Friday, February 27, 2026

The Music of Your Life

 


There was always music in our house when I was a kid. Neither of my parents played a musical instrument but they could play the radio.

And in the early fifties radio in Kingsport meant WKPT.

We had a Westinghouse console radio that played AM, FM (not that there was much choice on the FM dial) and shortwave. If you opened the doors in the front of the cabinet, a record player would slide out.

And we had a carboard box full of 78s, everybody from the Andrews Sisters to the Ink Spots. The stuff they played on WKPT.

Popular music, they called it.

You can still find that kind of “popular music” on radio, but it’s mostly satellite radio: 40s Junction and Siriusly Sinatra on SiriusXM, assorted channels on Amazon’s Prime Music. For twenty years or so there was a syndicated format called “The Music of Your Life” that popped up on AM stations around the country (including Bristol’s WOPI-AM). That syndicated format ended in 2016.

But I found charts of the most popular of that popular music of the forties and fifties in a trove of old Variety newspapers (“the Bible of Showbusiness”) posted on the Internet Archive (archive.org).

Just reading those old pop charts – “Songs with the Largest Radio Audience,” “Best Sellers on Coin Machines,” “Retail Disk Best Sellers” - took me back to carpool days, when my dad would drive the neighborhood kids to Johnson Elementary. He always had WKPT on the car radio, background for our chatter about classroom aquariums and recess softball games.

We weren’t old enough to ask for WKIN, if we even knew it existed. WKPT was the soundtrack of Kingsport then.

Eventually rock and roll and country music took over the local airwaves. Patti and Doris and Bing and Benny were filed away in the library of 78s.

That’s why I was so intrigued when I came across that stash of old Variety scans on the Internet Archive. And when I say a stash, I mean scanned issues going all the way back to the days when Al Jolson was still performing in the circus!

Variety began in 1905 as a publication covering vaudeville and related entertainment venues like fairs, circuses, burlesque shows, “legitimate theater” and movies, such as they were in 1905. It ran no-punches-pulled reviews of traveling acts and the performers are said to have loved the criticism, using it to help hone their shows.

Pretty soon Variety was also publishing lists of the most popular and best-selling songs: Best Selling Sheet Music, Top Selling Records, Most Popular Songs on the Coin Machines (Jukeboxes).

 

I came along in August 1947, the week that Variety published this list of “Songs With Largest Radio Audiences.”

Variety didn’t even bother to rank them, just list them alphabetically:

 

The top 32 songs of the week of Aug. 6, (1947), based on the copyrighted Audience Coverage Index Survey of Popular Music Broadcast over Radio Networks. Published by the Office of Research, Inc., Dr. John G. Peatman, Director. Survey Week of July 25-31, 1947. (Dr. Peatman was a psychology professor at City College of New York whose side hustle was radio research.)

  • Across the Alley From the Alamo — The Mills Brothers
  • Ain’tcha Ever Comin’ Back — Frank Sinatra
  • Almost Like Being in Love — Frank Sinatra
  • An Apple Blossom Wedding — Sammy Kaye (vocal: Don Cornell)
  • As Long As I’m Dreaming — Bing Crosby
  • As Years Go By — Elliot Lawrence & His Orchestra
  • Ask Anyone Who Knows — The Ink Spots
  • Cecilia — Bob Crosby and orchestra
  • Chi-Baba, Chi-Baba — Perry Como
  • Come to the Mardi Gras — Freddy Martin & His Orchestra (vocal: Stuart Wade)
  • Deep Down in Your Heart — Bob Crosby & The Modernaires
  • Don’t Tell Me (from The Hucksters) — Margaret Whiting
  • Echo Said “No” — Guy Lombardo & His Royal Canadians (feat. Don Rodney with the Lombardo Trio)
  • Ev’rybody and His Brother — The Modernaires with Paula Kelly
  • Feudin’ and Fightin’ — Dorothy Shay (“The Park Avenue Hillbilly”)
  • Have But One Heart — Vic Damone (also recorded by Frank Sinatra)
  • I Want to Be Loved (But Only by You) — Savannah Churchill
  • I Wish I Didn’t Love You So — Vaughn Monroe
  • I Wonder, I Wonder, I Wonder — Eddy Howard
  • I Wonder Who’s Kissing Her Now — Ted Weems Orchestra with Perry Como
  • Ivy — Jo Stafford / Dick Haymes (both charting hit versions)
  • Je Vous Aime (from Copacabana) — Andy Russell (featured in film with Carmen Miranda)
  • Kate (Have I Come Too Early, Too Late) — Eddy Howard
  • Lady From 29 Palms — The Andrews Sisters
  • Mam’selle — Art Lund
  • My Heart Is a Hobo — Bing Crosby
  • Passing By — Buddy Clark
  • Peg O’ My Heart — The Harmonicats
  • Red Silk Stockings and Green Perfume — Sammy Kaye
  • Tallahassee — Vaughn Monroe
  • That’s My Desire — Sammy Kaye
  • Whiffenpoof Song — Bing Crosby with Fred Waring

