The diversity, creativity, and originality - while commercially popular, these songs represented a time where fun and substance blended well. Today's music cannot be compared because it doesn't compare.
I was only 7 and 8 years old in 1974 but my sister was 12 and 13. She was very much into what was on the radio by that time and I picked up on all of it because of her. I have *always* loved my memories of the music of 1974-1976... There was absolutely something magical about those 3 years. 1975 has always been my favorite. I can remember being 14 in 1980 and already having intense nostalgia for the life I remembered enjoying so much only 5 years earlier!
I really enjoyed this good music. It's a good remembrance !! When I was a youngster I used to listen every saturday at 4 pm American Top fourty.!! Thanks for publishing!!🙏🙏Casey Kasem was and is the best countdown announcer through radio broadcast.I was born in 1960 , as a teenager started listening his voice and it was one of the things that inspired me for Learning English Language. Then , at the age of 19 , I became an English Teacher and finally got My master degree when I was 25 . I was getting deep inside this awesome music !! Really good music !! 🙏🙏🙏
Correct. "Rock the Boat" by Hues Corporation was the very first disco song to hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 on July 5th, immediately followed by "Rock Your Baby" by George McRae. "Dancing Machine", a top 5 hit by the Jackson 5, was also clearly a disco song.
Love it! Not only brings back a ton of almost unbearably sweet memories but reminds me of listening to Casey on VOA when my military family was stationed in Spain. Good times.
Casey Kasem is one of a kind. His voice is like one of soothing and fun to listen to. I remember listening to him while station in Spain in the late 80's, His America's Top 40 played on Armed Forces radio, he made being oversea's like being home. He will be missed.
There were still 3 songs in December of 1974 not mentioned. Due to the fact of the period used to tabulate the year end top 100. Those 3 songs from December of 1974 were "Kung Fu Fighting" - Carl Douglas [#1 12/7 & 12/14], "Cat's In the Cradle" - Harry Chapin [#1 12/21] and "Angie Baby" - Helen Reddy [#1 12/28]
Thanks so much for pointing that out, David. I’ve always had a problem with the way Billboard determines the top songs of the year. To me, the list would be far more accurate if they waited until a few months into the next year to compile the ranking for a given year. That would avoid ridiculous occurrences such as these: • “Another One Bites the Dust,” which spent all three of its weeks at No. 1 in October 1980, being ranked about the hits of 1981 just because it still happened to be rather high on the Hot 100 during the last week of ’80. It was No. 14 the week ending 12/27. • “Look Away” by Chicago being declared the top single of 1989 when it spent both of its weeks at No. 1 in 1988. It was at the summit in December, but I still think it’s unfair that “My Prerogative” had to settle for No. 2 when it hit No. 1 IN ’89. Those are just a couple examples of many that make the year-end ranking seem insanely premature.
The year my brother died. Every one of these songs brings memories of that time and him rushing back to me. Especially the ones he had on 45 like Bennie And The Jets, which was #1 when he died.
I just love all the songs in the 70's. Casey kasem was the best. He had that unique voice, you knew right away it was Casey spinning the records. And I mean spinning the records. ( 45's on vinyl ) great memories.
Great montage . . . surprisingly diverse. Two Beatles on their own, doing well. Two from John Denver. Roberta Flacks' top-charting single stood out for me.
You can always tell a great year for pop music by the number of new songs which topped the AT40 chart. 33 #1s in a single year! The competition was *fierce*!
I discovered Casey in 1972. He said at #10 Get It On (Bang A Gong) by T-Rex. It was on AFRTS in Goose Bay Labrador!! I'll never forget it. 1 tv channel and 1 radio channel on the air force base. Thanks for all the great memories Casey!!
I'm being sarcastic but real here - I was 11 in 1974. I remember all these songs except one. Great songs, great artists, great music decade...period. Once we got to 1980, it started to go downhill with the rest of my life...and here I am in the "Twilight Zone" of 2021.
I wss 16 and 17 in 1974. Great music everywhere. MTV and the 80's was different but still good. Then the 90's yikes. I fell completely out. I managed later to get into Green Day and the Offspring but that was it. So in the 90's I went backwards and started collecting stuff from the 60's and 50's!! At least I have 4 decades of music to enjoy. The 70's being my favorite.
1. Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe- Barry White 2. Show & Tell- Al Wilson 3. Love's Theme- Love Unlimited Orchestra 4. Feel Like Makin' Love- Roberta Flack 5. The Way We Were- Barbra Streisand 6. Seasons in the Sun- Terry Jacks 7. Dark Lady- Cher 8. Time in a Bottle- Jim Croce 9. Kung Fu Fighting- Carl Douglas 10. Then Came You- Dionne Warwick & the Spinners
#1 songs of 1974: 1. 'Time in a bottle' (Jim Croce); 2. 'The joker' (Steve Miller Band); 3. 'Show and tell' (Al Wilson); 4. 'You're 16' (Ringo Starr); 5. 'Love Theme' (Love Unlimited Orchestra); 6. 'Seasons in the sun' (Terry Jacks); 7. 'Dark lady' (Cher); 8. 'Sunshine on my shoulders' (John Denver); 9. 'Hooked on a feeling' (Blue Swede); 10. 'Bennie and the Jets' (Elton John); 11. 'The sound of Philadelphia' (Mother, Father, Sister & Brother); 12. 'Locomotion' (Grand Funk); 13. 'The streak' (Ray Stevens); 14. 'Band on the run' (Paul McCartney & Wings); 15. 'Billy, don't be a hero' (Bo Donaldson & Heywoods); 16. 'Sundown' (Gordon Lightfoot); 17. 'Rock the boat' (Hues Corporation); 18. 'Rock your baby' (George McCrea); 19. 'Annie's song' (John Denver); 20. 'Feel like making love' (Roberta Flack); 21. 'The night Chicago died' (Paper Lace); 22. 'You're having my baby' (Paul Anka feat. Odia Coates); 23. 'I shot the sheriff' (Eric Clapton); 24. 'Can't get enough of your love, babe' (Barry White); 25. 'Rock me gently' (Andy Kim); 26. 'I honestly love you' (Olivia Newton-John); 27. 'Nothing from nothing' (Billy Preston); 28. 'Then came you' (Dionne Warwicke & Spinners); 29. 'You haven't done nothing' (Stevie Wonder); 30. 'You ain't seen nothing yet' (Bachman-Turner Overdrive); 31. 'Whatever gets you through the night' (John Lennon feat. Elton John); 32. 'I can help' (Billy Swan); 33. The way we were' (Barbra Streisand).
My favorites of 1974 in this order (not that they weren't all great): #1. Seasons in the Sun #2. Sunshine on My Shoulder #3. Sundown #4. Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe #5. TSOP
Gosh do I miss him. He was my Sunday mornings. I think it was like 9am-1:00pm? We did household chores and anything in the house so we could listen to the countdown. Oh and you better listen because if you didn’t know what the top songs were when you went back to sch Mon morning well you were just not cool.
You are correct. Those were the last three number one songs of the 1974 Billboard chart, with each hitting number one in the month of December. Perhaps Casey recorded the promo after Thanksgiving of that year, accounting for the missing December chart toppers? Just a guess on my part. I was five years old at the time and trying to get through kindergarten, but I still remember the music very well! The songs appear in this promo in chronological order, as Billy Swan's "I Can Help" topped the Billboard charts on 11/23/74 and 11/30/74. "The Way We Were" (which hit #1 on 2/2/74, 2/16/74 & 2/23/74) is the only song that does not appear in chronological order; since it was the number one song of 1974, Casey waited until the end of this promo to announce it. He also says "a montage of the 33 songs" that have hit number one, when in fact 36 songs (including the three you mentioned) hit number one on the chart from January 1, 1974 through December 31, 1974. Any other guesses out there?
@@russellblake6471 The countdown of the top 100 songs of a given year were from December the previous year to November of the current year. For this it was from December 1973 to November 1974.
Don Cornelius said that TSOP was the biggest mistake of his career.Gambel and Huff wanted to release the Soul Train theme as a single but,Cornelius thought hey were trying to take advantage of him and refused so the released the musical version.The song broke a lot of records chart wise and he said ll that time I would have been getting the name of the show mentioned.
Casey Kasem's voice can never be touched..he is a icon....looked forward to hearing him every week...R.I.P. SWEET CASEY
The diversity, creativity, and originality - while commercially popular, these songs represented a time where fun and substance blended well. Today's music cannot be compared because it doesn't compare.
