1985 #1 Top Rock Tracks

the Pauls Carrack and Rodgers

These are the 1985 #1 Top Rock Tracks. What am I talking about? Earlier this year, I bought the book Joel Whitburn Presents Rock Tracks. It is “compiled from Billboard’s alternative Rock and Mainstream Rock charts.” The mainstream rock chart was first published in 1981.

Further, “there’s a weekly Top 60 airplay chart compiled from rock radio as indicated by the Nation’s leading album-oriented and top track stations. What is a track? Billboard’s Mike Harrison said, “Quite simply, a track is any individual song played on the raw merits of its popularity, regardless of its mechanical configuration, meaning, regardless of whether it is a 45 RPM single, LP cut, or whatever.”

Silent Running (On Dangerous Ground) – Mike + The Mechanics, five weeks at #1, #6 pop. It also appeared on the soundtrack of the film On Dangerous Ground. The track features former Ace and Squeeze singer Paul Carrack on lead vocals.

Lonely Ol’ Night – John Cougar Mellencamp, five weeks at #1, #6 pop

The Old Man Down The Road – John Fogerty, three weeks at #1, #10 pop

Don’t You (Forget About Me) – Simple Minds, three weeks at #1, #1 pop

Trapped – Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, three weeks at #1. #2 for four weeks pop. This was on the We Are the World album by USA for Africa.

If You Love Somebody Set Them Free – Sting, three weeks at #1, #3 for two weeks pop. Linguistically ahead of the curve. 

Money For Nothing – Dire Straits, three weeks at #1, #1 for three weeks pop

You Belong To The City – Glenn Frey, three weeks at #1, #2 for two weeks, from the Miami Vice soundtrack.

Tonight She Comes – The Cars, three weeks at #1, #7 pop, from the Cars’ Greatest Hits.

Also

Somebody – Bryan Adams, two weeks at #1, #11 pop

Just Another Night – Mick Jagger, two weeks at #1, #12 pop

All She Wants To Do Is Dance – Don Henley, two weeks at #1, #9 pop

Forever Man – Eric Clapton, two weeks at #1, #26 pop

Little By Little – Robert Plant – two weeks at #1, #36 pop

Tough All Over – John Cafferty and the Beaver Brown Band – two weeks at #1, #22 pop

The Power Of Love – Huey Lewis and The News, two weeks at #1, #1 for two weeks pop

Fortress Around Your Heart – Sting, two weeks at #1, #8 pop

Sleeping Bag – ZZ Top, two weeks at #1, #8 pop

Talk To Me – Stevie Nicks, two weeks at #1, #4 pop

The rest for a single week at #1

I Want To Know What Love Is – Foreigner, #1 for two weeks pop

Radioactive – The Firm, #28 pop. The Firm was a British rock supergroup formed in 1984, featuring singer Paul Rodgers (Free and Bad Company), guitarist Jimmy Page (The Yardbirds and Led Zeppelin), drummer Chris Slade (Manfred Mann’s Earth Band, Uriah Heep, and later AC/DC), and bass player Tony Franklin.

We Built This City – Starship, #1 for two weeks pop

Lydster: Driver’s license

Let’s go to the whatever!

The daughter wanted a driver’s license in the summer of 2024. She studied the driver’s manual thoroughly and got her driver’s permit. Then she took the mandated five-hour course on August 18th (the date becomes relevant),  but there just wasn’t enough time for her to get enough reps to drive, much to her disappointment.

She was away at college in the fall of 2024. During winter break, she drove a bit. But she was in South Africa in the spring of 2025. So she spent a goodly part of the summer of 2025 wheedling her mother to give her opportunities to drive. “Oh, let’s buy the groceries. Let’s go to the farmers’ market. Why don’t we visit Grandma?  Let’s go to the whatever. The daughter would drive, and my wife would be in the passenger seat. I generally was home because I hate being in the back seat; it kills my knees.

