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taxman
Jun 22, 2006, 11:53 AM
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/13483703/

LONDON - “Top of the Pops” has hit bottom.
The 42-year-old BBC music show that featured everyone from the Beatles to Bob the Builder is going off the air, a child of the black-and-white era abandoned by a younger generation more attuned to Internet downloads and 24-hour music television.

After years of declining ratings, the BBC announced this week that the show that has aired weekly since January 1964 would count down its last singles chart on July 30.

Cue an outpouring of nostalgia from Britons — at least those over 30.
“A sad day for all of us overgrown teenagers,” noted The Daily Telegraph’s Neil McCormick, hailing “this silly, exhilarating, infuriating, inspiring, chaotic, trivial grab bag of a music program.”

“For anyone over 35, it’s the first contact they had with popular music,” said music writer and broadcaster John Aizlewood. In the days before video, he added, “seeing a pop star in the flesh was really unusual.”

At its peak in the 1970s — when Britain had only three TV channels — the weekly rundown of the nation’s best-selling acts attracted more than 15 million viewers. The format was exported to several European countries and even to the U.S., where a short-lived version ran in 1987.

“Top of the Pops” lasted longer than U.S. television staple “American Bandstand,” another show to feature big-name acts performing for a live teenage audience, which ran for 30 consecutive years on ABC between 1957 and 1987.

The Sex Pistols and Bread on the same show
Since the BBC’s announcement, fans have reminisced about the glory days before music videos, when in-house dance troupe Pan’s People — later replaced by Legs & Co. — would execute interpretive dance routines to songs if the performers were not available.

There was the legendary 1982 incident in which Dexy’s Midnight Runners performed “Jackie Wilson Said” in front of a picture of darts player Jocky Wilson (a deliberate joke, the band said). Or the day in 1975 when the Who’s roadies hurled wigs onstage as Cliff Richard sang.

Staunchly middle-of-the-road crooner Richard has appeared on the show more than 150 times, including the first-ever episode on Jan. 1, 1964, alongside the Beatles, Rolling Stones, Dusty Springfield and the Swinging Blue Jeans. Commissioned for an initial six shows, “Top of the Pops” racked up more than 2,000 episodes.

Despite appearances by iconic acts from Jimi Hendrix to Nirvana, the show’s formula hardly epitomized artistic credibility. The sets were wobbly, the hosts unnervingly perky and almost all the performers lip-synched.

Aizlewood attributed the program’s success partly to its eclectic mix.

“The artists on it were selected solely by that week’s singles sales, so you could see the Sex Pistols literally next to Bread,” he said.

But from younger Britons, the passing of a rock era has been met with stony silence.

“I don’t watch it and I don’t know that any of my friends do,” said 20-year-old Londoner Kaare Stark, who keeps up with music through digital radio, TV and the Internet. “It’s easy enough to find out what’s hot without watching ‘Top of the Pops.”’

The show has suffered flagging ratings in recent years, and last year was moved from the main BBC1 channel to BBC2, which attracts a smaller audience.

In a statement, the BBC said that “in a rapidly changing musical landscape ‘Top of the Pops’ no longer occupies the central role it once did.”

Harbidge
Jun 22, 2006, 11:56 AM
People are saying that it's demise was because of the new digital age, but which I say b******t. The program has died because of how rubbish our music industry has become.

When a single only needs to sell 21,000 copies to make it to number 1 you know that there's some serious problems! In the 60's it took over 500,000 copies to get high in the charts, and even then it wasn't a guaranteed top spot hit.

Siobhan
Jun 22, 2006, 12:18 PM
People are saying that it's demise was because of the new digital age, but which I say b******t. The program has died because of how rubbish our music industry has become.

When a single only needs to sell 21,000 copies to make it to number 1 you know that there's some serious problems! In the 60's it took over 500,000 copies to get high in the charts, and even then it wasn't a guaranteed top spot hit.

Very true. But back then it was worthwhile buying a single, these days there's not much point. Tracks that are released as singles are almost always on the album and the B-sides are usually album tracks too, or remixes. At an average of Ł3.99 for a single, and with anything from 3-5 singles per album, you're better off just buying the album!

It is the end of an era - I rememebr watching TOTP every Thursday throughout my childhood. But it has got pretty bad, as well as redundant, over the years, and I can see why they've pulled the plug.

AMBOISVERT
Jun 22, 2006, 06:20 PM
Well, I will be marking it's demise (and saluting its legacy) by listening to the Kinks song of same name. Great tune.

"Yes, it's number one... it's Top of the Pops!"

Tony

62hofner
Jun 22, 2006, 08:14 PM
People are saying that it's demise was because of the new digital age, but which I say b******t. The program has died because of how rubbish our music industry has become.

When a single only needs to sell 21,000 copies to make it to number 1 you know that there's some serious problems! In the 60's it took over 500,000 copies to get high in the charts, and even then it wasn't a guaranteed top spot hit.