 

I remember only a handful of that Top 32 but in my defense, I was only one day old.

If I had been listening to WKPT in August 1947, that’s probably what I would have been listening to.

As for ones that had an afterlife, I’m familiar with a handful:

Almost Like Being in Love — Frank Sinatra
This one became a full-blown Great American Songbook standard. Covered endlessly (Sinatra again, Ella Fitzgerald, Nat King Cole, Sammy Davis Jr.), used in films, TV, and cabaret acts ever since.

I Want to Be Loved (But Only by You) — Savannah Churchill
Outlived 1947 because Dinah Washington recorded a later hit version.

I Wish I Didn’t Love You So — Vaughn Monroe
Another song covered by Dinah Washington and thus given a second life.

I Wonder Who’s Kissing Her Now — Ted Weems with Perry Como
Actually older than 1947—and that’s why it survived. A perennial barbershop and nostalgia standard with countless recordings.

Peg O’ My Heart — The Harmonicats
A monster instrumental hit that never quite went away. Revived in oldies radio, novelty instrumentals, and later pop culture. You may know it from “Downton Abbey” or “The Singing Detective.”

(I don’t remember “The Lady from 29 Palms” or “Across the Alley from the Alamo” but I hear them now on 40s Junction.)

 

I started school in September 1953 and that’s when WKPT became background music for the carpool. The top song on the jukebox that week, according to Variety, was a weeper called “Vaya Con Dios” by the husband-and-wife team of Les Paul and Mary Ford. Yes, that Les Paul, of the Gibson Les Paul solid body electric guitar. But I would have been more interested in the number three tune, the theme from one of my favorite TV shows, “Dragnet.” Dun-duh-dun-dun! (I don’t know if that approximates the familiar “Dragnet” theme.)

 

Top Ten Best Sellers on Coin-Machines Sept. 2, 1953

1. “Vaya Con Dios” – Les Paul and Mary Ford

2. “You, You, You” – Ames Brothers

3. “Dragnet” – Ray Anthony

4. “Oh!” – Pee Wee Hunt

5. “I’m Walking Behind You” – Eddie Fisher

6. “C’est Si Bon” – Eartha Kitt

7. “Hey Joe” – Frankie Laine

8. “I'd Rather Die Young (Than Grow Old Without You)” – Hilltoppers

9. “No Other Love” – Perry Como

10.              “Crying in the Chapel” – June Valli

 

I remember four of them.

“Vaya Con Dios” – Les Paul and Mary Ford

“You, You, You” – Ames Brothers

Three wholesome brothers harmonizing about, well, you.

“Dragnet” – Ray Anthony

Just the facts, ma’am, with a trumpet section.

“Crying in the Chapel” – June Valli

June (real last name: Foglia) was no relation to Frankie (real last name: Castelluccio). Need proof? Compare this religious weeper with say Frankie and the Four Season’s first hit “Sherry.”