Even '80s music does not compare. It's been all downhill since the '70s ended.
I miss Casey Kasem!
@sistakia, sad what happened to him😟😭
I still listen to him every Saturday on Sirius 70's on 7.
Do you want a brownie? 🤣🤣
Casey Kasem will always be my favorite! His voice was one-of-a kind.
He was the voice of shaggy on scooby doo.
You can say that again, he was
His talent will never be matched. Brilliant and irreplaceable
Exactly what talent are you talking about? All he did was talk .. speak scripts.
@@peacetoall1201 loved his voice and his presentation. He also did a lot of animated voices and tv appearances.
Take me back to the year I graduated from High School, everyday was magical. Thanks to everyone who part of that time.
Seasons in the Sun for sure
I was only 7 and 8 years old in 1974 but my sister was 12 and 13. She was very much into what was on the radio by that time and I picked up on all of it because of her. I have *always* loved my memories of the music of 1974-1976... There was absolutely something magical about those 3 years. 1975 has always been my favorite. I can remember being 14 in 1980 and already having intense nostalgia for the life I remembered enjoying so much only 5 years earlier!
I really enjoyed this good music. It's a good remembrance !! When I was a youngster I used to listen every saturday at 4 pm American Top fourty.!! Thanks for publishing!!🙏🙏Casey Kasem was and is the best countdown announcer through radio broadcast.I was born in 1960 , as a teenager started listening his voice and it was one of the things that inspired me for Learning English Language. Then , at the age of 19 , I became an English Teacher and finally got My master degree when I was 25 . I was getting deep inside this awesome music !! Really good music !! 🙏🙏🙏
1974 was a great year for music in my opinion. Far better than 1984, 1994, 2004, 2014 etc.
1964 was a great years
*year
+@Glenn Weeks Why?
The last great year in my opinion was 1987
Absolutely. Probably the greatest "4" for music!
I was 10 years old in 1974 and I remember listening to pretty all of these on my transistor radio on WLS or WCFL in Chicago.
me too, only in Cleveland it was 1260 am radio, WIXY
The earliest disco records beginning to chart... what a fabulous time. I was in 8th and 9th grades in ‘74.
Correct.
"Rock the Boat" by Hues Corporation was the very first disco song to hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 on July 5th, immediately followed by "Rock Your Baby" by George McRae.
"Dancing Machine", a top 5 hit by the Jackson 5, was also clearly a disco song.
Casey Kasem Was And Still Is The King Of The Countdown.
Oh God. You post this everywhere.
You pass away yet. Lolol
Brings back lots of good memories listening to this in 1974 in Bad Kissingen, Germany in my barracks. Wish I had a time machine. Thanks Casey.
Great songs. Great mix. Great year for pop music.
Love it! Not only brings back a ton of almost unbearably sweet memories but reminds me of listening to Casey on VOA when my military family was stationed in Spain. Good times.
I still have a lot of that fabulous music on 45's !
I sure miss Casey’s American TOP 40 70's... you could tell he really loved his work!
I listen to his retro shows every day. That way I'm guaranteed to hear great songs
Rip Casey I enjoyed listening to ya back in the day you played all kinda great hits rock and soul 👍👍👍
I listen him all the time in the 70's!! Thank you so much ❤!!
Wow, I remember listening to american top 40 with Casey Kasem when I was a kid on WBLI. Great memories.
What an era for music.... imagine 33 #1 songs in 52 weeks!!!
Those were the days !
Casey Kasem is one of a kind. His voice is like one of soothing and fun to listen to. I remember listening to him while station in Spain in the late 80's, His America's Top 40 played on Armed Forces radio, he made being oversea's like being home. He will be missed.
Ohohoh wah, how l miss Casey, always wait for his program. Thank you for the music Casey
"Love's Theme" by the Love Unlimited Orchestra is my all-time favorite instrumental.
A piece of heaven. Disco was so beautiful in the beginning…then…..
This very interesting as I remember all these songs in 74, thanks !!!
There were still 3 songs in December of 1974 not mentioned. Due to the fact of the period used to tabulate the year end top 100. Those 3 songs from December of 1974 were "Kung Fu Fighting" - Carl Douglas [#1 12/7 & 12/14], "Cat's In the Cradle" - Harry Chapin [#1 12/21] and "Angie Baby" - Helen Reddy [#1 12/28]
Casey skipped "The Way We Were" as well. There were actually 36 songs that hit number one in 1974; Casey played 32 of them.