It's sad that a show like "Top of the Pops" can't keep going on and on. I've never seen it, being from the States. But, I've seen all the great footage from appearances by the likes of Cream, The Kinks, etc.\

I tend to agree with you... it died because the music industry SUCKS. :barf4:

sadie
Jun 22, 2006, 11:49 PM
It became a childs program really.

FPSHOT
Jun 23, 2006, 12:16 AM
I have watched TOTP for decades so am sorry to see it go but the past years I used to tape it and then look back only that which I thought of as being interesting but that was not much anymore.

Which I think is just representative for how the singles market is and ofcourse indeed, music tasts change and it became a kiddos program with all those waving arms all the time in slow songs...so boring....

BeatlesFan4life
Jun 23, 2006, 06:05 AM
It's sad that a show like "Top of the Pops" can't keep going on and on. I've never seen it, being from the States. But, I've seen all the great footage from appearances by the likes of Cream, The Kinks, etc.\

I tend to agree with you... it died because the music industry SUCKS. :barf4:
I agree with 62hofner about the Top of the Pops.

lennonluvr9
Jun 23, 2006, 09:28 AM
I agree too, i think it's sucky music industry. It only takes 21,000 to get to #1? Geez!

62hofner
Jun 23, 2006, 09:34 AM
I agree too, i think it's sucky music industry. It only takes 21,000 to get to #1? Geez!

Just like the talent, the criteria for "hits" is watered-down these days.

Georgie Girl
Jun 23, 2006, 10:03 AM
How sad.

The problem with the industry is that it
is an industry, producing all these
look-a-like pop acts that all sound alike as
well. It became more about how "sexy" the
artist is, and not about what they have to
say.

Cardboard.canvas
Jul 19, 2006, 01:21 PM
People are saying that it's demise was because of the new digital age, but which I say b******t. The program has died because of how rubbish our music industry has become.

When a single only needs to sell 21,000 copies to make it to number 1 you know that there's some serious problems! In the 60's it took over 500,000 copies to get high in the charts, and even then it wasn't a guaranteed top spot hit.

well music in general has gone downhill.
Everyone is getting lazier and lazier.
And American kids are just getting dumber.
Let us review a favorite among students at my school:
"We in tha club doin' the same ol' two step
Gorilla unit cuz they say we bugged out
Cuz we don't go nowhere without toast we thugged out"

For those of you who've seen Stewie Griffin explode on this subject (video on YouTube)..
I agree..it's terrible.
And what DOES it mean "we don't go nowhere without toast?"
I hate being an American teenager.
I'm lumped into the same uncultured group as them.

AmericanBeatle
Jul 19, 2006, 08:17 PM
It seems that true musicians are few and far between in the modern age of music. It's like in that fast food commercial where the two technicians are eating their burgers while recording a Britney/Christina lookalike and one of 'em puts his cola too close to one control and it inadvertently turns off the backing vocals. Suddenly, the music really sounds bad and the singer can hardly carry a tune (kind of like Peter Brady waaaaay back when), but then they quickly turn back on the overdubs and whatnots and whichits, and the singer sounds great again. That is our current musical output in a nutshell, my friends. How many of today's artists can sing A Cappella, or even know what that is? I know I'm lumping a lot of talented folk into this tirade, so take what I say with a grain of salt.

Cardboard.canvas
Jul 20, 2006, 12:08 PM
It seems that true musicians are few and far between in the modern age of music. It's like in that fast food commercial where the two technicians are eating their burgers while recording a Britney/Christina lookalike and one of 'em puts his cola too close to one control and it inadvertently turns off the backing vocals. Suddenly, the music really sounds bad and the singer can hardly carry a tune (kind of like Peter Brady waaaaay back when), but then they quickly turn back on the overdubs and whatnots and whichits, and the singer sounds great again. That is our current musical output in a nutshell, my friends. How many of today's artists can sing A Cappella, or even know what that is? I know I'm lumping a lot of talented folk into this tirade, so take what I say with a grain of salt.true..
I feel a little out of place in Bakerfsield. All the other kids jump on the bandwagon and they never have any idea about anything that hasn't been on MTV or Fuse. In our yearbook they have a "what's hot, what's not" list..which is always ridiculous. This year's best music is apparently Ciara, and the worst is classical. I listen to Antonio Vivaldi all the time! They need to realize how much we owe to the classical musicians. If only they could appreciate fine art :afraid3:

Georgie Girl
Jul 20, 2006, 12:26 PM
Some people have shallow tastes or tastes formed
by the people they hang out with. Or they're not
enough into music to find out about things that are
not on MTV. Since there's so many young people here
at Beatlelinks that I am very hopeful that people like your
classmates will also check out music that isn't
run-of-the-mill. They just need time to catch up to us. :teeth1:

dari
Jul 21, 2006, 08:02 AM
no more " to the toppermost of the poppermost"...:+(

beatlebangs1964
Jul 21, 2006, 11:37 AM
The end of an era.