeks overall — on its final week on Billboard, the single drops out at #41 for the week-ending, January 22, 1966.
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Source: The Billboard Hot 100 Pop Singles Charts [1966]
#47 | “Michelle” by David and Jonathan
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Debuted #96 week-ending January 8, 1966, “Michelle” peaks at #18 (2 weeks) on the Hot 100, week-ending, February 12, 1966. Having charted 9 weeks overall — on its final week on Billboard, the single drops out at #42 for the week-ending, March 5, 1966.
Source: The Billboard Hot 100 Pop Singles Charts [1966]
The featured Country singles and Country LP’s chart courtesy of Record World, as issued, for this week in January, 1966.
The featured Record World chart was digitally re-imaged and restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks
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RECORD WORLD became one of three weekly music trade magazines (Billboard; 1894, Cash Box; 1942, being the other two) when it began its publication in 1946 as Music Vendor. The MV title was changed to Record World, April 1964, and so remained under that banner until it ceased publication, April 1982.
The featured singles and LP’s charts courtesy of Record World, as issued, for this week in January, 1966.
THIS WEEK: #1! The Beatles dominate both the Record World Pop and LP charts
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The featured Record World charts were digitally re-imaged and restored by Motor City Radio Flashbacks
ON YOUR PC? You can read the above Record World 01/15/1966 charts ENLARGED. For a larger detailed view click above images 2x and open to second window. Click image anytime to return to NORMAL image size.
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Three Years in the Making, Holland, Dozier, Holland, Established Top Hit Makers at Motown Records Today
The team of Lamont Dozier-Brian and Eddie Holland produced nine releases in 1965 and “8-eight-8,” I said eight of these records, made the Top 10, both pop and R&B.
In the last three years, they have produced (and written) a minimum of “15 fifteen-15 Top 10″ pop and R&B” records. The sales on “I Can’t Help Myself” by the Four Tops are over one million, four hundred thousand; sales on “Where Did Our Love Go” by the Supremes are over one million-two hundred thousand. Berry Gordy himself, who scored in the poll, did one hit on his own last year – “Shotgun.” So now Motown made Brian Holland a Vice President – to me, it’s all three together. I just went out to Detroit and they told me how they do it.
Brian and Lamont sit down at a piano to riffle a taste. They keep thinking and thinking, and reaching and searching for a definite melody line – the “handle.” They usually work together this way for about a half an hour. They will discard quite a few ideas, and then will take out anything that they feel is extraneous. Their goal is always naked simplicity, and when they achieve that, then they strip that down even more, if possible. The basic criterion is always “pleasantness to the ear.” Then they turn the melody and a “working title” over to Holland. Different situations will vary from time to time.
The soul emanates from within them as they write. The soul is the quintessence of all they ever were and are. They draw upon a “Soul Fund” that includes: familiarity with ALL classical and semi-classical music; their cultural heritage as Negroes; and much of the Hebraic-Judaic musical literature.
As children, they sang in church choirs, and thus know almost all the spirituals and work and folk song of their people. They benefited from a cultural enrichment program that has existed in the Detroit school system for years. Their teachers took them to many classical concerts.
I was reminded of the great autobiographical play by the Welsh actor, Emlyn Williams, “The Corn Is Green,” when Eddie Holland said to me, “Kal, the first time I heard Brahms and Beethoven, I felt as if a giant force had lifted me up from the poverty and misery around me, up a steep wall, until I could see stretching out in front of me an expanse of green grass and a whole new world of beauty.”
They will thrill all their lives to the greatness and genius of these music titans of centuries past. They cannot pinpoint any particular melody of theirs to any one source. However, the emotional mainspring that drives their creativity is evolved from the “most hurtin’, tore-up peoples that the world has ever known.” I asked VP Brian Holland which of their songs move them the most. He told me that he is still moved to tears by: “I Can’t Help Myself”; “Stop In The Name Of Love”; and especially “I Hear A Symphony.”
I asked them who is their favorite writing team. I knew before they answered that they would say “Music by Burt Bacharach and words by Hal David.“
KAL RUDMAN’S ‘MONEY MUSIC‘
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Information, credit and news source: Record World, January 15, 1966