 

Among the others:

“Hey Joe” – Frankie Laine is not that “Hey Joe,” the one about going somewhere with a gun in your hand, made famous by Jimi Hendrix, but Frankie Laine’s “Hey Joe, where’d you get that pearly-girly,” whatever a pearly-girly is.

 “I'd Rather Die Young (Than Grow Old Without You)” – Hilltoppers

The Hilltoppers formed at what was then known as Western Kentucky College, whose sports teams were known as the Hilltoppers. I don’t remember any of their songs.

“No Other Love” – Perry Como

I listened to this on YouTube to make sure I didn’t remember it. I didn’t. And I thought I’d heard every Perry Como song. I did remember the cardigan on the YouTube video.

 

The 1953 jukebox was a strange place - half nightclub, half confessional, with occasional detours into French sophistication and police procedurals.

Then came 1957, my fourth-grade year, when the the carpool was packed and the jukebox was having a full-blown identity crisis. Half the records are screaming rock and roll is the future, the other half are politely asking if everyone could please calm down.

Top Ten Best Sellers on Coin Machines May 1, 1957

1. All Shook Up – Elvis Presley

2. Little Darlin’ – The Diamonds

3. Round and Round – Perry Como

4. Party Doll – Steve Lawrence / Buddy Knox

5. Gone – Ferlin Husky

6. Butterfly – Andy Williams / Charlie Gracie

7. Why Baby Why – Pat Boone

8. Walking After Midnight – Patsy Cline

9. I’m Walkin’ – Fats Domino

10.              Dark Moon – Bonnie Guitar

 

Second Group (that’s what Variety called them instead of, say, 11-20.

  • Ninety-Nine Ways – Tab Hunter
  • Marianne – Hilltoppers
  • School Days – Chuck Berry
  • Come, Go With Me – Del-Vikings
  • Mama, Look at Bubu – Harry Belafonte
  • Rock-a-Billy – Guy Mitchell
  • So Rare – Jimmy Dorsey
  • I’m Sorry – Platters
  • Almost Paradise – Roger Williams / Norman Petty Trio / Lou Stein
  • Teen-Age Crush – Tommy Sands

 

Now we’re talking songs I remember!

(May 1, 1957)

1. All Shook Up – Elvis Presley

The King at full throttle. This record didn’t just top jukeboxes—it sat on them. Parents panicked, teenage girls swooned, and Elvis proved once again that hips could, in fact, change history.


2. Little Darlin’ – The Diamonds

A novelty record disguised as doo-wop. Ridiculously exaggerated, impossible to forget, and played so often it probably violated noise ordinances.


3. Round and Round – Perry Como

Here’s Perry, calmly reminding everyone that rock and roll is just a phase and cardigans will outlive us all.


4. Party Doll – Steve Lawrence / Buddy Knox

Two Americas collide. Steve Lawrence’s version made it safe. Buddy Knox made it wiggle. Guess which version kids preferred? Buddy Knox, whose next “big” hit was “Hula Love.” I don’t remember it or any of his other recordings.


5. Gone – Ferlin Husky

Heartbreak, country-style: sincere, mopey, and sung like someone just stared at the phone for six hours. A massive hit that proved misery sells just fine without electric guitars.


6. Butterfly – Andy Williams / Charlie Gracie

Andy Williams polished it until it shone. Charlie Gracie gave it a little edge. The jukebox split the difference and played both, mostly to keep everyone happy.


7. Why Baby Why – Pat Boone

Pat Boone doing rock and roll in quotation marks. Clean, gentle, and approved by church committees nationwide. Wild enough to suggest rebellion, safe enough to sell it at Sears.


8. Walking After Midnight – Patsy Cline

Actual emotion sneaks onto the chart. Patsy Cline delivered heartbreak with class and a voice that made everything else sound like rehearsal. The jukebox briefly grew up.


9. I’m Walkin’ – Fats Domino

While everyone else debated the future of music, Fats Domino just made hits.