My wife is a quite good driver but we didn’t know how her teaching the daughter to drive would go. Pretty darn well, it seems.

The test

We all agreed that she should get a professional driver to give her one lesson in case my wife missed sharing something. My daughter tried to schedule it in late July, but the guy postponed it to August 3rd, the day before she would take her driver’s test. This made her anxious. The driving instructor was a little prickly, which put her in a bit of a funk.

She got over it. The next day, she took the driving test in downtown Albany and passed it with flying colors! She really wanted to get the license before August 18 so that she didn’t have to retake the five-hour course.

She doesn’t have a car, though. Well, technically, she does. My wife’s previous car was lent to her niece, Alexa, in New York City. But with expenses for the trip to South Africa and the increase in the money we have to spend for college this coming year, there’s no money to put another car on the road. But, you know, when she graduates next spring and makes oodles of money, she may have a car, albeit used. 

For the remainder of August, before she returned to college, she had the “privilege” of moving the car because we have alternate-side street parking. She bought some groceries and did some other chores for the family.

I’m very proud of them. My wife is an excellent driver, and my wife is obviously a good teacher.

Dad and the neighbor’s tree

Wizard of Oz

Here’s the story about Dad and the neighbor’s tree. The photo above was taken in August of 1969. My baby sister says she remembers the picture but not the incident, whereas my recollections are the opposite.

Let me tell you about that tree. I saw it from my bedroom at 5 Gaines Street, Binghamton, NY, looking towards the tree and the house at 1 Gaines. The photo was likely shot from our driveway.

The tree weirded me out. It reminded me of one of those mean trees in the Wizard of Oz movie: gnarled and sinister. Sometimes when I woke up from a dream, I would see an ominous face on the tree.

Sidebar (1965)

Here’s something only tangentially related. In 1965, when I was a 7th grader at Daniel S Dickinson Junior High School, there were some new kids in our class. One of them was Dawn, with flaming red hair. Based on a note her friend Bernadette passed me, Dawn seemed romantically interested in me. I was 12—she might have been a year or two older—and I had no idea what to do with this information, so I did nothing.

Back to the main story (1969)

The caption says the tree “accidentally crashed into the house… and  the elm was being felled by the building’s owner when it tipped in the wrong direction into the building.”

My father is watching this young man, probably in his early twenties, work on this tree, ensuring it won’t strike our house. Dad told the guy that the tree would hit his dwelling. The fellow told Dad to mind his business as though this “old man,” who would have been in his early forties, was a foolish meddler. My father told me about this exchange before the tree was felled.

It “accidentally” hit 1 Gaines, which is technically accurate, but it was an avoidable incident. I don’t know the tenant in the photo; I suspect he lived upstairs, and the tree branches breached his dwelling area.

(Do you know how to “fell a tree” safely? If not, click here. This is from OSHA, which sister Leslie sent me.)

I think the owner lived downstairs with his wife, who I’m almost positive was Dawn from 7th grade, with a baby.

My father, an artist and floral designer, had excellent spatial acuity. He would have been 99 years old tomorrow.

PS: My sister

A walk around the neighborhood

Emergency Department

My wife took a walk around the neighborhood on Wednesday, September 10th. She said she’d return at 7:30 a.m., but came back about seven minutes early.

I was shocked! She looked as though she had been assaulted on the face! The cut above her left eyebrow seeped enough blood to cover the left third of her face. Several people later told me that the head has much more blood per cubic centimeter than the rest of the body. She had bruising under her left eye.  I don’t think she realized how bad she looked until she got a gander at the mirror. She also had some minor cuts elsewhere, on her fingers and knee.

She had fallen on the sidewalk, just like she had three years ago when she tripped on an uneven surface. But this time, there was seemingly no culprit.  She looked worse than that time.  

I made an appointment for her at the urgent care place, which she went to around 10:30. A couple of hours later, she called me and said the urgent care place had encouraged her to go to the emergency room at St. Peter’s Hospital. She was asked who had accompanied her, and no one had.

