Billboard’s Hot 100/ Top 40
Chart #02
Jan. 12, 1974
Number of singles reviewed this week: 39!!
last week: 36
including:
MARVIN GAYE - You Sure Love to Ball [3:35]; producer: Marvin Gaye; writer: M. Gaye; Tamla 54244 [Motown]. You can't be more explicit about the sexual meaning of this tune, complete with a moaning girl at the beginning of the arrangement. Gaye sings the song softly, telling his sexy mama that he's aware of her main desire in life. The tune is fare for adults, but for subteens it certainly sounds risque.
The Motown Review:
Stevie Wonder advances a notch higher in the Top Ten while the Temptations return to the Top 40. In a week that's weak in new records, Billboard picks Marvin Gaye's latest release as hopeful while also questioning it as appropriate. Nothing new from Motown this week as one 45 slips off, giving the label a total of 5 charters all upward bound, two are in the Top 40.
The Top 10:
Steve Miller has a serious first Top 40 hit as it zooms to the top. THE JOKER moves up from #2 trading places with Jim Croce's TIME IN A BOTTLE. Quite a Top 10 shift this round as three songs drop out to be replaced by: Ringo's YOU'RE SIXTEEN from #16 to #6, and in the Top 10, there for the first time, Olivia Newton-John enters at #9 from #13 with LET ME BE THERE, while at #10 from #12, another Beatle, Paul McCartney, enters with HELEN WHEELS. Helen Reddy, leaves alone with her RUBY RED DRESS from its peak of #3 to #14 while it's also GOODBYE to THE YELLOW BRICK ROAD by Elton John, denied a #1 record by peaking at #2 [#1 Canada] plunging from to #7 to #18, and so long as well to THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL by Charlie Rich from #4 to #12.
The Top 40:
Two 45s from Motown are on the Top 40:
^LIVING FOR THE CITY - Stevie Wonder shifts to #8 from #9 [no bullet]
^LET YOUR HAIR DOWN - Temptations bulleted DEBUT at #38
COME GET TO THIS - Marvin Gaye OFF from #34
Off:
Marvin Gaye's COME GET TO THIS, first recorded in 1970 then polished up in 1973, it peaks at #21 [#3 Soul] with a ten week run. The Funk Brothers do the instrumentation aided by the Detroit Symphony Orchestra who are also heard on this weeks highest Top 40 debut. The unnoticed "b" side, DISTANT LOVER will get re-released later this year in a live version.
Biggest mover in the Top 40, 11 steps
JUNGLE BOOGIE - Kool & The Gang at #26 from #37
5 debuts, 3 US, 1 Canada, 1 UK , 3 +Top 10 bound+, 1 PI related, 1 Motown, 0 by proxy
Highest debut:
+AMERICANS+ -Bryon MacGregor - #33 up 33 from #65 - [One Hit Wonder]
JOY Part I - Isaac Hayes - #38 up 6 from #44 [6th Top 40 hit]
LET YOUR HAIR DOWN - Temptations #38 up 8 from #46 [34th Top 40 hit]
+PUT YOUR HANDS TOGETHER+ - OJays - #39 up 11 from #50 [5th Top 40 hit]
+ROCK ON+- David Essex - #40 up 8 from #48 - [One Hit Wonder]
The Hot 100:
7 debuts : 6 Top 40 bound, 3 first time to chart on the Hot 100, 0 Philly International related, 0 Motown, 0 by proxy
Highest debut 3rd tier:#83 - DOO DOO [HEART BREAKER] - The Rolling Stones
#85 - COME AND GET YOUR LOVE - Redbone
#90 - ERUS TU [TOUCH THE WIND] - Mocedades
#97 - MEADOWS - Joe Walsh
#98 - AMERICANS - Gordan Sinclair
#99 - SEASONS IN THE SUN - Terry Jacks
#100 - SEXY MAMA - Moments
Motown:
debuts: none
2nd week: ^LAST TIME I SAW HIM - Diana Ross #56 up 14 from #70
2nd week: ^BOOGIE DOWN - Eddie Kendricks #62 up 14 from #76
4rd week: ^LET YOUR HAIR DOWN - Temptations Top 40 from #46
9th week ^BABY COME CLOSE - Smokey Robinson #48 up 3 from #51
OFFs : none
____
A very good week for:
Americans.
Paul Simon peaks this week at #35 with AMERICAN TUNE described in wiki as a meditation of the American experience, using a Bach composition as its melody.
Canada meanwhile tips its hat at its neighbor as a pro-American newspaper opinion piece is read with underlying music called AMERICANS that has caught fire. Canadian DJ Bryan MacGregors version, released first, surges 33 places to be this week's highest Top 40 debut while Gordon Sinclair's version [also a Dj who wrote the piece originally] taps in at #98.
Also a very good week for:
Canadians.
For the one-two punch of the novelty mentioned above and also the debut of Canadfian Terry Jacks' SEASONS IN THE SUN.
***
Motown is promo-ing Edwin Starr's DON'T IT FEEL GOOD TO BE FREE, but last week Record World took a liking to the 45's "b' side called , AIN'T IT HELL UP IN HARLEM, produced by Freddie Perren & Fonce Mizell, the title tune to the movie by that name. The Motown soundtrack includes an instrumental of Starr's song that is reminiscent of another movie theme that did quite well on a different label:
***
Dropping out of the Top 40 this week after a peak of #4 is SPACE RACE, Billy Preston's celestial follow up to OUTA-SPACE , both #1 Soul charters.
If it's possible to have more fun with a synthesizer time will tell while Motown's Paul Riser seems to be enjoying himself just as much with the abundance of complimenting horns he's arranged.
***
Five Month Club: Ann Peebles: I CANT STAND THE RAIN at #47 in its 20th week on the Hot 100.
***
Full page ad : Eddie Kendricks pictured for new single: BOOGIE DOWN
reads:
The follow-up single to "Keep On Truckin'" is truckin' across the board
and up the charts.
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