Thanks so much for pointing that out, David. I’ve always had a problem with the way Billboard determines the top songs of the year. To me, the list would be far more accurate if they waited until a few months into the next year to compile the ranking for a given year.
That would avoid ridiculous occurrences such as these:
• “Another One Bites the Dust,” which spent all three of its weeks at No. 1 in October 1980, being ranked about the hits of 1981 just because it still happened to be rather high on the Hot 100 during the last week of ’80. It was No. 14 the week ending 12/27.
• “Look Away” by Chicago being declared the top single of 1989 when it spent both of its weeks at No. 1 in 1988. It was at the summit in December, but I still think it’s unfair that “My Prerogative” had to settle for No. 2 when it hit No. 1 IN ’89.
Those are just a couple examples of many that make the year-end ranking seem insanely premature.
The year my brother died. Every one of these songs brings memories of that time and him rushing back to me. Especially the ones he had on 45 like Bennie And The Jets, which was #1 when he died.
I just love all the songs in the 70's. Casey kasem was the best. He had that unique voice, you knew right away it was Casey spinning the records. And I mean spinning the records. ( 45's on vinyl ) great memories.
Damn I miss those days,that great music,
I Loved all these songs, great time to grow up.
I remember hearing this on the original broadcast. I was 11. ❤ i may actually have it on a cassette somewhere.
Great montage . . . surprisingly diverse. Two Beatles on their own, doing well. Two from John Denver. Roberta Flacks' top-charting single stood out for me.
3... Band on the Run, Paul; Whatever Gets You thru the Night, John; and You're Sixteen, Ringo
You can always tell a great year for pop music by the number of new songs which topped the AT40 chart. 33 #1s in a single year! The competition was *fierce*!
My radio mentor!!!
I was 9 yrs old in 1974 and remember every song on here. Guess I’m officially old😂
Awesome! Thanks for posting this.
I discovered Casey in 1972. He said at #10 Get It On (Bang A Gong) by T-Rex. It was on AFRTS in Goose Bay Labrador!! I'll never forget it. 1 tv channel and 1 radio channel on the air force base. Thanks for all the great memories Casey!!
I was 19 in 1974. "T.S.O.P." by MFSB. "Rock Your Baby", by George McCrae. Sweet, sweet memories...
Great fun! Thanks!
I'm being sarcastic but real here - I was 11 in 1974. I remember all these songs except one. Great songs, great artists, great music decade...period. Once we got to 1980, it started to go downhill with the rest of my life...and here I am in the "Twilight Zone" of 2021.
Which song did you not remember ?
I wss 16 and 17 in 1974. Great music everywhere. MTV and the 80's was different but still good. Then the 90's yikes. I fell completely out. I managed later to get into Green Day and the Offspring but that was it. So in the 90's I went backwards and started collecting stuff from the 60's and 50's!! At least I have 4 decades of music to enjoy. The 70's being my favorite.
Well 80s had a lot of great music too,didn’t really go downhill bad til after the millenium
Wasn't born yet but the music sounded great in 74
Love it!!!
1. Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe- Barry White
2. Show & Tell- Al Wilson
3. Love's Theme- Love Unlimited Orchestra
4. Feel Like Makin' Love- Roberta Flack
5. The Way We Were- Barbra Streisand
6. Seasons in the Sun- Terry Jacks
7. Dark Lady- Cher
8. Time in a Bottle- Jim Croce
9. Kung Fu Fighting- Carl Douglas
10. Then Came You- Dionne Warwick & the Spinners
You don't get these montages anymore ,dam the first ten songs made a impact on our life's ,no they all did thanks Casey !!
