Date: 8 Jun 2008 20:42:24 -0000
Message-ID: <20080608204224.73277.qmail@nezumi.pair.com>
From: Regina Litman <golq256@golq.org>
Subject: RESULTS and ANSWER KEY for Golden Oldies Lyrics Quiz 256 (GOLQ256)

RESULTS & ANSWER KEY for Golden Oldies Lyrics Quiz #256 (GOLQ256)

Congratulations to Randy Price & Peter Morley, Die, Monster, Die!, the EJ's
& Co., the Village Idiots, The GenaTeam, Across the Boarder, Delphi Trivia
Club, and Allan Johnson, who tied for first place in this quiz with perfect
scores of 500++.  Really Rockin' in Boston with a score of 500.+ and Will
McCorry and NAVAIRHEADS with scores of 500+. came in close behind.

GOLQ256's mean score was 462, but the median was an extremely high 500 as a
result of several teams getting near perfect scores.  The theme was recordings
that reached #1 on the Billboard R&B, Country, or Easy Listening (later known
as Adult Contemporary) chart but didn't reach #1 on the Billboard Hot 100.
All 25 of the regular songs peaked between #2 and #25 on the Hot 100.
One of the regular recordings reached #1 on two of the other charts.  One of
the tie-breakers was a song that reached #1 on two of the other charts but by
two different artists.  Both artists fit alphabetically based on the other
tie-breaker.

Several entries identified the essence of the theme.  Once this theme was
identified, it was no doubt helpful because most of them got a score of 500
for the regular songs.  Delphi Trivia Club listed the recordings that fit
into each category:

#1 Country: 5, 9, 11, 13, 14, 17, 18, 20, T1, T2
#1 R&B: 1, 2, 6, 7, 8, 12, 16, 19, 21, 23, 25
#1 AC: 3, 4, 10, 15, 17, 22, 24 [plus the other #1 recording of T2]

This GOLQ included a #1 Country song from May 1958 (50 years ago), a #1 Easy
Listening song from May 1963 (45 years ago), and a #1 R&B song from May 1968
(40 years ago).

My thanks to everyone who participated.

Marc Dashevsky has posted GOLQ257.

-- Regina Litman <golq256@golq.org>


Replace all occurrences of "&" in all e-mail addresses with "@".
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tie Breaker Scoring Key
    +  after numeric score below indicates a tie-breaker answered correctly.
    -  indicates partial credit.
    x  indicates a totally incorrect guess.
    .  indicates no guess.

                                                                   # on
Pos Score ID Name and E-mail address                               Team Age(s)
---+-----+--+------------------------------------------------------+---+-------
T01 500++ RP Randy Price & Peter Morley                               2   38-56
                             <randypny&aol.com, pmorley&nyc.rr.com>
T01 500++ DM Die, Monster, Die!           <bob_homeo&entermail.net>   2   48
T01 500++ EJ The EJ'S & Co.: Ellis, Jean, Kevin, Mitch, Vinnie,       6   21+
                                           Kyra <brombere&matc.edu>
T01 500++ VI The Village Idiots (Andrew, Andy, Roxie, Doug, Ping)     5   <58
                                                   <Clete6&aol.com>
T01 500++ GE The GenaTeam                   <ah.rh&optusnet.com.au>   7   39-64
T01 500++ AB Across the Boarder               <joshea11&rogers.com>   2
T01 500++ DT Delphi Trivia Club (SafeHouse, Russ, Marlnoe, Logot,     7   45-67
                            ClueLess, und)   <billp49&pd.jaring.my>
T01 500++ AJ Allan Johnson                           <aln&jcis.net>   1   53
T09 500.+ RR Really Rockin' In Boston             <rardini&cox.net>   5 50s,60s
T09 500+. WM Will McCorry                <wmccorry&ns.sympatico.ca>   1   50
T09 500+. NA NAVAIRHEADS                   <tompillion&comcast.net>   2   56,61
 12 475++ GC Gypsy's Caravan                        <iriss&aol.com>   3   21+
 13 430.. MW Mike Weaver                   <oldtunes&sbcglobal.net>   1   61
T14 420.. CO The Coasters (Rick & Kathy Schubert, Magic Marc,         4  56-59
                                      Bigfoot Mae) <rns&san.rr.com>
T14 420.. VH Virve Harkonen            <virve_harkonen&hotmail.com>   1   27
 16 380.. TT Team Teitelbaum (Howard, Bonnie, Patty)                  3  45-58
                                     <Howard.Teitelbaum&gd-ais.com>
 17 368.- RO Ron                       <roncoastnewsroom&gmail.com>   2   46
 18 320.+ EM EMC and Friends                <cochran_david&emc.com>   5 Various
---+-----+--+------------------------------------------------------+---+-------
Pos Score ID Name and E-mail address                               # on Age(s)
                                                                   Team

