WTMA Tunedex ’67
The top 25 songs on radio station WTMA, Charleston, South Carolina, for the week ending 20 May 1967, and you can be sure I was listening that week: this was my station of choice during the years I lived in the Holy City. The cover art is a cut-down version of an actual WTMA “Tunedex” Top 40 chart, courtesy of station historian Ted Tatman. The first track is preceded by a brief WTMA jingle.
Track listing for 111058-2:
- Arthur Conley: Sweet Soul Music
- The Young Rascals: Groovin’
- The Supremes: The Happening
- Peaches and Herb: Close Your Eyes
- Frank and Nancy Sinatra: Something Stupid
- Aretha Franklin: Respect
- The Dave Clark Five: You Got What It Takes
- The Hollies: On a Carousel
- The Monkees: A Little Bit Me, a Little Bit You
- The Happenings: I Got Rhythm
- Neil Diamond: Girl, You’ll Be a Woman Soon
- The Mamas and the Papas: Creeque Alley
- Engelbert Humperdinck: Release Me
- The Spencer Davis Group: I’m a Man
- Eric Burdon and the Animals: When I Was Young
- The Buckinghams: Don’t You Care
- The Easybeats: Friday on My Mind
- Tommy James and the Shondells: I Think We’re Alone Now
- The Tremeloes: Here Comes My Baby
- The Five Americans: Western Union
- The Platters: With This Ring
- Toussaint McCall: Nothing Takes the Place of You
- Paul Revere and the Raiders: Him or Me—What’s It Gonna Be?
- The Temptations: All I Need
- Aretha Franklin: I Never Loved a Man (The Way I Love You)

February 3rd, 2006 at 4:20 pm
Not a speck of cereal
Warner Bros. once sold a $2 sampler album called All Meat, implying a distinct lack of filler among the tracks therein, which, given the content of most pop albums —…
July 24th, 2006 at 9:10 pm
[...] The top 26 songs on radio station WTMA, Charleston, South Carolina, for the week ending 30 April 1966, and you can be sure I was listening that week: this was my station of choice during the years I lived in the Holy City. (If this sounds familiar, I’ve already done a similar disc from May 1967. The cover art is a cut-down version of an actual WTMA “Tunedex” Top 40 chart, courtesy of station historian Ted Tatman. The first track is preceded by a brief WTMA jingle; a less-brief one follows the last. [...]