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Seventies Almanac - 1975

1975


Linda Ronstadt

fter spending a semester at Arizona State University, Linda Ronstadt formed the Stone Poneys with two friends and cut one hit record, "Different Drum," in 1967. The group then broke up, leaving Linda to drift around the L.A. country-rock scene until 1974, when ex-singer Peter Asher became her manager. Under Peter's direction, Linda recorded Heart Like a Wheel, the landmark album that made her one of the brightest new stars of 1975. The album, which zoomed to number one on the national charts, featured her first number-one single, "You're No Good," as well as another million seller, "When Will I Be Loved." A few months later, there was "Heat Wave" and "Love Is a Rose," and after that there was no stopping the young lady from Tuscon. For the rest of the decade, Linda specialized in rock 'n' roll remakes, making old hits her own in much the same way as Johnny Rivers had a decade earlier. "That'll Be the Day," "Blue Bayou," "It's So Easy," "Back in the U.S.A.," "Ooh Baby Baby" and "Hurt So Bad" all made the Top 20 over the next five years.
Bruce Springsteen

New Jersey born-Bruce Springsteen began his recording career in 1973, but didn't gain much more than local fame until two years later when Rolling Stone magazine discovered him and began hyping him as "the future of rock'n'roll" (by an odd coincidence, Bruce's original producer had just been replaced by Rolling Stone writer Jon Landau). Columbia Records fanned the flames with an all-out publicity campaign that resulted -- incredibly -- in Time and Newsweek cover stories the same week on the "new Dylan." Hysteria mounted until the release of Born To Run as an album and as a single -- and then everything backfired. The album, according to critics, failed to capture Springsteen's live excitement, while the single fizzled out without even making the Top 20. Contract disputes kept Bruce out of the studios and away from the public for the next three years. In 1978, he began a comeback with the album Darkness at the Edge of Town. It wasn't until 1980, though, that Springsteen finally scored with a major hit song: the Top 5 single "Hungry Heart," from his The River album.

Music Icon Other Music Highlights of 1975:

  • New albums carry four established acts to even loftier heights of popularity and respect: Bob Dylan's Blood On The Tracks, Chicago's Chicago VIII, John Lennon's Rock'N'Roll, and Led Zeppelin's Physical Graffiti.
  • The Wiz, a contemporary version of The Wizard of Oz, opens on Broadway.
  • Elton John's Captain Fantastic And The Brown Dirt Cowboy enters the charts at number one and goes on to become his biggest all-time seller.
  • While on vacation, Robert Plant, lead singer of Led Zeppelin, is involved in a serious auto crash that almost claims his life and those of his family.
  • Fleetwood Mac's Mick Fleetwood and John and Christine McVie are joined by new members Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham for the new album for Reprise Records, titled Fleetwood Mac. It would become the sleeper smash of the rock era, taking 58 weeks to reach number one on the charts.
  • Kiss releases their breakthrough album, Alive!.
  • The Southern rock band Molly Hatchet forms in Jacksonville, Fla.
  • The Captain & Tennille release their album Love Will Keep Us Together. The title song, written by Neil Sedaka, becomes the biggest hit single of the year.
  • Ted Nugent releases his eponymous solo debut album, and Blue Oyster Cult releases its first live album, On Your Feet or On Your Knees.
  • The Bee Gee's album Main Course produces the number one disco-flavored "Jive Talkin'," a song that changed the whole image and sound of the group, and foreshadowed the disco explosion they would launch two years later with the album Saturday Night Fever.
  • On Thursday, October 9, John Lennon's 35th birthday, John and Yoko's son Sean is born.
  • On Saturday, October 11, Saturday Night Live premiers on NBC-TV. George Carlin is the first host, and Janis Ian and Billy Preston are the first musical guests.
  • The Runaways, a unique all-girl band of underage musicians including future Blackheart star Joan Jett, form in Los Angeles.
  • The Tubes release their eponymous debut LP.

Seventies Daily Music Chronicle - 1975

Singles Icon The Top 40 Singles of 1975:

  1. "Love Will Keep Us Together" - Captain & Tennille (First chart appearance: 5/24/75; Highest position: #1)
  2. "Rhinestone Cowboy" - Glen Campbell (6/21/75; #1)
  3. "Fame" - David Bowie (8/2/75; #1)
  4. "Shining Star" - Earth, Wind and Fire (3/22/75; #1)
  5. "My Eyes Adored You" - Frankie Valli (1/18/75; #1)
  6. "Thank God I'm A Country Boy" - John Denver (4/5/75; #1)
  7. "Philadelphia Freedom" - Elton John (3/15/75; #1)
  8. "One Of These Nights" - Eagles (6/14/75; #1)
  9. "Pick Up The Pieces" - Average White Band (12/21/74; #1)
  10. "At Seventeen" - Janis Ian (7/12/75; #3)
  11. "Kung Fu Fighting" - Carl Douglas (12/21/74; #1)
  12. "Boogie On Reggae Woman" - Stevie Wonder (11/30/74; #3)
  13. "Laughter In The Rain" - Neil Sedaka (11/16/74; #1)
  14. "Black Water" - The Doobie Brothers (1/11/75; #1)
  15. "Lady Marmalade - LaBelle (2/1/75; #1)
  16. "Why Can't We Be Friends" - War (6/14/75; #6)
  17. "The Hustle" - Van McCoy (5/31/75; #1)
  18. "Best Of My Love" - Eagles (12/28/74; #1)
  19. "Wasted Days And Wasted Nights" - Freddy Fender (7/19/75; #8)
  20. "Before The Next Teardrop Falls" - Freddy Fender (3/8/75; #1)
  21. "Some Kind Of Wonderful" - Grand Funk (12/21/74; #3)
  22. "Island Girl" - Elton John (10/18/75; #1)
  23. "Lovin' You" - Minnie Riperton (2/15/75; #1)
  24. "Jive Talkin'" - Bee Gees (6/28/75; #1)
  25. "Mandy" - Barry Manilow (12/7/74; #1)
  26. "Please Mr. Postman" - Carpenters (12/7/74; #1)
  27. "Have You Never Been Mellow" - Olivia Newton-John (2/8/75; #1)
  28. "Jackie Blue" - The Ozark Mountain Daredevils (3/22/75; #3)
  29. "Ballroom Blitz" - Sweet (8/2/75; #5)
  30. "Another Somebody Done Somebody Wrong Song" - B.J. Thomas (3/1/75; #1)
  31. "He Don't Love You" - Tony Orlando & Dawn (3/29/75; #1)
  32. "Feelings" - Morris Albert (8/23/75; #6)
  33. "I'm Not In Love" - 10cc (6/14/75; #2)
  34. "Games People Play (They Just Can't Help It)" - Spinners (8/30/75; #5)
  35. "Love Won't Let Me Wait" - Major Harris (4/19/75; #5)
  36. "Angie Baby" - Helen Reddy (11/2/74; #1)
  37. "I'm Sorry" - John Denver (8/30/75; #1)
  38. "Fight The Power (Part 1)" - The Isley Brothers (7/12/75; #4)
  39. "Lady" - Styx (1/18/75; #6)
  40. "Fire" - Ohio Players (12/28/74; #1)

1975 Singles - Month By Month


LP Icon Top Albums of 1975:

Movie Icon 20 Popular Movies of 1975:

  1. Jaws
  2. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
  3. Shampoo
  4. Dog Day Afternoon
  5. Nashville
  6. Hester Street
  7. The Hindenburg
  8. The Day of the Locust
  9. Tommy
  10. Janis
  11. The Rocky Horror Picture Show
  12. Barry Lyndon
  13. Breakout
  14. Emmanuelle
  15. Farewell, My Lovely
  16. French Connection II
  17. The Man Who Would Be King
  18. Rooster Cogburn
  19. Shining Star
  20. Stardust
Cuckoo's Nest/Dog Day Afternoon

TV Icon The Top 20 Television Shows of 1975:

  1. All in the Family
  2. Rich Man, Poor Man
  3. Laverne & Shirley
  4. Maude
  5. The Bionic Woman
  6. Phyllis
  7. Sanford and Son
  8. Rhoda
  9. The Six Million Dollar Man
  10. The ABC Monday Night Movie
  11. Happy Days
  12. One Day at a Time
  13. The ABC Sunday Night Movie
  14. The Waltons
  15. M*A*S*H
  16. Starsky and Hutch
  17. Good Heavens
  18. Welcome Back, Kotter
  19. The Mary Tyler Moore Show
  20. Kojak
Rhoda

Prime Time TV Schedule - 1975

News Icon News Highlights of 1975:Vietnam Evacuation

  • Angola gains its independence from Portugal after centuries of foreign rule.
  • John N. Mitchell, H.R. Haldeman, and John D. Ehrlichman are sentenced to prison for conspiring to obstruct justice in the Watergate investigation.
  • Margaret Thatcher is the first woman elected to lead Britain's Conservative Party.
  • King Faaisal of Saudi Arabia is assassinated by a crazed nephew.
  • The president of South Vietnam, Duong Van Minh, surrenders to the Communists.
  • The busing of 21,000 students is ordered in Boston to achieve racial balance in the public schools.
  • Egypt reopens the Suez Canal after eight years.
  • Band leader and radio/TV sitcom pioneer Ozzie Nelson dies at age 69.
  • President Ford escapes assassination twice within 17 days.
  • The Supreme Court rules that suspension of students requires "due process" hearings.
  • More than $4 million is spent on research by the National Cancer Institute to study the relationship between diet and cancer.
  • President Ford meets with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos to renew American use of strategic air and naval bases in the Philippines.
  • Advice columnist Ann Landers solicits parents' opinions on whether they have "buyer's remorse" about having children.
  • Mood rings are introduced and reach their peak in only a few months, selling more than 20 million before passing from popular fancy. Meanwhile, maintenance-free pet rocks also hit the short-term big time.

Sports Icon Sports Winners of 1975:

  • Baseball: The Cincinnati Reds beat the Boston Red Sox 4 games to 3.
  • Football: The Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Dallas Cowboys 21-17 on January 18, 1976, at the Orange Bowl in Miami in Super Bowl X.
  • Basketball: Golden State beat the Washington Bullets 4 games to 0.
  • Hockey: The Philadelphia Flyers beat the Buffalo Sabres 4 games to 2.


1976




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