Songs That Were Only Popular Locally

The Connells were big in NC but not anywhere else in the US. For some reason they had a hit in Europe though.

The Connells had a song on the Scream soundtrack, “Bitter Pill”, that I really love.

'74/'75 was enormous here on the radio but then they never followed it up. Great song, great video.

Don’t forget “Psycho Chicken” & “A Night For Beautiful Girls”. Then there were the Stompers, Jon Butcher Axis, Charlie Farren, Del Fuegos, (who sorta broke out of Boston), & what seems like a zillion others. Lizzie Borden & the Axes, November Group, I could go on & on! (but mercifully won’t). Geez, remember WBCN & all their great DJs in the 80’s?
Just a whole different time. I’m sure people in other cities have similiar memories, but thanks for the Boston blast! :smiley:

Thanks for the catch, I can see why Friedman never took off 'cause his style was very close to Billy Joel who came along (I think a bit after) and took off and left Friedman in the dark.

I think, at least in Chicago, in the 70s, DJs had much more control over their playlists than radio stations do now. So if a DJ liked a song he’d play. Charlene’s “I’ve Never Been To Me,” is an example of this A Tampa radio DJ liked the song and kept playing it and it caught on locally and internationally (going to #3 in the US and #1 in Britian)

For that, he should have been put on the FBI’s Most Wanted list.

LOL - Angry Salad. Haven’t listened to them in a while. I’ll have to get them onto my iPhone this weekend.

I used to love this song as a college student in Chicago in the early 90’s.

And, I was a Massachusetts teenager in the 80’s. I’d forgotten about The Fools! She Makes Me Feel Big was a fun song.

Speaking of Boston, another song I used to hear on the radio there but nowhere else was The Kingston Trio’s Charlie on the MTA.

Da Yoopers! They got some play in Wisconsin, too; I bought several tapes.

I loved “Second Week of Deer Camp”, but “Rusty Chevrolet” (to the tune of “Jingle Bells”) is still my favorite.

My parents were both folkies when they met in the '60s, and the Trio was their favorite group. I grew up listening to them, and that was one of my favorite songs. :slight_smile:

Local band Limited Warranty had a ton of airplay in the Twin Cities in the 80s.

In the 90s, one of the indie stations played the hell out of New York band Soul Coughing and that band sold the most records here than anywhere else in the US.

“The Young Rascals” rebilled themselves as “The Rascals” on an album which probably sold better here in Hawaii than anywhere else in the country, called “Once Upon A Dream”. It was due to not the title song or the hit, “It’s Wonderful”, but due to the song, “My Hawaii”.

In Philly, G Love had a huge hit with “Cold Beverages”…I’m sure it got some airplay elsewhere, but nothing like here.

Same can be said for Marah’s “Point Breeze” to a lesser extent.

As a former intern for the man, I would like to point out that it was Dean Friedman.

Broadway Blotto was my high school substitute teacher newspaper advisor! I thought no one else had heard of “I wanna be a lifeguard” lol.

Bill Quateman also got a lot of airplay in Chicago around the same time as Aliotta, Haynes & Jeremiah. I always wondered why he wasn’t bigger nationally, as good as he was. David Mallet had a song that got a lot of airplay on FM radio in the 70’s, “Photographs and Memories” (not the Jim Croce song) that I had always assumed was popular nationally, but I’ve never met another person who ever heard of it outside of die-hard folkies.