In 1978 I was 11-12 years old, and I can actually say that I remember every single one of these songs (i.e. hearing them multiple times when they were current).
Well, except for “Boogie Oogie Oogie.” Don’t remember that one at all, at least the title. Maybe if I heard it it would sound familiar.
Of the songs that went to #1, Yvonne E*lliman with If I Can’t Have You *is the best. Miss You, by the Rolling Stones wasn’t event the best song they had in 1978. Beast of Burden was, and it only went to #8.
No, go ahead. It can’t be worse than listening to Andy Gibb’s “Shadow Dancing” which was the song that kept “Baker Street” from hitting #1 by making it sit in the runner-up position for six weeks.
If it’s any consolation, I’ve heard “Baker Street” played on oldies stations a lot more than I’ve heard “Shadow Dancing”.
I would’ve done that too but these polls aren’t about songs that peaked at #2. Once you start doing that, you’re on a slippery slope that leads to including any song that made the Top 5, then the Top 10, the Top 20, the Top 40, etc. Smapti is already doing a lot of work on these as it is so it’s not fair to add to his burden just because some of us find the selection of number ones from a particular year lackluster.
My view of dance music has always been that it’s harmless enough fluff, often entertaining at its best. Pop music has always been poorer since the 70s when dance music isn’t driving its evolution.
And this era had some good dance music. This chart is filled with Bee Gees and Donna Summer, two of the greatest dance acts of all time.
You’re absolutely right and just to set the record straight: I most definitely wasn’t complaining. No one forced me to post, the rules are clear and I play by them.
It’s just that Baker Street was mentioned and I wanted to make a side comment about it ;).
I voted Rolling Stones as it is, I think truthfully, the ***only ***one on that list that I would not prompt me to reach for the off or mute button if it started playing on the radio.
Les Espaces, I for one never thought you were implying that we/Smapti should add #2’s to these polls. Like you, I just thought it was okay to discuss certain songs we EXPECTED to have reached #1, but turns out they did not (Baker Street being a prime example, surely).
What I wanted to say about the song is how delightfully it plays with major and minor. The verse is mostly in A Major, and ends in D Major. The refrain alternates between D minor and A minor, but the first half of it ends on a juicy, hopeful D Major chord (“you’re trying now”), while the second half ends in on a juicy, but more wistful A Major chord (“you’re crying now”), echoing the lyrics.
The sax thing is played over power chords which I usually see notated as “major,” and I guess they are, but because of the sax melody (blues scale), they’re ambiguous enough that they feel neither or both. Coming out of the sax thing into a verse, it feels like you’ve gone from minor to major, while going into the sax thing from the refrain it feels like you’re going from a mostly minor section back to major again.
The song is beautifully crafted vocally and musically so that it has transcended disco and been covered by a plethora of artists in different genres, myself included.
Like any year, there was plenty of great music that never made it to #1. I’ve made myself “100 Songs” compilations of each decade to listen to on my iPod, meaning I picked 10 songs from each year and made a mix. For 1978, I have:
Cheap Trick - Surrender
Elvis Costello & The Attractions - No Action
The Cars - Just What I Needed
Kraftwerk - The Model
The Only Ones - Another Girl, Another Planet
The Clash - White Man in Hammersmith Palais
Buzzcocks - I Don’t Mind
Queen - Don’t Stop Me Now
The Police - So Lonely
XTC - Statue of Liberty
Even if those aren’t to your taste, I’m sure there are plenty of other songs from '78 you’d like. No reason to completely write off your birth year!