The following table gives the individual scoring breakdown.  A '-' is used to
indicate that no guess was made for a question, whereas a zero indicates that
a completely incorrect response was submitted.

   Song#
   01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--
RP 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
DM 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
EJ 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
VI 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
GE 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
AB 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
DT 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
AJ 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
RR 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
WM 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
NA 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
GC 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 15 20 20 20 20  - 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20
MW 20 20 20 20  - 10 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  - 20 20 20 20 20 20  -
CO 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  - 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  - 20 20 20 20 20  -  -
VH 20  - 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  - 20 20  - 20 20 20  - 20 20 20
TT 20 20 20  -  - 20 20  - 20 20  - 20 20 20 20 20 20  - 20 20 20 20 20 20  -
RO 10  -  - 20 20 20  -  - 20 20 20 10 20 20 20 10 20 18 20 20 20 20 20 20  -
EM  0  -  - 20  - 20 20  - 20 20 20 20 20 20 20  - 20  -  - 20 20 20 20 20  -
--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--
   01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25

=============================================================================
GOLDEN OLDIES LYRICS QUIZ #256 ANSWERS:

Answers are in the form:
#number) Artist: Title (year[s]) [peak position on Pop chart] {peak R&B}

[-]   = did not make pop chart
{-}   = did not make R&B chart
{F}   = made R&B chart as a flip side
{n/c} = no Billboard R&B chart published during this recording's period
        of peak popularity

In this quiz, songs that reached #1 on the Country and/or Easy Listening
(Adult Contemporary) chart also have this information noted.
=============================================================================

Forever my darling
My love will be true
Always and forever
I'll love just you
#01) Ace, Johnny: Pledging My Love (1955) [17] {1}

Everybody's gonna be there
My friends and yours from everywhere
Oh what a time it's gonna be
Come on baby let's go see
#02) Ballard, Hank, and the Midnighters: Let's Go, Let's Go, Let's Go
                                                               (1960) [6] {1}

Ah, you'll have a home, all right
You'll have a home
Real hot home
Ah, you'll have a home
#03) Benton, Brook: The Boll Weevil Song (1961) [2] {2} (#1 Easy Listening)

    This record was #1 on the Easy Listening chart the first week it was
    published, July 17, 1961.  In fact, the first time I ever heard it was
    in the family car, when my father was driving.  He would have certainly
    had the radio tuned to an Easy Listening station.  As a nine-year-old,
    I thought the song was fun.  Unfortunately, we arrived at our destination
    before it was finished.  Despite years of listening to oldies on Top 40
    and, later, oldies radio stations, I never heard this song again until
    I was past 40.  I still think it's fun and had it on my list of songs I
    wanted to use in a GOLQ.  Unfortunately, it had been used too recently
    for inclusion when I first started making these quizzes, so I had to wait
    for a while.  This song and the one immediately following it were the
    first two songs I chose for this quiz.  Once I saw that both had been #1
    on the Easy Listening/Adult Contemporary chart, I remembered that I had
    once identified the theme of #1's on other charts as a possible one to
    use and decided to use it this time.

If you see your brother standing by the road
With a heavy load from the seeds he sowed
And if you see your sister falling by the way
Just stop and say you're going the wrong way
#04) Campbell, Glen: Try A Little Kindness (1969) [23] {-} (#1 Easy Listening)

You want me to act like we've never kissed
You want me to forget
Pretend we've never met
And I tried and I tried
But I haven't yet
#05) Cline, Patsy: I Fall To Pieces (1961) [12] {-} (#1 Country)

I'm lonely as I can be
I'm waitin' for your company
I'm hopin' that you'll come back to me
#06) Domino, Fats: I'm Walkin' (1957) [4] {1}

    A cover by Ricky Nelson also reached #4 that year.

