At #2 this week is Helen Shapiro (headed for the top spot next week):
Some memorable events (via Wikipedia):
'Country music star Brenda Lee, who was 17 at the time, sang the national anthem and the field of 42 cars got underway. Jack Smith of Spartanburg, S.C. entered the record books as the first NASCAR winner. Unusually, he wasn't actually in the driver's seat when the car took the chequered flag – after 290 laps the extreme heat had taken its toll and blistered Smith's feet, so he turned over driving duties to Johnny Allen, of Atlanta, who finished the race as a relief driver.'
1
Well I Ask You
Eden Kane
Decca
2
You Don't Know
Helen Shapiro
Columbia
3
Temptation
The Everly Brothers
Warner Brothers
4
Halfway To Paradise
Billy Fury
Decca
5
Pasadena
The Temperance Seven
Parlophone
6
A Girl Like You
Cliff Richard and The Shadows
Columbia
7
Runaway
Del Shannon
London
8
Hello Mary Lou / Travellin' Man
Ricky Nelson
London
9
Romeo
Petula Clark
Pye
10
Don't You Know It
Adam Faith
Parlophone
11
You Always Hurt The One You Love
Clarence 'Frogman' Henry
Pye
12
Time
Craig Douglas
Top Rank
13
Johnny Remember Me
John Leyton
Top Rank
14
Baby I Don't Care / Valley Of Tears
Buddy Holly
Coral
15
Weekend
Eddie Cochran
London
16
Quarter To Three
The U.S. Bonds
Top Rank
17
Marcheta
Karl Denver
Decca
18
Reach For The Stars / Climb Every Mountain
Shirley Bassey
Columbia
19
Surrender
Elvis Presley
RCA
20
Runnin' Scared
Roy Orbison
London
5 comments:
Hi Sack
I've got every song. I can remember where I was for everyone of them.
Its kind of like the play Brigadoon. It opens up the past and you can no longer get to it. They were very fine times.
Hi Jim: yes, like old photos - or smells. How is this all stored in the brain ?
JD comments:
Yet again I can remember most of the songs on the list; I must be ancient. 'Point of order' as they say in Parliament: The US Bonds is actually Gary 'U.S.' Bonds, last seen in Blues Brothers 2000 as one of the Louisiana Gator Boys. My head is full of trivia :)
Gary Bonds is wearing the red shirt and is first voice at 0;24 secs https://youtu.be/AAtLazmElOM
Wiggia comments:
Your Helen Shapiro piece reminded me of the fact she lived round the corner from in Clapton E5 London when i was still living at home and went to the same primary school, later in life in the late eighties we lived in a small village called Great Easton near Stansted And again she lived round the corner, not a lot of people know that and fewer care!
While on famous people I met or didn't in the case of Shapiro, I did meet Moira Stewart the newsreader, who was and still is a friend of my sister, she lived just up the road from us in Clapton, her father I believe left her and the mother a very handsome man in a double breasted suit, Moira went to school with my sister and I saw her a couple of times at our flat, beautiful face even as a young child and a smile that would melt an iceberg, not a lot of people know that either!
JD again:
"How is this all stored in the brain?" Before I was rudely interrupted by the NHS, I was reading or trying to read, this book by Dr Ian McGilchrist - https://www.waterstones.com/book/the-master-and-his-emissary/iain-mcgilchrist/9780300245929 It's a heavyweight book but fascinating in some of the details; 'language began as music' for example. There is also another book I have referred to in the past - 'Irreducible Mind' which is an easier read than McGilchrist's book but is full of radical ideas https://med.virginia.edu/perceptual-studies/book/irreducible-mind-toward-a-psychology-for-the-21st-century/
And is the information stored in the brain? The idea known as the 'holographic universe' would indicate otherwise. Try this book for example, written in 1937 - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2691925-the-quest-of-the-overself (the reviews are a bit misleading)
"There are more things in heaven and earth etc etc....."
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