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Sean Ross On Radio Insight RadioInsight

The 100 Most Lost Songs of the ‘60s

Sean Rossby Sean Ross
3

Tommy Roe Sweet PeaI started listening to pop radio in 1967, around the time that Top 40 radio started playing oldies in a more regular way. But by then, many of the ‘60s songs with the highest “Lost Factor” were already gone from the radio. In fact, less than half are songs I grew up hearing on the radio on any regular basis.

“Lost Factor” mathematically calculates whether songs are currently receiving airplay proportionate to their hit status at the time by awarding points for year-end chart placement and dividing them by the number of weekly broadcast radio spins they get today. Of the top 102 Lost Factor songs (including a three-way tie for No. 100), only about 40% are songs that I heard on a regular basis.

  • There are only 10 songs that I remember hearing as current hits on the radio, not surprising since 71% of the songs in question are from the pre-Beatles years, 1960-63; 22% are from the year 1960 alone.
  • There are another six that I remember hearing either as gold or in other settings (e.g., hearing Bent Fabric’s “Alley Cat” in gym class).
  • There are another 20 that were a regular part of the Oldies stations that I listened to during the nostalgia craze of the early ‘70s. All of those songs were long gone from the “safe list” that emerged when Oldies had its late ‘80s/early ‘90s format resurgence.
  • There are five songs, from “Mockingbird” to “My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own,” that I learned because they were remade over the next decade or so.

The top 100 of the 1960s is an expanded version of a top 15 list that ran last July, a few months after we began our Lost Factor calculations. Even that list was full of instrumentals, early ‘60s titles, and one early ‘60s instrumental, “Theme from ‘A Summer Place,’” that had a perfect 100 score — a No. 1 song of the year that had gotten no plays at BDSRadio-monitored stations in the previous week. 

Now that we’ve expanded to 102 songs, they include:

  • 25 instrumental hits;
  • 24 artists that would now be considered MOR acts, not including instrumentals;
  • 17 artists that were considered teen idols (in general, the likes of Steve Lawrence and Connie Francis were classified MOR, even though you could have made a case for them as either);
  • Six folky songs from the early ‘60s hootenanny era of pop music;
  • Three songs that would be considered bubblegum; a lot of late ‘60s bubblegum is scarce on the radio now, but the Lost Factor scores are generally lower than the early ‘60s MOR, not surprising when we’re talking about 60-year-old songs.

Connie Francis is the artist who makes the most appearances among the 102 songs (with three titles). Those with two range from Chubby Checker and Gary “U.S.” Bonds to piano duo Ferrante & Teicher to bubblegum’s 1910 Fruitgum Company, the only late ’60s act with more than one title.

The Lost Factor within the top 102 songs stretches from the 100 score for “Theme From ‘A Summer Place’” to a 45 score for the last three songs. By comparison, the ‘70s’ top 100 ranges between 91 at the top and 14 at the bottom. As the passage of time would suggest, the ‘60s songs are a lot more gone from broadcast radio.

Here are the Top 100 Lost Factor Hits of the ‘60s. None received more than two spins for the week we calculated. (BDSRadio monitors mostly large- and medium-market stations. It does not include SiriusXM’s 60s on 6, although many of these would be “oh wow” songs even there.)