Crazy little mama comes knock, knock, knockin'
Just like she did before
#07) El Dorados, The: At My Front Door (1955/56) [17] {1}

    One of the unwritten rules of doing a GOLQ is to not use the title of the
    song in the lyric snippet.  After I put this quiz together, I learned that
    "Crazy Little Mama" is an alternate title for it.  So I may have broken
    this "rule" here.

Some time ago I thought
You had run out of fools
But I was so wrong
You got one that you'll never lose
#08) Franklin, Aretha: I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You) (1967) [9] {1}

    This was her first charting single (at least on the Hot 100) on Atlantic.
    Earlier, she had nine charting singles on columbia, with the highest of
    these reaching #37.  Columbia was more of an Easy Listening-oriented label
    then and was no doubt marketing her to that audience, maybe along the lines
    of, say, Della Reese.  Atlantic had its roots as an R&B label and no doubt
    marketed her to that audience plus the crossover market of white kids that
    loved R&B (or loved white acts that loved R&B, which was where I would have
    been categorized).  And, no doubt about it, this is where "Lady Soul"
    belonged.

    The only Aretha Franklin record I heard on the radio during her Columbia
    days was called "Runnin' Out Of Fools."  When I first heard "I Never Loved
    A Man (The Way I Love You)," the lines I've quoted above stood out because
    she came close to mentioning the title of this earlier recording of hers.

A bad mistake I'm makin' by just hangin' 'round
I know that I should have some fun and paint the town
A lovesick fool is just blind and just can't see
#09) Gibson, Don: Oh Lonesome Me (1958) [7] {-} (#1 Country)

    This was #1 on the Country chart during May 1958, 50 years ago.

Play your didgeridoo, Blue
Play your didgeridoo
Uh, like, keep playin' till I shoot through, Blue
Play your didgeridoo
#10) Harris, Rolf: Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport
                                          (1963) [3] {19} (#1 Easy Listening)

    The #19 R&B chart position is a reminder that before 1964, a lot of songs
    by white acts that didn't sound particularly soulful made this chart,
    including some #1's.  I had hoped I could find one of these #1's to use in
    this quiz, but the ones I came across had either also made it to #1 on the
    Hot 100 or had been used too recently in another GOLQ.

Then we danced and she whispered, I need you
Take me away from here and be my man
Then I looked into her eyes and I saw it
The reflection of my wedding band
#11) Houston, David: Almost Persuaded (1966) [24] {-} (#1 Country)

    I have this song in my collection by Crispian St. Peters, best known
    (at least in the U.S.) for "The Pied Piper."

I remember (I remember)
When I used to see you jumping rope
(Jumping rope, up and down, baby)
I remember when you got your first baby coach
#12) Intruders, The: Cowboys To Girls (1968) [6] {1}

    This was #1 on the R&B chart during May 1968, 40 years ago.  It was
    written and produced by Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff, who would go on
    to even greater fame in the 1970s.

Little general Napoleon of France
Tried to conquer the world but lost his pants
Met defeat known as Bonaparte's Retreat
#13) Jackson, Stonewall: Waterloo (1959) [4] {11} (#1 Country)

    I remember this song from my childhood.  Later, when I eventually heard of
    General Stonewall Jackson, I figured that this singer must have been using
    a stage name.  However, it was his real name, and he was a descendent of
    General Jackson.

    One of two different songs called "Waterloo" that I like a whole lot.
    The other is from the 1970s and was the first song I ever heard by ABBA.

The bears and the birds
Tell Clifton Clowers
If a stranger should wander there
#14) King, Claude: Wolverton Mountain (1962) [6] {-} (#1 Country)

    The first of three songs in this GOLQ that had answering songs that
    charted the same year of which I'm aware.  The answer song to this one
    was "(I'm The Girl On) Wolverton Mountain" by Jo Ann Campbell, which
    peaked at #38.

