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No best answer has yet been selected by Evil. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I want to know who is buying these flippin' Elvis singles! Surely anyone who is old enough to have been a fan when he was alive will already have them. Anyone else who maybe likes him will have bought the CD's out in the last few years i.e Elv1s No 1's and ElvIIs No 2's?
I've not heard the singles get any radio airplay either (other than on the chartshows)
I would care to disagree - the charts is still valid, and a reflection of the relative quality and merits of the featured artists.
I mean, an artist must have to sell, oooh, at least fifteen copies of a single to reach number one these days. After they have sold fourty-three copies, they get a golden disc, and after a whacking great fifty-one copies sold, they have the honour of having a platinum-selling single.
I am of the understanding that there is an up-and-coming popular beat-combo by the name of 'Busted' whose record sales can literally be numbered in their hundreds.
The charts remain a genuine indicator of popular music, and anyone who says it is merely a publicity machine influenced and driven by money-grabbing music industry players and cynical pop impressarios is clearly misguided.
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Major General Despair,
2nd Bromley Contingent (Retired),
Tungfirmly-in-Cheek,
Chartsh1te-shire
I think Greedyfly and I are of a similar mind on a point or two...
Would it be too romantic of me to think that some actual quality talent is what's topping the charts? Yes, die-hard fans would already have a copy - probably several - but is it beyond the realms of possibility that, despite the paltry amounts required to achieve a number one these days, the record-buying of people appreciating some good ol' bluesy rock is what's causing it. Is it actually a desperate gasp from a drossed-out music industry?