Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Perfect 20th century history of Hot 100 singles year by year, May 9, 2005
The second essential Billboard reference book after the Joel Whitburn's Top 40 book is one mentioned to me by Eric Andrews, my first real Amazon Friend. Again, owning this pricey book indicates one is a pop culture buff. So why have this book in addition to the Top 40 book? Well, ever think about any single that didn't make the Top 40? Or what were the Top Ten singles for each year? This is where Joel Whitburn's Pop Annual comes in. Where the Top 40 book was indexed by artist/group, the Pop Annual is indexed by year, then listing all the singles by position, the #1's, the #2's, #3's, all the way to the songs that sadly peaked at No. 100 on Billboard's Hot 100 charts. Within the songs that reached the same position, what determines its ranking is how long it stayed at #1, weeks in the Top Ten, weeks in the Top 40, and finally weeks in the entire Hot 100. Hence, Bad English's "When I See You Smile" may have spent more weeks in the Hot 100 and Top 40 than Phil Collins' "Two Hearts," despite both spending two weeks at #1, but "Two Hearts" spent a week longer in the Top Ten, so it is ranked above "When I See You Smile."
Each year begins with a time capsule of the top international and national headlines, fads and fashions, sports, and the top movies and TV programs that year. There then follows a list of the Top 20 artists, their score determined by a point system, a 100 points for each week spent at #1, 10 points for each additional week, 90 points plus 5 additional for each #2 single, 80 points plus 3 points for each #3 single, 70 points for each #4-#5 single, 60 points for each #6-#10 single, and on down to 10 points for each #91-100 single. There's more involving airplay, but I'll not dwell on that.
Then there are top songwriters and artist debuts for the year. For the year I graduated high school, the Top debut artist was the Bangles (yay!) the top songwriters were ex-Time members Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis of Janet Jackson fame, and surprisingly it wasn't Madonna or the Bangles who was the top artist that year based on points but Billy Ocean!
Now, for the Top Five singles, there is included its chart positions history, from debut to its last week in the Hot 100. Looking at the #1 list enables on to see who and how many #1 hits they had or indeed how many songs made it to the top spot. For my favourite group, 1964 was a banner year, as they were the #1 artist, #1 artist debut, top songwriters, and had six #1 hits. It wouldn't take a PhD to figure out who I am referring to.
Of additional notes, there is a debut column, a 1 indicating an artist/group's debut on the Hot 100, or a diamond, indicating an artist/group's only Hot 100 charting entry, which may consist of one time duets between lead singers of varied groups, e.g. Ann Wilson and Mike Reno in "Almost Paradise," one-time gatherings like USA For Africa, or novelty acts like Rick Dees or Buckner and Garcia.
Finally, like its companion book, the Top 40, there is an index in the back alphabetized by song, which contains the artist name, its peak position, and year. Some, including me, may think why not have a separate artist index, which would help, but that would probably double the price of this already expensive tome.
Having this book takes me back to Memory Lane, i.e. my musical heyday, the 80's, but also a curious look at the 50's through 70's. Me, I rarely look at anything beyond 1994 due to the type of music that began dominating the charts and still does today-some may call it music. This tome goes from 1955 to 1999, and perfectly encapsulates the Billboard charts for the 20th century.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Whitburn has done it again, October 30, 2000
Joel Whitburn has been America's chart chronicler for thirty years now-The new edition of "Pop Annual" is great-Not only does it list every single that charted in Billboard magazine's "Hot 100" from 1955-1999,but Whitburn has a year by year Time Capsule,which gives the reader an overview of world & national events,sports,& entertainment-If you're a radio personality or just a music geek,like myself,this book deserves a worthy place in your bookcase.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Joel Witburn's Pop Annual 1955-1999, January 9, 2007
It is a great book, every thing I wanted. It was in excellent condition. Now I can look up the authors and year my favorite songs were produced. I love it!
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