She took my one ray of sunshine
She took my pride and my joy
She took my reason for living
She took my small baby boy
#15) Laine, Frankie: You Gave Me A Mountain (1969) [24] {-} (#1 Easy Listening)

    Die, Monster, Die!: Big favorite of Elvis.

If you're not gonna stay
Please don't tease me like you did before
Because I still love you so
Although it seems like a mighty long time
#16) Lewis, Barbara: Hello Stranger (1963) [3] {1}

    This song had two charting remakes in the 1970s.  The better known one was
    by Yvonne Elliman and peaked at #15 in 1977.  The other was by Fire & Rain
    and made it to #100 in 1973.  No, another 1970s song, "Goodbye Stranger"
    by Supertramp, is not an answer song to this one.  Nor is yet another one
    from that decade, "Come Back To Us, Barbara Lewis Hare Krishna Beauregard"
    by John Prine.

    NAVAIRHEADS: Backing vocals by The Dells

I know every engineer on every train
All of the children and all of their names
And every handout in every town
And every lock that ain't locked when no one's around
#17) Miller, Roger: King Of The Road (1965) [4] {-} (#1 Country and AC)

    The second of three songs in this GOLQ with an answer song--"Queen Of The
    House" by Jody Miller (no relation), which peaked at #12.

Well I thought the day I met you
You were meek as a lamb
Just the kind to fit dreams' plans
Now the pace we're living takes the wind from my sails
#18) Owens, Buck: I've Got A Tiger By The Tail (1965) [25] {-} (#1 Country)

    I had heard of but never heard this song until I was putting this GOLQ
    together.  Around the time that this was a hit, one of the major oil
    companies was using the phrase "tiger in your tank" as an advertising
    slogan to get consumers to spend that 30 cents or so per gallon that it
    cost back then on their product.

    NAVAIRHEADS: Backing vocals by his Buckaroos.

Over and over
My friends said I'm a fool
#19) Price, Lloyd: Personality (1959) [2] {1}

    For many years, I thought this song was called "Over And Over."  I was
    aware of a different song with this title that was remade by the Dave
    Clark Five and just figured it was another example of two different songs
    with the same title.

    Delphi Trivia Club: Some copies of the 45, but not all, give the title of
    the song as "(You've Got) Personality."

    NAVAIRHEADS: Backing by Don Costa orchestra.

Put your sweet lips a little closer to the phone
Let's pretend that we're together all alone
I'll tell the man to turn the jukebox way down low
#20) Reeves, Jim: He'll Have To Go (1959/60) [2] {13} (#1 Country)

    The third song in this GOLQ with an answer song--"He'll Have To Stay"
    by Jeanne Black, which peaked at #4.  In fact, it was because I came
    across "He'll Have To Stay" by Jeanne Black that I got interested in
    hearing this song.  At the same time, I learned that the original had
    been a #1 Country hit but only peaked at #2 on the Hot 100, so it was
    a natural choice for this quiz.

    "He'll Have To Go" was remade by Solomon Burke in 1964, peaking at #51.

Got what I got the hard way
And I'll make it better each and every day
So honey don't you fret (now)
'Cause you ain't seen nothing yet
#21) Sam & Dave: Soul Man (1967) [2] {1}

    Mike Weaver: Sam Moore performed as part of show I went to a number of
    years ago (Dave Prater was gone from the scene by then).  During his
    performance of this song he encouraged the audience to get up and
    participate.  It struck me as weird that 5000 overfed white boomers would
    be on their feet clapping their hands and shouting "I'm a soooul man!!".
    It was either the irony of it or the 3 Miller Lites I had during
    intermission; I dunno.

    The Blues Brothers' remake went to #14 in 1979.  An instrumental cover
    by Ramsey Lewis reached #49 in 1967.

We're children needing other children
And yet letting a grownup pride
Hide all the need inside
Acting more like children than children
#22) Streisand, Barbra: People (1964) [5] {n/c} (#1 Easy Listening)

    From her hit Broadway show FUNNY GIRL, although the hit single was a
    different recording from the song on the Original Cast Album.  This was
    also the title song of her first #1 album on the Billboard Top 200 Albums
    chart.  She has had eight #1 albums on that chart, which is eight more
    than her one-time singing partner Neil Diamond had as of May 1, 2008,
    and seven more than her one-time singing partner Neil Diamond has as of
    May 31, 2008.

