Top Ten Singles 40 Years Ago This Week

Week ending January 13, 1973

  1. You’re So Vain-Carly Simon
  2. Superstition-Stevie Wonder
  3. Me and Mrs. Jones-Billy Paul
  4. Clair-Gilbert O’Sullivan
  5. Funny Face-Donna Fargo
  6. Your Mama Don’t Dance-Loggins & Messina
  7. Rockin’ Pneumonia-Boogie Woogie Flu-Johnny Rivers
  8. Superfly-Curtis Mayfield
  9. Crocodile Rock-Elton John
  10. Keeper of the Castle-Four Tops

(Source: Billboard Hot 100)

Even Yet Still More Sleeveface

sleeve 15 Credit: Elien & Johan Copermans

sleeve 11

Credit: Les Johnson

sleeve 12

Credit: Johanna Páramos Santalucía

sleeve 13

Credit: Duane Perera

sleeve 14

Credit: Elien & Johan Copermans

sleeve 18

credit: Hyperbubble

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Credit: Stourley Kracklite

sleeve 16

Credit: Colin Lee

sleeve 21

Credit: Peter Rockwell

sleeve 22

Credit: Sarah Ross

sleeve 24

Credit: Carsten Ostendorf

sleeve 28

Credit: Elien & Johan Copermans

sleeve 26 Credit: Peter Jakadofsky

sleeve 29

Credit: Christophe Gowans

More at: http://www.sleeveface.com/

Eight Nerd Weddings and Three WTF’s

nerd 1 nerd 2 nerd 3 nerd 4 nerds nerds 2

nerds 3

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nerds 4

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Top Ten Singles 30 Years Ago This Week

Week ending January 8, 1983

  1. Maneater-Hall & Oates
  2. The Girl is Mine-Michael Jackson/Paul McCartney
  3. Dirty Laundry-Don Henley
  4. Down Under-Men at Work
  5. Sexual Healing-Marvin Gaye
  6. Mickey-Toni Basil
  7. Gloria-Laura Branigan
  8. Steppin’ Out-Joe Jackson
  9. Rock This Town-Stray Cats
  10. Truly-Lionel Richie

(Source: Billboard Hot 100)

Adele’s ’21’ Is Top-Selling LP for Second Straight Year

adele

(Reprinted from Rolling Stone)

Adele’s mega-smash 21 was 2012’s best-selling album in the United  States, marking the first time during the SoundScan era that the same album has  taken that top spot two years in a row, Billboard reports.

Selling 4.41 million copies this year (down from last year’s 5.82 million),   21 also became the 21st album to sell 10 million copies since SoundScan started tracking music sales in 1991.  The album hasn’t left the Billboard 200, nor the weekly top 40, since  its debut on March 21st, 2011. Along with topping the Billboard charts  again, Adele’s 21 was the best-selling  album on iTunes two years running.

Coming in second in album sales was Taylor Swift’s Red,  which moved 3.11 million copies. One Direction nabbed both the third and fifth  spots with their two records, Up  All Night (1.62 million) and Take  Me Home (1.34 million), becoming the first act in the SoundScan era to  take two of the top five spots. In fourth place was Mumford & Sons’ Babel, whose 1.46  million made it the biggest selling rock album of the year, and the only rock  record appear in the top 10.

Gotye had the year’s biggest digital single with “Somebody That I Used to  Know,” with sales of 6.8 million. Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe” was second  with sales of 6.47 million; and fun. came in third with their Janelle Monáe  collaboration “We Are Young,” which sold 5.95 million. All three songs sold  more than the previous record-holder for sales in a single year, which was  Adele’s “Rolling in the Deep,” which moved 5.81 million in 2011.

In fourth place for singles was Maroon 5’s collaboration with Wiz Khalifa  “Payphone,” while Nicki Minaj’s “Starships” sold 3.98 million copies to land in  the fifth spot. Rounding out the top ten were One Direction’s “What Makes You  Beautiful” at number six (3.89 million), fun.’s “Some Nights” in seventh (3.84  million), Kelly Clarkson’s “Stronger (What Doesn’t Kill You)” in eighth (3.82  million), Psy’s “Gangnam Style” in ninth (3.59 million) and Maroon 5’s “One More  Night” in tenth (3.46 million).

Chuck Berry Takes Keith Richards to School, Shows Him How to Rock (1987)

(Excerpted from Open Culture)

The purpose of Taylor Hackford’s 1987 film Hail! Hail! Rock ‘n’ Roll was to document two concerts held at the Fox Theatre in St. Louis to celebrate Chuck Berry’s 60 birthday, and that it does, giving audiences loads of concert footage. Berry plays the hits, backed by an all-star band of legendary bluesmen, R&B singers, and rock guitarists, assembled and directed by president of the Chuck Berry fan club, Keith Richards: There’s Bobby Keys and Chuck Leavell, Robert Cray and Eric Clapton, Etta James and Linda Ronstadt. And that’s not to mention the “talking head” appearances from people like Bo Diddley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Roy Orbison, Little Richard, and Bruce Springsteen. In the pantheon of rock-docs, it’s up there with Last Waltz. The live takes are electrifying—the band’s pistons pound as they struggle to keep up with Berry. If the man had slowed down any in his sixth decade, it’s little wonder he had trouble holding onto backing bands in his youth.

But there’s another reason Berry burned through musicians. He is not an easy man to work with (nor, I would think, for). Brilliant live performances abound in Hackford’s film, but its principal charm is the rehearsal footage, where Berry berates and bewilders his musicians–and sometimes, like he does above to Richards, takes them to rock ‘n’ roll school. In the clip above, Richards, Berry, and band rehearse “Carol,” but it takes them a good while to get going. Richards tries to play bandleader and, thinking he’s doing Chuck a favor—or not wanting to lose the spotlight—suggests that Berry play rhythm while he plays the lead. Berry agrees at first. They bicker and look daggers at each other as Richards spoils a bend that only Chuck can play to his own satisfaction. Finally he dives in and takes over. Why not? It is his song. Richards falls in line, takes the rhythm part, but looks a little sullen as Berry outshines him. It’s almost an oedipal struggle. But the old rock forefather isn’t about to roll over and let the Brit take over.

Elsewhere in the film, Berry gives voice to the underlying anger he harbored for Richards. The Stones and other British bands took Berry’s riffs (he claimed) and made millions, and Chuck never forgave them. He still doesn’t get enough credit. The Rolling Stones still tour and record, but Berry, almost twenty years older than Richards, is still out on the road too, still showing ‘em how it’s done.

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