10. Dark Moon – Bonnie Guitar

A dreamy, floaty ballad: not revolutionary, not dangerous, just proof that melancholy still had a market in 1957. Today say the name Bonnie Guitar and even geezers shrug their shoulders.


Second Group (a.k.a. The Waiting Room)

Ninety-Nine Ways – Tab Hunter

Movie star sings! Hollywood hoped that would be enough. It wasn’t—but fans were polite about it.


Marianne – Hilltoppers

Pleasant, tropical-flavored escapism. Sounded great until something louder came along—which was most of 1957.


School Days – Chuck Berry

Here’s the future, briefly slumming in the “Second Group.” Smart, sharp, and destined to outlive half the Top Ten combined.


Come, Go With Me – Del-Vikings

Doo-wop bliss. Harmonies, romance, and street-corner cool—this one was already plotting its long-term survival.


Mama, Look at Bubu – Harry Belafonte

Calypso comedy: Fun, rhythmic, and proof that novelty didn’t have to be dumb, just charming.


Rock-a-Billy – Guy Mitchell

The title promised rebellion. The record delivered Guy Mitchell. Close, but no switchblade.


So Rare – Jimmy Dorsey

A big-band ghost wandering through the rock era, politely reminding everyone what used to matter.


I’m Sorry – Platters

Silky smooth heartbreak that never really goes out of style. Even when trends changed, the Platters just kept sounding expensive.


Almost Paradise – Roger Williams

Instrumentals still hanging on, hoping no one noticed the guitars getting louder.


Teen-Age Crush – Tommy Sands

The next Elvis! He even married Nancy Sinatra. After his expulsion from the Sinatra family, his career pretty much went to Teen Heaven. He eventually settled in Fort Wayne, Indiana, performing the occasional dinner theater gig. “Teen-Age Crush” was pretty much the peak of his career. He was 19.

 

1957’s jukebox was torn between hips and hymns, guitars and good manners. Rock and roll was clearly winning, but it still had to share space with crooners, novelty records, and anything that wouldn’t frighten adults.

 

How did those 1957 chart-toppers age?


AGED BEST (Still alive, still played, still matter)

Elvis Presley – “All Shook Up”

Unkillable. Still in movies, commercials, documentaries, and karaoke bars. It didn’t just age well — it became historical bedrock.


Chuck Berry – “School Days” (Second Group)

This is the sleeper MVP. It wasn’t even Top Ten here, but it’s now rock’s Rosetta Stone. Guitar players still learn it. Jukeboxes may have hesitated, history did not.


Fats Domino – “I’m Walkin’”

Pure joy, no expiration date. Sounds as fresh now as it did then, and nobody has ever objected to it. That alone is a miracle.


Patsy Cline – “Walking After Midnight”

Grew in stature with every passing decade. Once just a hit, now a pillar of American music. Timeless heartbreak beats trendy rebellion every time.


The Platters – “I’m Sorry” (Second Group)

Silky, elegant, and still capable of stopping people mid-sentence. Doo-wop that aged like formal wear.


Del-Vikings – “Come, Go With Me” (Second Group)

Still turns up in movies, commercials, and oldies playlists. Proof that harmony never goes out of style.

 

 

AGED… FINE (Contextual, but not immortal)

Little Darlin’ – The Diamonds

Still famous, but mostly as a novelty artifact. You admire it, you chuckle, you don’t put it on repeat.


Ferlin Husky – “Gone”

A classic within its genre, but unlikely to cross generations unless someone’s already wearing cowboy boots.


Andy Williams – “Butterfly”

Pleasant, professional, and frozen in amber. Works perfectly… in 1957.


Bonnie Guitar – “Dark Moon”

A lovely mood piece that survives as a deep cut rather than a cultural landmark.


Harry Belafonte – “Mama, Look at Bubu” (Second Group)

Still charming, still fun, but more historical curiosity than evergreen hit.

 

 

AGED POORLY (Time was not kind)

Pat Boone – “Why Baby Why”

Once safe, now sanitized beyond usefulness. Boone’s legacy survives mostly as a counterexample.