RANK ARTIST TITLE YEAR SPINS
1 Percy Faith Theme From A Summer Place 1960 0
2 Paul Mauriat Love Is Blue 1968 0
3 Highwaymen Michael 1961 0
4 Chubby Checker Pony Time 1961 0
5 Hugo Montenegro The Good, the Bad and the Ugly 1968 0
6 Sensations Let Me In 1962 0
7 String-A-Longs Wheels 1961 1
8 S/Sgt. Barry Sadler Ballad of the Green Berets 1966 0
9 Connie Francis Everybody's Somebody's Fool 1960 0
10 Brothers Four Greenfields 1960 0
11 Jack Scott What In The World's Come Over You 1960 0
12 Al Martino I Love You Because 1963 0
13 Mar-Keys Last Night 1961 1
14 Rebels Wild Weekend 1963 0
15 Connie Francis My Heart Has a Mind of Its Own 1960 0
15 Ferrante & Teicher Exodus 1961 0
15 Chubby Checker & Dee Dee Sharp Slow Twistin' 1962 0
15 Bobby Darin You're the Reason I'm Living 1963 0
19 Johnny Tillotson It Keeps Right On a-Hurtin' 1962 0
19 Billy J. Kramer & Dakotas Little Children 1964 0
21 Inez & Charlie Foxx Mockingbird 1963 0
21 Ray Charles Singers Love Me With All Your Heart 1964 0
23 Sue Thompson Sad Movies (Make Me Cry) 1961 0
24 Chantays Pipeline 1963 0
25 Connie Stevens Sixteen Reasons 1960 0
26 Sandy Posey Born a Woman 1966 0
27 Frankie Avalon Why 1960 0
28 Brook Benton The Boll Weevil Song 1961 0
28 Vikki Carr It Must Be Him 1967 0
30 Sounds Orchestral Cast Your Fate to the Wind 1965 0
30 Roger Williams Born Free 1966 0
32 Dick & Dee Dee The Mountain's High 1961 0
33 Floyd Cramer On the Rebound 1961 0
34 Georgie Fame The Ballad of Bonnie and Clyde 1968 1
35 Steve Lawrence Portrait of My Love 1961 0
35 Jay & Americans She Cried 1962 0
35 Trini Lopez If I Had a Hammer 1963 0
38 Jimmy Jones Good Timin' 1960 0
38 Connie Francis Don't Break the Heart That Loves You 1962 0
40 Gary U.S. Bonds Dear Lady Twist 1962 0
40 Serendipity Singers Don't Let the Rain Come Down (Crooked Little Man) 1964 0
40 Bert Kaempfert Red Roses for a Blue Lady 1965 0
43 Jimmy Clanton Go, Jimmy, Go 1960 0
43 Sue Thompson Norman 1962 0
43 1910 Fruitgum Company Simon Says 1968 0
46 Jackie Wilson Night 1960 0
46 Betty Everett & Jerry Butler Let It Be Me 1964 0
48 Jack Scott Burning Bridges 1960 1
48 Jørgen Ingmann Apache 1961 1
50 Linda Scott Don't Bet Money Honey 1961 0
50 Highwaymen Cotton Fields 1962 0
52 Duane Eddy Because They're Young 1960 0
52 Johnny Tillotson Without You 1961 0
52 Henry Mancini Days of Wine and Roses 1963 0
55 Bent Fabric Alley Cat 1962 1
56 Conway Twitty Lonely Blue Boy 1960 0
57 Steve Lawrence Pretty Blue Eyes 1960 0
57 Richard Chamberlain Theme From "Dr. Kildare" 1962 0
59 Ace Cannon Tuff 1962 0
60 Patti Page Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte 1965 1
61 Anita Bryant Paper Roses 1960 0
61 Clyde McPhatter Lover Please 1962 0
61 Bill Anderson Still 1963 0
61 Gene & Debbe Playboy 1968 0
61 Bobby Sherman Little Woman 1969 0
66 Larry Verne Mr. Custer 1960 0
66 Troy Shondell This Time 1961 0
66 Danny Williams White on White 1964 0
66 Freddie & Dreamers I'm Telling You Now 1965 0
70 Bobby Vinton Please Love Me Forever 1967 0
71 Ricky Nelson Young World 1962 1
72 Kokomo Asia Minor 1961 0
72 Tommy Roe Hooray for Hazel 1966 0
72 Dionne Warwick Alfie 1967 0
75 Fendermen Mule Skinner Blues 1960 1
76 Pat Boone Speedy Gonzales 1962 0
77 Burl Ives A Little Bitty Tear 1962 0
77 Ed Ames My Cup Runneth Over 1967 0
79 Arthur Lyman Yellow Bird 1961 0
79 Horst Jankowski A Walk in the Black Forest 1965 0
79 Charles Wright & Watts 103rd Street Rhythm Band Do Your Thing 1969 0
82 Ron Holden Love You So 1960 0
82 Timi Yuro Hurt 1961 0
82 Emilio Pericoli Al di Là 1962 0
82 Lonnie Mack Memphis 1963 0
82 1910 Fruitgum Company 1, 2, 3, Red Light 1968 0
87 Ernie Maresca Shout! Shout! (Knock Yourself Out) 1962 0
88 Don & Juan What's Your Name 1962 0
88 Kai Winding More 1963 0
90 Platters Harbor Lights 1960 1
91 Corsairs Smoky Places 1962 0
91 Sammy Davis Jr. I've Gotta Be Me 1969 0
91 Jeanne Black He'll Have to Stay 1960 0
94 Ferrante & Teicher Theme from "The Apartment" 1960 0
94 People I Love You 1968 0
96 Gary U.S. Bonds School Is Out 1961 0
96 Bill Pursell Our Winter Love 1963 0
96 Percy Sledge Take Time to Know Her 1968 0
99 Elvis Presley Crying in the Chapel 1965 2
100 Joanie Sommers Johnny Get Angry 1962 0
100 Ral Donner You Don't Know What You've Got (Until You Lose It) 1961 0
100 Andy Williams The Village of St. Bernadette 1960 0
WP Data Tables