    Other charting recordings of this song were by Nat King Cole
    (#100 in 1964) and the Tymes (#39 in 1968).

I know you wanna leave me
But I refuse to let you go
If I have to beg and plead for your sympathy
I don't mind 'cause you mean that much to me
#23) Temptations, The: Ain't Too Proud To Beg (1966) [13] {1}

    Remade by the Rolling Stones in 1974 (#17) and Rick Astley in 1989 (#89).

No matter what I try to do
Gonna live my whole life through
Loving you
#24) Williams, Andy: Can't Get Used To Losing You (1963) [2] {7}

    This was #1 on the Easy Listening chart during May 1963, 45 years ago.
    It is my all-time favorite Andy Williams song.  Another one that doesn't
    sound very R&B that nonetheless peaked fairly high on that chart.

Your precious sweetheart
She's so faithful, she's so true
Oh, yeah
Her dreams are tumbling, her world is crumbling
Because of you
#25) Wonder, Stevie: Shoo-Be-Doo-Be-Doo-Da-Day (1968) [9] {1}

    Written by himself, Sylvia Moy, and Henry Cosby.

    All of the entries that identified this song got the title correct,
    despite the presence of an extra "Doo-Be" in the song's lyrics.

------------
Tie-Breakers
------------

The day she went away
I made myself a promise
That I'd soon forget we ever met
But something sure is wrong
'Cause I'm so blue and lonely
#T1) Presley, Elvis: I Forgot To Remember To Forget (1956) [-] {-} (#1 Country)

    As soon as I saw that Elvis had a song that was #1 on the Country chart,
    I checked to see where it had peaked on the Hot 100, so that I could
    include it in this GOLQ.  Much to my surprise, I discovered that this
    song didn't even make the Hot 100 at all!  I had a feeling that my tie-
    breakers were going to come from the country chart, and I wasn't sure
    how well the usual participants would be able to fare with such songs.
    However, here was a song that had been recorded during the GOLQ era by
    BOTH of the two biggest artists of that time period, and probably a lot
    of others, too, so I was happy to use it as one of the tie-breakers.

    The NAVAIRHEADS, although giving Elvis Presley as their official answer,
    were the only ones to note that this was released on the Beatles' LIVE AT
    THE BBC 2-CD set in the 1990s.  The Beatles would have been an acceptable
    (and alphabetically appropriate) answer, particularly for entrants who
    didn't figure out the theme.

    Two entries that didn't identify the theme gave Johnny Cash (also a valid
    response) as the artist.

    This was one of two Elvis Presley songs to reach #1 on the Country chart
    but not on the Hot 100.  The other was the post-GOLQ era hit "Moody Blue,"
    which did at least reach #31 on the Hot 100 in 1977.  He also had one song
    that reached #1 on the R&B chart but not the Hot 100--"Wear My Ring Around
    Your Neck," which peaked only at #2 in 1958 and which I was not able to
    use in this GOLQ because of its use in GOLQ211.

    Delphi Trivia Club: The Sun original uses the credit Elvis Presley,
    Scotty and Bill; the RCA Victor 1956 reissue uses Elvis Presley with
    Scotty and Bill.

And though the rain may fall
My skies will all be blue
And if I look close enough
The sun will come shinin' through
#T2) Stewart, Wynn: It's Such A Pretty World Today (1967) [-] {-} (#1 Country)
or
#T2) Russell, Andy: It's Such A Pretty World Today
                                           (1967) [-] {-} (#1 Easy Listening)

    Like "I've Got A Tiger By The Tail" and "He'll Have To Go," this was
    a song I had heard of but never heard until I put this GOLQ together.
    Thanks to YouTube, I can find a lot of songs that I don't have in my
    collection available in their entirety (although their availability
    there is questionable from a legal perspective).  I found the Wynn
    Stewart version there, so I know that the lyrics that I used are from
    his recording.  I still have never heard the Andy Russell version, so
    I don't know for sure if these exact words are contained in it.