Steve Lawrence – “Party Doll”

The version history did not choose. Buddy Knox lives on; this one mostly doesn’t.


Guy Mitchell – “Rock-a-Billy” (Second Group)

The title promised danger. The record delivered reassurance. History noticed.


Tab Hunter – “Ninety-Nine Ways” (Second Group)

Movie-star novelty that vanished the moment the movie-star novelty wore off.


Roger Williams – “Almost Paradise” (Second Group)

Instrumentals faded fast once guitars took over. Polite applause, then silence.

 

 

AGED WORST (Almost completely erased)

Jimmy Dorsey – “So Rare” (Second Group)

Big-band déjà vu in a rock-and-roll world. By 1957, this was already a museum piece pretending not to be.


Tommy Sands – “Teen-Age Crush” (Second Group)

Manufactured teen angst with no staying power. The kind of song that only survives in trivia books.

 

 

By 1962, the year I started high school, Variety was no longer tracking the “Coin Machines.” People, mostly teens, were buying records, mostly 45s.

 

Variety Top Singles August 2, 1962

1. Roses Are Red — Bobby Vinton

2. Breaking Up Is Hard to Do — Neil Sedaka

3. Wolverton Mountain — Claude King

4.Wait a While — Orlons

5. Sealed With a Kiss — Brian Hyland

6. Speedy Gonzales — Pat Boone

7. Stripper — David Rose

8. I Can’t Stop Loving You — Ray Charles

9. Ahab the Arab — Ray Stevens

10.              You’ll Lose a Good Thing — Barbara Lynn

11.              Loco-Motion — Little Eva

12.              Things — Bobby Darin

13.              I Need Your Loving — Don Gardner & Dee Dee Ford

14.              Gravy — Dee Dee Sharp

15.              Party Lights — Claudine Clark

16.              Johnny Get Angry — Joanie Sommers

17.              Twist and Shout — Isley Bros.

18.              It Keeps Right On A-Hurtin’ — Johnny Tillotson

19.              Dancing Party — Chubby Checker

20.              Theme From Dr. Kildare — Richard Chamberlain

21.              Heart in Hand — Brenda Lee

22.              It Started All Over Again — Brenda Lee

23.              Bring It On Home to Me — Sam Cooke

24.              Palisades Park — Freddy Cannon

25.              Girls Girls Girls — Eddie Hodges

26.              Addio — Emilio Pericoli

27.              Ring Between — Bud & Ives

28.              You Don’t Know Me — Ray Charles

29.              Shame on Me — Bobby Bare

30.              Swingin’ Safari — Billy Vaughn

31.              Bongo Stomp — Jay & Flip

32.              Vacation — Connie Francis

33.              Fortune Teller — Bobby Curtola

34.              Little Diane — Dion

35.              Rinky Dink — Dave Cortez

36.              Sheila — Tommy Roe

37.              Little Red Rented Rowboat — Joe Dowell

38.              She’s Not You — Elvis Presley

39.              I Don’t Love You No More — Jimmy Norman

40.              Devil Woman — Marty Robbins

41.              Snap Your Fingers — Joe Henderson

42.              Having a Party — Sam Cooke

43.              Steel Guitar and a Glass of Wine — Paul Anka

44.              Limbo Rock — Chubby Checker

45.              West of the Wall — Toni Fisher

46.              I’ll Never Dance Again — Bobby Rydell

47.              Above the Stars — Acker Bilk

48.              Goodnight Irene — Jimmy Reed

49.              Follow That Dream — Elvis Presley

50.              Have a Good Time —Sue Thompson

 

If you’re reading this, you don’t need my comments on these songs. You remember them.

A personal footnote: I interviewed Chubby Checker – who had two hits on this chart - in 1975 before his performance at the Flamingo Club in Bristol, Tennessee. I stayed for the show and he invited/coaxed me on stage. So I can say, proudly, that I did the Twist with Chubby Checker!


Chubby Checker twisting with unknown fan (not me) at Flamingo Club in Bristol in 1975.


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