1981 #1 Top rock tracks

Start Me Up

These are the 1981 #1 Top Rock Tracks. I purchased the book Joel Whitburn Presents Rock Tracks last year. It is “compiled from Billboard’s alternative Rock and Mainstream Rock charts.” The mainstream rock chart was first published on March 21, 1981.

Not unlike Spotify today, it would compile the most-played tracks based on their popularity, “regardless of its mechanical configuration, meaning, regardless of whether it is a 45 RPM single, LP cut, or whatever.”

Start Me Up – the Rolling Stones,  13 weeks at #1, #2 pop for three weeks. I remember this song extraordinarily well. I went to my high school reunion, ten years later, at Binghamton Central High School in upstate New York. The reunion itself was so-so, but several of my friends and I ended up going over to my friend Cee’s house. One of my oldest friends, Karen, who was in the music industry, played “Start Me Up,” which had just come out, at least hourly, so about a half dozen times. (We were there for a very long time.) Ultimately, it became a song for Windows 95, by which point I had grown sick of it. But I liked it initially.

The Waiting – Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, 6 weeks at #1, #19 pop. The line, “the waiting is the hardest part,” is forever stuck in my vernacular.

Wagering?

You Better You Bet – the Who, 5 weeks at #1, #18 pop. This is the last Who song I really remember.

The Voice – the Moody Blues, 4 weeks at #1, #15 pop. Oh, THAT song; I’d heard it, but I didn’t recognize it from the title. 

Urgent – Foreigner, 4 weeks at #1, #4 pop. I was a sucker for the saxophone.

Harden My Heart – Quarterflash, 3 weeks at #1, #3 pop for two weeks

I Can’t Stand It– Eric Clapton and his band, 2 weeks at#1, #10 pop. It feels pretty generic. 

Burnin’ For You – Blue Oyster Cult, 2 weeks at #1, #40 pop. I’ve never seen this video; I like it.

Every Little Thing She Does Is Magic – The Police, 2 weeks at #1, #3 pop for two weeks. Ghost In The Machine may have been my first Police album. 

A Life Of Illusion – Joe Walsh, 1 week at #1, #34 pop

Waiting For A Girl Like You – Foreigner, 1 week at #1, #2 pop for ten weeks. For nine of those weeks, which rolled into 1982, Physical by Olivia Newton-John was #1 pop; the final week, I Can’t Go For That (No Can Do) by Daryl Hall & John Oates was #1 pop

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

Ramblin' with Roger
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