ER

I took the bus and met her at St Peter’s. She got to the triage area, or whatever they call it, with her on a gurney outside of a room, and eventually, I got in there, too. I was falling asleep in the Emergency Department waiting room, but in the triage area, that was impossible with all of the monitors beeping and buzzing.

Over a period of about four hours, she got some pain medicine, a CAT scan  (no brain injury), and some X-rays. At last, she got a splint because she had broken the bone on her left pinky closest to the palm. 

We noticed the couple at the next gurney since we had been there for a long time. The husband was there with his wife, the patient. She was in such a weakened state that the nurse asked the patient whether her husband could sign the consent form for her treatment, and she nodded yes.

The interaction gave me information that had not occurred to me.  The nurse asked him whether they had the same insurance, and they did so that he could provide the nurse with his insurance information. But my wife and I do not have the same insurance, so I need my wife’s information, and she needs mine.

My wife is recovering well, thank you. The black eye, worse than the last one, is fading. However, interestingly, some bruising on her shoulder and hip, not immediately evident right after the fall, became more prominent a week later before eventually fading. 

Epilogue

A week later, she went to a specialist, who wanted to bind her left pinkie with her left ring finger. This meant my wife removing her wedding ring, which was recrafted with her engagement ring.  Despite concerted efforts, they could not remove the ring, which was still swollen from the accident.    So they had to cut her ring off, which, despite their slow (over an hour) and deliberate efforts, was quite physically uncomfortable.

We were both sad about the ring, which we’ll get fixed after her hand is healed. 

Blog-specific edition of Ask Roger Anything

SCOTUS

This is the blog-specific edition of Ask Roger Anything. People have asked me general questions, sometimes in person, some via email or Facebook. I’ve often gotten them enough that I should address them.

One is: Why do I do the quizzes, notably Sunday Stealing? There are two basic reasons. One is that they are easy; I can do them quickly. I sort of free-associate when I’m writing, and I don’t have to fact-check them because they’re all from my own experience.

The other reason is that I tend to get more responses to them than to many of my other blog posts. And it’s not just from the people participating in the quiz but also from people who email me and say, “We’re following your posts.” I guess because they’re more relatable.

Another question is Why do I write about politics all the time? As I’ve said repeatedly, I hate talking about it. On the other hand, I don’t want people to think that the stuff that’s going down is OK. I don’t want my silence to signify consent to what Public Citizen calls the “unilaterally, unconstitutionally, and unlawfully dismantling the federal government — our government — from Cabinet-level departments… to smaller agencies that go largely unnoticed as they do the routine, unheralded work that makes for a functioning country.”

Math is everywhere

I had a great time drinking with a friend and their friend last month. We had this wonderful, weird conversation about why math is everywhere. I mentioned this question from Who Wants to Be a Millionaire, which was fun for those who like numbers and terrifying for those who don’t, such as contestants Helen Hunt and Daniel Bucatinsky. The $250,000 question:

“The judicial handshake is a US Supreme Court tradition in which all nine justices shake hands with each other once for a total of how many handshakes.”

The choices were 18, 25, 36, and 57.

The AI says: “You can find the answer by using the formula for triangular numbers, N * (N-1) / 2, where N is the number of people (9 in this case), so 9 * 8 / 2 = 36.” Well, yeah, but that’s too mathy. Since you don’t shake your own hand, one could add 8+7+6+5+4+3+2+1, which also equals 36.   

This is why figuring out fractions should be done with pie charts, or preferably, actual pies, instead of talking about multiplying the numerator and the denominator. (More pies, Kelly!)

The ask

If you have other queries, you can Ask Roger Anything. Roger loves to answer almost any question, no matter how absurd. He will respond in a few weeks. It takes time to be true and accurate! 

You can leave your questions in the comments section of this blog, in my email, referenced elsewhere on this blog, or on my Facebook page (Roger Owen Green); always look for the duck.

Ramblin' with Roger
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