    Of the twelve entries who identified this song, nine gave Wynn Stewart
    as the artist, two gave Andy Russell, and one (which didn't identify the
    theme) gave Carl Smith (also a correct response).  Ironically, both
    entries that gave Andy Russell as the artist mentioned Wynn Stewart.

    Die, Monster, Die!: Written by country star Wynn Stewart, and also
    performed by Eddy Arnold, who passed away this past week [on May 8].
    Russell's version, though, was the only one that reached Billboard,
    as a 'Bubbling Under.'

    Really Rockin' In Boston: I have the Whitburn books for Adult Contemporary
    and R&B.  Both list all the #1 hits in a separate section.  There appeared
    to be 5 or less songs in each book that hit #1 in these books but didn't
    chart on the Pop Top 100, and this was one of them.  The version I have was
    actually by an obscure C&W performer, Wynn Stewart.

    This is a much-recorded song that I just hadn't run across over the years.
    While verifying that Carl Smith had also recorded a qualifying version or
    searching for the song on YouTube, I found that among other artists not yet
    mentioned who recorded it are Wanda Jackson and Mark Dinning (but not Neil
    Diamond, despite information to the contrary in the 1969 book LILLIAN
    ROXON'S ROCK ENCYCLOPEDIA).

=============================================================================

This chart ranks the songs/artists from most to least recognized.  The second
number on the line denotes the average number of points scored on that song
(total points divided by number of entrants, to 2 decimal places).  For
comparison purposes, tie-breakers are scored here on the usual 20-point scale.

Most songs on this GOLQ ranked where I expected them to be.  There are a lot
of songs with perfect or near-perfect averages because of the large number of
500 scores.  The entries that scored below 500 tended to miss the same songs
(08, 25, 18, and the tie-breakers).  "He'll Have To Go" performed better than
I expected it to perform, perhaps because I didn't know this song until I began
researching this quiz.  "Shoo-Be-Doo-Be-Doo-Da-Day" performed worse than I
expected it to perform, as did "I Forgot To Remember To Forget," despite its
tie-breaker status.

Rank Avg. Song
---+-----+----+--------------------------------------------------------------
T01 20.00 #10) Harris, Rolf: Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport
T01 20.00 #14) King, Claude: Wolverton Mountain
T01 20.00 #17) Miller, Roger: King Of The Road
T01 20.00 #20) Reeves, Jim: He'll Have To Go
T01 20.00 #21) Sam & Dave: Soul Man
T01 20.00 #23) Temptations, The: Ain't Too Proud To Beg
T07 19.44 #06) Domino, Fats: I'm Walkin'
T07 19.44 #12) Intruders, The: Cowboys To Girls
T09 18.89 #04) Campbell, Glen: Try A Little Kindness
T09 18.89 #07) El Dorados, The: At My Front Door
T09 18.89 #09) Gibson, Don: Oh Lonesome Me
T09 18.89 #11) Houston, David: Almost Persuaded
T09 18.89 #13) Jackson, Stonewall: Waterloo
T09 18.89 #15) Laine, Frankie: You Gave Me A Mountain
T09 18.89 #19) Price, Lloyd: Personality
T09 18.89 #22) Streisand, Barbra: People
T09 18.89 #24) Williams, Andy: Can't Get Used To Losing You
T16 18.33 #01) Ace, Johnny: Pledging My Love
T16 18.33 #16) Lewis, Barbara: Hello Stranger
 20 17.78 #03) Benton, Brook: The Boll Weevil Song
T21 16.67 #02) Ballard, Hank, and the Midnighters: Let's Go, Let's Go, Let's Go
T21 16.67 #05) Cline, Patsy: I Fall To Pieces
 23 16.39 #08) Franklin, Aretha: I Never Loved a Man
 24 14.44 #25) Wonder, Stevie: Shoo-Be-Doo-Be-Doo-Da-Day
 25 14.33 #18) Owens, Buck: I've Got A Tiger By The Tail
 26 13.22 #T2) Stewart, Wynn: It's Such A Pretty World Today
 27 12.22 #T1) Presley, Elvis: I Forgot To Remember To Forget
---+-----+----+--------------------------------------------------------------

============================================================================
Regina Litman <golq256@golq.org>