We also looked at which songs overperform their year-end chart placing. These are songs with the lowest “Lost Factors” that now receive more than 100 spins a week at radio. These calculations were revised on April 17 from our initial tabulation. Thanks to an e-mail from reader Daniel O’Connor, we realized that not all eligible songs had been included; (this did not in any way impact the Top 100 Lost Factor songs above).

RANK ARTIST TITLE YEAR SPINS
1 Beatles Come Together 1969 770
2 Steppenwolf Magic Carpet Ride 1968 793
3 Beatles Revolution 1968 428
4 Cream White Room 1968 337
5 Monkees Daydream Believer 1967 103
6 Van Morrison Brown Eyed Girl 1967 965
7 Steppenwolf Born to Be Wild 1968 767
8 Rolling Stones Paint It Black 1966 727
9 Marvin Gaye I Heard It Through the Grapevine 1969 111
10 Rolling Stones Jumpin' Jack Flash 1968 404
11 Rolling Stones (I Can't Get No) Satisfaction 1965 760
12 Beatles Something 1969 103
13 Kinks You Really Got Me 1964 122
14 Ben E. King Stand by Me 1961 198
15 Creedence Clearwater Revival Bad Moon Rising 1969 393
WP Data Tables

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Comments 3

  1. wtk's avatar wtk says:
    5 years ago

    I bought some British (public-domain) anthologies a while back that purportedly contained every record to hit the US Top 10 in their given years/volumes, and was surprised to hear so many Connie Francis records, including some I didn’t remember at all. (There also were oddities for the UK market I didn’t expect, like “Wooden Heart” with the German verse replaced by a sax solo, and a BBC-friendly “Beep Beep” that turned the Cadillac and Nash Rambler into a “limousine” and “bubble car.”)

    A number of these lost tracks today would seem to be the domain of Country radio, which didn’t exist as we know it to any great extent until 1964-65. Before then, Country was a more vital ingredient of Top 40.

    And it should go without saying that there’s little justification today for playing things like “Mr. Custer,” “Speedy Gonzales” and, despite its absence from this list, “Ahab the Arab.”

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  2. Dave Doherty's avatar Dave Doherty says:
    5 years ago

    I remember about 2/3 of the lost songs and every one of the overplays. I was in Albany, NY, in the 60’s. WTRY 980, WPTR 1540, WABY 1400, and later WFLY 92.3. I agree with WTK that a lot of the lost songs would never get airplay today and are lost for a variety of reasons….

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  3. borderblaster's avatar borderblaster says:
    5 years ago

    Some internet station will start playing this list tomorrow LOL. I caught up with a lot of those titles during the nostalgia craze, and from listening to a Drake-Chenault “Solid Gold” station which played a mix of currents and gold. Later I worked in oldies radio, but even then, there weren’t that many of those oldies titles. I had heard music on the radio (WOWO Fort Wayne) going back to 1962 give or take, but I caught the new sound of the brand new Big 8 (with a month of Fun Radio 8 CKLW at the pool that summer. I’ve loved Motown and R&B ever since.

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Sean Ross

Sean Ross

Sean Ross is a radio business researcher, programming consultant, conference speaker, and a veteran of radio trade journalism at Billboard, Radio & Records, M Street Journal, and others. For more than a decade, his weekly writings have been collected in the Ross On Radio newsletter; subscribe for free here. https://tinyurl.com/mhcnx4u

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