Back when we had music
I started listening to The Top 40 around the middle of August of 74 and bthe first NO. 1 song was THE NIGHT CHICAGO DIED by PAPER LACE
RIP Casey
#1 songs of 1974: 1. 'Time in a bottle' (Jim Croce); 2. 'The joker' (Steve Miller Band); 3. 'Show and tell' (Al Wilson); 4. 'You're 16' (Ringo Starr); 5. 'Love Theme' (Love Unlimited Orchestra); 6. 'Seasons in the sun' (Terry Jacks); 7. 'Dark lady' (Cher); 8. 'Sunshine on my shoulders' (John Denver); 9. 'Hooked on a feeling' (Blue Swede); 10. 'Bennie and the Jets' (Elton John); 11. 'The sound of Philadelphia' (Mother, Father, Sister & Brother); 12. 'Locomotion' (Grand Funk); 13. 'The streak' (Ray Stevens); 14. 'Band on the run' (Paul McCartney & Wings); 15. 'Billy, don't be a hero' (Bo Donaldson & Heywoods); 16. 'Sundown' (Gordon Lightfoot); 17. 'Rock the boat' (Hues Corporation); 18. 'Rock your baby' (George McCrea); 19. 'Annie's song' (John Denver); 20. 'Feel like making love' (Roberta Flack); 21. 'The night Chicago died' (Paper Lace); 22. 'You're having my baby' (Paul Anka feat. Odia Coates); 23. 'I shot the sheriff' (Eric Clapton); 24. 'Can't get enough of your love, babe' (Barry White); 25. 'Rock me gently' (Andy Kim); 26. 'I honestly love you' (Olivia Newton-John); 27. 'Nothing from nothing' (Billy Preston); 28. 'Then came you' (Dionne Warwicke & Spinners); 29. 'You haven't done nothing' (Stevie Wonder); 30. 'You ain't seen nothing yet' (Bachman-Turner Overdrive); 31. 'Whatever gets you through the night' (John Lennon feat. Elton John); 32. 'I can help' (Billy Swan); 33. The way we were' (Barbra Streisand).
My favorites of 1974 in this order (not that they weren't all great):
#1. Seasons in the Sun
#2. Sunshine on My Shoulder
#3. Sundown
#4. Can't Get Enough of Your Love, Babe
#5. TSOP
Great music!
I love the 1970s but a lot of these songs suck
AHHHHH HELL TO THE YES!!!!!!
Great Top Forty years. Barb at #1
⭐⭐⭐⭐
Aló about Casey is a well done thing
All about Casey is a well done thing for people Who enjoyed the 70's
Gosh do I miss him. He was my Sunday mornings. I think it was like 9am-1:00pm? We did household chores and anything in the house so we could listen to the countdown. Oh and you better listen because if you didn’t know what the top songs were when you went back to sch Mon morning well you were just not cool.
So ....where's the list of answers to this (including artists)...
I think I got em' all...but I'm not sure😁
I was in Miami um 74
Weird cause alot of these songs I thought were already old songs
But what about Kung Fu Fighting, Cat's In The Cradle, and Angie Baby?
You are correct. Those were the last three number one songs of the 1974 Billboard chart, with each hitting number one in the month of December. Perhaps Casey recorded the promo after Thanksgiving of that year, accounting for the missing December chart toppers?
Just a guess on my part. I was five years old at the time and trying to get through kindergarten, but I still remember the music very well!
The songs appear in this promo in chronological order, as Billy Swan's "I Can Help" topped the Billboard charts on 11/23/74 and 11/30/74. "The Way We Were" (which hit #1 on 2/2/74, 2/16/74 & 2/23/74) is the only song that does not appear in chronological order; since it was the number one song of 1974, Casey waited until the end of this promo to announce it.
He also says "a montage of the 33 songs" that have hit number one, when in fact 36 songs (including the three you mentioned) hit number one on the chart from January 1, 1974 through December 31, 1974.
Any other guesses out there?
@@russellblake6471 The countdown of the top 100 songs of a given year were from December the previous year to November of the current year. For this it was from December 1973 to November 1974.
Don Cornelius said that TSOP was the biggest mistake of his career.Gambel and Huff wanted to release the Soul Train theme as a single but,Cornelius thought hey were trying to take advantage of him and refused so the released the musical version.The song broke a lot of records chart wise and he said ll that time I would have been getting the name of the show mentioned.
TSOP The Best Song!!
There was a lot of No. 1's in 1974. There were no dominate songs in that year.
What have you got against "The Way We Were?"?
"The Way We Were" was released in 1973 along with the movie.
@@tabathasheffroth7981 "The Way We Were" hit number one on Feb. 2, 1974 and then returned to number one Feb. 16 for two more weeks.
Just don’t do a long distance dedication about a dead dog after an up tempo song.
but need more barbra!